Petrology of a Subduction-related Caldera and Post-Collisional, Extension-related Volcanic Cones from the Early Cambrian and Middle Ordovician (?) of the Camaquã Basin, Southern Brazil*

2003 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 541-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. del P.M. Almeida ◽  
M.A.F. Hansen ◽  
H.C. Fensterseifer ◽  
K. Petry ◽  
L. de Lima
Author(s):  
André Marconato ◽  
Renato Paes de Almeida ◽  
Liliane Janikian ◽  
Simone Campos Carrera ◽  
Bruno Boito Turra ◽  
...  

1980 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 86-93
Author(s):  
James Sprinkle

The initial explosive radiation of echinoderms in the Cambrian and Ordovician is very likely the single most spectacular evolutionary pattern shown by echinoderms during their long fossil record. This radiation involved 19–20 echinoderm classes and lasted from the Early Cambrian (perhaps latest Precambrian) to the end of the Middle Ordovician. It is important because in many ways this initial radiation determined the entire Paleozoic record for echinoderms. In addition, it is almost a textbook example of a major adaptive radiation (Raup and Stanley, 1978, p. 307, 357–360), and also fits nicely the two-stage metazoan diversification model for the Early Paleozoic outlined by Sepkoski (1979).


2009 ◽  
Vol 217 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 30-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renato P. de Almeida ◽  
Liliane Janikian ◽  
Antonio Romalino S. Fragoso-Cesar ◽  
André Marconato

Geosciences ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 119
Author(s):  
Mark A. S. McMenamin

Bradoriids, among the earliest arthropods to appear in the fossil record, are extinct, ostracod-like bivalved forms that ranged from the early Cambrian to the Middle Ordovician. Bradoriids are notable for having appeared in the Cambrian fossil record before the earliest trilobites, and considering their rapid ascent to high genus-level diversity, provide key data for our understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of the Cambrian Explosion. This paper presents a broad review of bradoriid paleobiology. It is hypothesized here that an allele of Antennapedia determines whether bradoriid shields are preplete, amplete, or postplete. The preplete configuration of the shields of Cambroarchilocus tigris gen. nov. sp. nov. suggests that shield rowing motion may have propelled the animal backwards. Arcuate scars attributed here to a microdurophagous predator (Arcuoichnus pierci nov. ichnogen. nov. ichnosp.) occur on the paratype of Cambroarchilocus tigris gen. nov. sp. nov.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 107-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen M. Rowland ◽  
Melissa Hicks

A consortium dominated by archaeocyaths and calcified microorganisms (calcimicrobes) constructed the first metazoan reefs during an eleven-million-year interval of the Early Cambrian. However, archaeocyaths were not the first metazoan reef dwellers; the weakly calcified organismNamacalathus, and the more heavily biomineralized organismNamapoikia, occupied microbial reef environments during the late Neoproterozoic, but they were not involved in reef construction. Throughout the late nineteenth century, and during most of the twentieth century, the biological affinities of archaeocyaths were unsettled, which caused paleobiologists to avoid including them in analyses of the Cambrian fauna. However, in the late twentieth century the discovery of living, aspiculate sponges led to a consensus among archaeocyathan workers that these fossils represent an extinct class of aspiculate, calcareous sponges. The majority of archaeocyathan-calcimicrobial reefs are relatively small, lenticular mounds, typically about a meter thick and a few meters in diameter, but the archaeocyathan-calcimicrobial consortium also constructed massive, ecologically zoned, wave-resistant, framework reefs. The Great Siberian Cambrian Reef Complex is 200-300 km wide and stretches for 1500 km across northern Siberia. A consensus has not yet been found among Cambrian reef workers concerning photosymbiosis, which is such an important aspect of the ecology of modern coralgal reefs. Two extinction events hit during the Early Cambrian, the second of which is associated with a eustatic sea-level drop. The attendant marine regression eliminated reefs, and the archaeocyathan-calcimicrobial reef community disappeared. While the disappearance of reefs at this time is perfectly understandable, it is nevertheless surprising that the metazoan-calcimicrobe reef-building consortium was not able to recover within a few million years. Approximately forty million years passed æ from the end of the Early Cambrian to the beginning of the Middle Ordovician æ before metazoans finally returned to reef-building. We present seven hypotheses to explain this metazoan-reef-free window. The testing of these hypotheses will, in part, be the challenge of the next phase of research on Early Cambrian reefs.


