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9 May 2019 Rediscovery of the holotype of the extinct cephalopod Baculites ovatus Say, 1820 after nearly two centuries
Matthew R. Halley
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Abstract

Thomas Say (1787–1834) based his description of the ammonite species Baculites ovata (= B. ovatus) on a single specimen in the collection of his childhood friend, the Quaker naturalist Reuben Haines III (1786–1831). However, the specimen's whereabouts faded from memory after Haines and Say both died unexpectedly in the early 1830s. The holotype specimen has been missing for more than 180 years, and was thought to be lost or destroyed until 2017, when I relocated it at Haines's ancestral home (Wyck) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where his collection was preserved by his descendants in its original wooden cabinet. Herein, I present the first photographic images, an illustration of its suture line, and quantitative measurements for use by systematic paleontologists.

©2019 by the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University
Matthew R. Halley "Rediscovery of the holotype of the extinct cephalopod Baculites ovatus Say, 1820 after nearly two centuries," Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 167(1), 1-9, (9 May 2019). https://doi.org/10.1635/053.167.0101
Received: 28 November 2018; Accepted: 5 March 2019; Published: 9 May 2019
KEYWORDS
Ammonoidea
history of science
Malacology
Navesink Formation
Samuel Morton
Thomas Say
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