Kelly and Nel—Revision of some Mesozoic Odonata from England and Antarctica 92(6):1035–1048 1037
Figure 1. Locality map and stratigraphic chart for English specimens described herein. 1 = Strensham, Gloucestershire; 2 = Binton, Warwickshire; 3 = Stonebarrow, Dorset; 4 = Catherston Lane, Dorset; ‘Swb’ = ‘shales-with-beef’; WLM = Wilmcote Limestone Member.
Wales, Cardiff (NMW), and the Oxford University Museum of Natural History (OUMNH). Photographs of the Antarctic speci- menwere examined fromthe NationalMuseumofNatural History (United States National Museum), Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (USNM). All specimens from the English Mid- lands (Warwickshire and Worcestershire) were collected by the Rev. PeterBellinger Brodie in the nineteenth century except for the OUMNH specimen, which was collected by the Rev. Frederick WilliamHope; all of theDorset specimenswere collected by James Frederick Jackson in the twentieth century except for the one col- lected from Catherston Lane, which was collected by a team of volunteers ledbyKevinPage. All specimens (except the holotype of Caraphlebia antarc-
Riek and Kukalová-Peck (1984), as modified by Nel et al. (1993) and Bechly (1996). Abbreviations are as follows: AA = anterior anal; AP = posterior anal; Arc = arculus; Ax = pri- mary antenodal crossvein; Ax0 = first branch of primary antenodal crossvein; Ax1 = second branch of primary
tica)wereexaminedinpersonbytheprimaryauthorand remotely via photographs by the co-author. Specimens were examined using the microscope equipment available at each museum and photo- graphs were taken with a stand supporting a Nikon D3300 camera with AF-S Micro Nikkor 40-mm macrolens. Measurements were taken from photographs using the software package ImageJ (National Institutes of Health, ver. 1.51) and the scale of each image was calibrated using a standard ruler. Taxonomic figures were constructed in DrawPlus (Serif, version X8). Venation nomenclature is based on the interpretations of
antenodal crossvein; Ax2 = third branch of primary antenodal crossvein; C = costal vein; Cu = cubitus; CuA = anterior cubitus; CuA1 = distal branch of anterior cubitus; CuA2 = proximal branch of anterior cubitus; CuP = posterior cubitus; DC = discoidal cell; Ht = hypertriangle; IM = intercalary medial vein; IR = intercalary radial vein; IR1 = intercalary radial vein 1; IR2 = intercalary radial vein 2; MA = anterior median; MA1 = anterior branch of anterior median; MA2 = posterior branch of anterior median; MP = posterior median; N = nodus; ‘O’ = oblique vein; Pt = pterostigma; RA = anterior radius; RP = posterior radius; RP1 = first branch of posterior radius; RP2 = second branch of posterior radius; RP3/ 4 = third/fourth branch of posterior radius; ScP = posterior subcostal; T = triangle. The higher classification of fossil and extant Odonatoptera is based on the phylogenetic system of Bechly (1996, 2016).
Repositories and institutional abbreviations.—NHMUK, The Natural History Museum, London, UK; NMW, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, UK; OUMNH, Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford, UK; USNM, National Museum of Nat- ural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
Systematic paleontology
Order Odonata Fabricius, 1793 Suborder Epiprocta Lohmann, 1996
Superfamily Heterophlebioidea Needham, 1903 Family Liassophlebiidae Tillyard, 1925
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