1991 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 71-139
Author(s):  
A.K Higgins ◽  
J.R Ineson ◽  
J.S Peel ◽  
F Surlyk ◽  
M Sønderholm

The Franklinian Basin extends from the Canadian Arctic Islands to eastern North Greenland, a distance of approximately 2000 km. In the North Greenland segment about 8 km of Lower Palaeozoic strata are well exposed and permit the recognition of 7 stages in the evolution of the basin. With the exception of the first stage of basin initiation, which occurred dose to the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary, each stage is differentiated into a southern shelf and slope, and a northern deep-water trough. The position of the boundary between the shelf and trough was probably controlled by deep seated normal faults and, with time, the basin expanded southwards leading to a final foundering of the shelf areas during the Silurian. The 7 stages in the evolution of the Franklinian Basin in North Greenland are: 1, Late Proterozoic? - Early Cambrian shelf (basin initiation); 2, Early Cambrian carbonate platform and incipient trough; 3, Early Cambrian siliciclastic shelf and turbidite trough; 4, Late Early Cambrian - Middle Ordovician carbonate shelf and starved trough; 5, Middle Ordovician - Early Silurian aggradational carbonate platform, starved slope and trough; 6, Early Silurian ramp and rimmed shelf, and turbidite trough; 7, Early - Late Silurian drowning of the platform. Basin evolution and sedimentation patterns in the eastem part of the Franklinian Basin were strongly influenced by the dosure of the lapetus Ocean and Caledonian orogenic uplift in eastern North Greenland. The Franklinian Basin in North Greenland was finally closed in Devonian - Early Carboniferous times, resulting in strong deformation of the northern part of the Franklinian trough sequence during the Ellesmerian Orogeny.


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ya-Dong Chen ◽  
Shoufa Lin ◽  
Cees R. van Staal

Cape Breton Island has been interpreted as consisting of four zones of pre-Carboniferous rocks, but the relationships among them are controversial. To help resolve the controversy, we have dated detrital zircons from a conglomerate (part of the Cheticamp Lake Gneiss) in the Aspy terrane in the northeastern Cape Breton Highlands using the U–Pb method. The following ages were obtained: 462 ± 2 Ma (Middle Ordovician); ~492–488 Ma (6 ages; Early Ordovician); 552 ± 3 Ma (latest Precambrian–Early Cambrian); 620 ± 13 and 687 ± 4 Ma (Cadomian); and 809 ± 17, 1423 ± 10, 1462 ± 12, 1605 ± 14, 1644 ± 4, and 1911 ± 5 Ma (Proterozoic). The Middle Ordovician age sets a maximum age limit for deposition of the conglomerate, and supports an Ordovician–Silurian age for the Cheticamp Lake Gneiss. The Early Ordovician, latest Precambrian–Early Cambrian, and Cadomian ages match published ages from the Bras d'Or terrane (and its correlatives) and the Mira terrane (and its correlatives), and indicate provenance of the conglomerate from both terranes. They also indicate that the Bras d'Or and Mira terranes had been connected by the time of deposition of the conglomerate. The combination of the Cadomian and the Proterozoic ages is typical of parts of South America, supporting a suggestion that the Avalon Composite Terrane was derived from South America.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 183-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xing Li ◽  
Mary Droser

