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Paleogene marine bivalves of the deep-water Keasey Formation in Oregon, Part II: The pteriomorphs

Systematic documentation of pteriomorph bivalves of the late Eocene–early Oligocene Keasey Formation in western Oregon follows previous monographic treatments of the anomalodesmatans and heteroconchs. It includes material from coeval Cascadia Margin strata in southwestern Washington in the context of major molluscan faunal turnover during the dramatic doubthouse climate transition from an ice-free tropical marine environment to the establishment of permanent polar ice caps and a cold temperate marine climate. The families represented are Crenellidae, Parallelodontidae, Glycymerididae, Limopsidae, Isognomonidae, Pectinidae, Propeamussiidae, and Limidae. New taxa include the genus Bathyisognomon and five new species: Limopsis squiresi, Bathyisognomon smithwickensis, Delectopecten kieli, Delectopecten keaseyorum, and Propeamussium (Parvamussium) mistensis. Small to minute mud pectens and glass scallops are among the most abundant and frequent taxa in the Keasey fauna, although they are poorly preserved and have been overlooked heretofore. Pteriomorphs are prominent elements of recurring associations of species in mudstone and fine-grained siltstone facies adjacent to three Keasey cold methane seeps. Previously described Keasey anomalodesmatans and heteroconchs in these seep-adjacent strata have living relatives adapted to dysoxia and toxic geochemistry. Because the unique macrofaunal associations in these settings are neither seep fauna nor part of the background fauna, this paper introduces and defines the concept of a transitional peri-seep biotope. Relationships, monophyly, systematic resolution within major pteriomorph groups, and global biogeographic distributions are reviewed in each systematic treatment. Recurring patterns include occurrences in active margin settings, inferred oscillatory deepening of the calcium carbonate compensation depth, late Eocene origin of two-layered oceans following establishment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, and biogeographic gateway changes that disrupted earlier Paleogene larval dispersal patterns.