Utility of Geochemical Analysis of Trace Fossils: Case Studies UsingPhycosiphon incertumfrom the Lower Jurassic Shallow-Marine (Higashinagano Formation, Southwest Japan) and Pliocene Deep-Marine Deposits (Shiramazu Formation, Central Japan)

Ichnos ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kentaro Izumi
2021 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-223
Author(s):  
Mohammed Nadir Naimi ◽  
◽  
Amine Cherif ◽  

Shallow marine deposits characterize the upper Albian – lower Cenomanian deposits of Northern Algeria. In Djebel Azzeddine (Ouled Nail Mounts), the corresponding sediments have been subdivided into three distinctive units A to C. The first discovered ammonite fauna from the Bou Saada area allowed the attribution of a part of the mid-Cretaceous post-Continental Intercalaire deposits to the upper Albian. The ammonite-bearing level indicates a maximum flooding surface and could be correlated with similar levels from Northern Algeria. The studied succession is characterized by a low ichnodiversity containing eight ichnotaxa with abundant Thalassinoides, common Skolithos, and rare Gyrolithes, Oichnus, Planolites and cf. Tisoa. This ichnoassemblage is dominated by domichnion, fodinichnion and praedichnion trace fossils, and is attributed to the Skolithos and Glossifungites ichnofacies. These traces are produced mainly by decapod crustaceans, polychaetes and naticid gastropods. The sedimentological and ichnological data suggest shoreface to backshore environments with mixed tide/storm energy, and long subaerial exposures indicated by Lofer cyclothems in the lowermost part and dinosaur footprints in the upper part of the section.


2016 ◽  
Vol 155 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. HEWARD ◽  
G. A. BOOTH ◽  
R. A. FORTEY ◽  
C. G. MILLER ◽  
I. J. SANSOM

AbstractThe Amdeh Formation is a 3.4 km stack of sparsely fossiliferous quartzites and shales which crops out in the Al Hajar mountains near Muscat. Here we describe the uppermost member (Am5) that can be dated biostratigraphically as Darriwilian and which is the outcrop equivalent, and probably the seaward continuation, of the Saih Nihayda Formation in the Ghaba Salt Basin of northern Oman. The outcrops at Wadi Daiqa and Hayl al Quwasim consist of 690 m of quartzitic sandstones, shales and bivalve-rich shell beds. Trace fossils referable to the Cruziana and Skolithos ichnofacies abound. The member comprises storm-dominated shelf, shoreface and delta deposits. A number of new discoveries have been made in the outcrops: fragments of the arandaspid fish Sacabambaspis, ossicles and moulds of the early disparid crinoid Iocrinus, two new genera of conodont, an occurrence of the rare trinucleid trilobite Yinpanolithus, and palynological and sedimentological evidence of more continuous Floian–Darriwilian deposition than is usual in the region. Sea levels during Middle Ordovician time are estimated to have been 50–200 m above present levels and a wide, low-gradient shelf covered much of Arabia. Similar trace fossils and storm-dominated, micro-tidal, sedimentary rocks occur throughout the region. Small changes of sea level, possibly caused by the growth and melting of polar ice sheets, could lead to substantial seaward or landward shifts of facies belts. The Am5 deposits are thick compared to most equivalents in Arabia implying active subsidence and a ready supply of sediment.


1990 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 119-144
Author(s):  
Gregers Dam

Trace fossils are common in the shallow marine sandstones of the Lower Jurassic Neill Klinter Formation, East Greenland. Thirtyfour ichnospecies (4 new) are referred to 29 ichnogenera (1 new). Tue new forms are J amesonichnites heinbergi ( n. igen., n. isp.); Parahaentzschelinia sur ly ki ( n.isp.), Ph ycodes Auduni ( n. isp.) and Phycodes brom/eyi (n. isp.). Where possible each ichnogenus is interpreted in the light of its trophic and ethological properties and related to a particular group of organisms.


2011 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Lars B. Clemmensen ◽  
Richard G. Bromley ◽  
Paul Martin Holm

Bioturbated, glauconitic siltstones and sandstones are overlain by presumed Upper Triassic deposits at coastal exposures at Julegård on the south coast of Bornholm. These glauconitic deposits have not previously been dated. A 40Ar-39Ar dating of the glaucony gives an age of 493 ± 2 Ma suggesting the deposits belong to the Lower Cambrian Norretorp Member of the Læså Formation. The shallow marine deposits are strongly bioturbated, but only a single ichnoassociation is represented. The ichnogenus is referable to either Trichophycus Miller and Dyer, 1878 or Teichichnus Seilacher, 1955. Rare examples of Rusophycus Hall, 1852, probably trilobite trace fossils, are also represented.


2012 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis A. Buatois ◽  
María Gabriela Mángano

An early Cambrian ichnofauna consisting of Helminthoidichnites tenuis, Helminthopsis tenuis, Multina isp., Oldhamia alata, and Pilichnus cf. dichotomus is documented from shallow-marine deposits ranging from the upper offshore to the offshore transition in the Puncoviscana Formation of northwest Argentina. Although the ichnogenus Oldhamia is more common in Cambrian deep-marine environments, this occurrence provides further evidence that it is also present in shallow-marine environments. The burrow network Multina (senior synonym of Olenichnus) is preserved at the base of tempestites, representing the activity of post-storm colonizers. A drowning surface separating offshore-transition deposits below from upper-offshore deposits above contains widespread evidence of trace fossils in direct association with matgrounds. The undermat miners Oldhamia alata and Pilichnus cf. P. dichotomus occur on this surface, revealing exploitation of organic matter in the biomat. Low sediment rate during drowning and paucity of bioturbation by sediment bulldozers may have promoted the establishment of the matground. In comparison with the simpler animal-matground interactions characteristic of the Ediacaran, the combination of Cambrian evolutionary innovations and the presence of microbial mats promoted more sophisticated interactions. Complex feeding trace fossils revealing that systematic undermat mining, as displayed by Oldamia alata and Pilichnus cf. dichotomus, is a product of the Cambrian explosion.


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