Tetragraptus approximatus is a species of dichograptid graptolite belonging to the genus Tetragraptus. It existed during the Floian Age (million years ago) of the Ordovician. It is an important index fossil in biostratigraphy.
The general outline of each Tetragraptus approximatus colony (rhabdosome) is highly distinctive. It resembles a long narrow letter H or X. The central process (the funicle) is about 2.5mm long, each end bifurcating at right angles with each other. Each pair of branches (stipes) curve away sharply from the ends of the funicle then run more or less parallel with each other at a distance of 5to apart. Each of the stipes can reach more than 45mm in length, with approximately ten cup-like structures (thecae) for every 10mm of the stipes. The thecae are tilted at a 45° angle to the axis.[1]
Tetragraptus approximatus is classified under the genus Tetragraptus of the family Dichograptidae.[2] [3] It was first described by the British paleontologist Henry Alleyne Nicholson in 1873 from specimens recovered from Lévis, Quebec, Canada.[4]
Tetragraptus approximatus is found worldwide. It has been identified in graptoliferous rocks from Australia, New Zealand, Canada (Newfoundland), the United States (Texas), Kazakhstan, Russia (Taimyr), China, South America, Norway, and Sweden. It is unknown, however, in areas which lack coeval graptoliferous rocks like the United Kingdom, Spitsbergen, and Africa.
Tetragraptus approximatus is used in biostratigraphy as an index fossil. Its first appearance at the GSSP section of the Diabasbrottet Quarry in Västergötland, Sweden is defined as the beginning of the Floian Age (million years ago) of the Ordovician.[5]