Somalirhynchia
Somalirhynchia africana is a species of extinct, medium-sized brachiopod, a marine rhynchonellate lampshell in the family Tetrarhynchiidae. It is roughly the size and shape of a toy marble, and has about 29 ribs fanning out from the hinge.
Distribution
Somalirhynchia africana lived during the late Jurassic in the Ethiopian Faunal Province, which consisted of the areas now known as Ethiopia, Somalia, Israel, Jordan, Yemen, Kenya, Madagascar, Saudi Arabia, and Tunisia. It also occurred in India which Kiessling defines as part of the Southwestern Tethys Faunal Province.
Fossils of S. africana are known from the Upper Jurassic of Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, India, Israel, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Tunisia, Yemen.
Habitat
During the Upper Jurassic, the fossil locations cited were on continental plates, probably in tropical, shallow, coral seas, where this lampshell lived as a stationary epifaunal suspension feeder.
Description
Somalirhynchia africana has medium sized shells subtriangular in outline, strongly dorsibiconvex with maximum width attained past midlength; beak erect and massive with small hypothyroid pedicle foramen; deltidial plates disjunct. Anterior commissure strongly uniplicate; lateral commissure deflected ventrally; interareas large, somewhat concave. Ventral sulcus originates just past midlength, widening anteriorly into a long tongue with six costae. Dorsal valve high, domelike, with strong median fold with seven costae that begins near midlength and becomes strongly elevated anteriorly.