Shell concentrations have constituted an important and conspicuous part of the stratigraphic record since the Early Cambrian. The paleontological and stratigraphic significance of shell beds is well understood, primarily from Mesozoic and Cenozoic examples. Lower Paleozoic fossil concentrations, however, have not received much attention. The Cambrian and Ordovician evolutionary radiations were two of the most significant events in the history of life and established the Cambrian and Paleozoic faunas respectively. In order to determine the effect of these radiations on the development of fossil accumulations, a systematic study of early Paleozoic shell beds was conducted in the Great Basin areas of California, Nevada, and Utah.In order to minimize taphonomic variations in original chemical and physical conditions, shell beds were compared from strata deposited in similar depositional environments from similar tectonic settings. Preliminary analysis of the shell beds from relatively pure carbonate facies and mixed carbonate and siliciclastic facies shows: 1) that shell concentrations became a significant stratigraphic feature in the later Early Cambrian; 2) the thickness and lateral extent of the shell beds increase from Early Cambrian to Middle Ordovician; 3) the abundance and internal complexity of the shell beds increase from Early Cambrian to Middle Ordovician; and 4) the Cambrian and Early Ordovician shell beds are primarily, if not exclusively, dominated by trilobites whereas the Middle Ordovician shell beds are dominated by brachiopods and ostracodes.These data show a temporal trend in the development of the early Paleozoic shell beds. The nature of the Cambrian and Ordovician shell beds differs qualitatively and quantitatively. There is an increase in physical scale, abundance, and internal complexity through time. The thickness and abundance of the trilobite beds increase through the Cambrian. Interestingly, although trilobites were still diverse and abundant, they did not commonly generate thick trilobite beds after the Late Cambrian. The early Middle Ordovician is a critical time in the development of early Paleozoic shell beds. A variety of monotaxic and polytaxic shell beds, including 6m thick composite beds, first appeared at this time. While the brachiopods and ostracodes generate laterally extensive, commonly monotaxic, shell beds, the gastropods and bryozoans only formed lenticular concentrations.


2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 269-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ed Landing ◽  
Mohibullah Mohibullah ◽  
Mark Williams

Two new species of ostracods, Conchoprimitia cassidula n. sp. and Sorornanopsis avalonensis n. gen. n. sp., represent the first described Middle Ordovician ostracods from western Avalonia. They were recovered as phosphatized carapaces dissolved out of a late early Darriwilian (ca. 467 Ma) limestone boulder from the Triassic Lepreau Formation of New Brunswick, Canada. The ostracods form a low-diversity component of a higher energy, near-shore, shelf marine fauna dominated by the trilobites Neseuretus and Stapleyella and by the conodonts Drepanoistodus and Baltoniodus. The low diversity of this Avalonian ostracod fauna contrasts with more diverse (tens of species), coeval ostracod faunas from Laurentia and Baltica. The association of Darriwilian ostracods and trilobites from New Brunswick demonstrates continuing exchange of open marine, cool water biota between Avalonia, Baltica, and West and North Gondwana that began in the late early Cambrian.


2007 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce V. Sanford

ABSTRACT Field investigations in the Head Lake-Burleigh Falls area of south-central Ontario, that focused mainly on the Covey Hill(?), Shadow Lake, Gull River and Coboconk formations along the Paleozoic escarpment, provided clear evidence of faulting. Observed and inferred structural deformation, coupled with faciès changes within the Shadow Lake and lower Gull River, point to a succession of basement movements during the Phanerozoic. These range from Hadrynian-Early Cambrian, through Middle Ordovician to post-late Middle Ordovician times. Some of the earlier movements (Hadrynian-Early Cambrian to late Middle Ordovician) appear to be coincident with, and probably related to, plate tectonic events and the associated Taconian orogeny that were in progress along the southeastern margins of the North American continent. Post-Middle Ordovician block faulting, on the other hand, may have been triggered by any number of epeirogenic events related to late stage Taconian, Acadian or Alleghanian orogenies in Late Ordovician to Carboniferous times, or possibly to rifting associated with continental break-up and initiation of seafloor spreading processes in the early Mesozoic. Manuscrit révisé accepté le 5 août 1993


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