Ice and Its Consequences: Glaciation in the Late Ordovician, Late Devonian, Pennsylvanian‐Permian, and Cenozoic Compared

2004 ◽  
Vol 112 (6) ◽  
pp. 655-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Raymond ◽  
Cheryl Metz
1994 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Elias ◽  
A. W. Potter ◽  
Rodney Watkins

The shoo fly Complex of Late Devonian and older Paleozoic age is a regionally extensive rock assemblage in the northern Sierra Nevada of northern California. It consists chiefly of a coherent unit of phyllite, quartzose sandstone, and chert, and a melange unit (Hannah and Moores, 1986). Several limestone lenses in the Taylorsville area comprise the Montgomery Limestone (Diller, 1892, 1908; McMath, 1958; Figure 1). The Montgomery was long considered to be Silurian, largely on the basis of corals, brachiopods, and cephalopods (Diller, 1892, 1908; McMath, 1958; Berry and Boucot, 1970; Merriam, 1972). However, recent analyses of the biota indicate an Ashgill (middle Maysvillian–Gamachian) age (Boucot and Potter, 1977; Harris, personal commun. cited in Hannah and Moores, 1986, p. 790; Potter et al., 1990b; present study).


Paleobiology ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 332-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Cowen

The pattern of arm branching and arm morphology in the camerate crinoid family Melocrinitidae became more complex during an evolutionary sequence which extended from Late Ordovician to Late Devonian. The fully evolved melocrinitid arm pattern bears an amazing resemblance to the theoretically ideal lay-out for harvesting roads on a banana plantation. This may not be coincidental since the problems faced by a banana plantation manager are much the same as those of a crinoid: the harvesting of an evenly distributed micro-particulate resource from an area and its delivery to a central point for processing. The analogy suggests a detailed explanation of the melocrinitid morphology and evolution. It also raises the question: why did the pattern not become dominant among crinoids if it was so efficient? It may have been unlikely to evolve; it may reflect an unusual food supply. I prefer an explanation in which the plantation pattern demands a rigidity of the crinoid crown which is characteristic of camerates but is uncommon among other crinoids: the latter have adopted a strategy of feeding which emphasizes flexibility in anatomy and behavior. The banana plantation pattern is equally rare among other organisms. Thus an “ideal” may not be common in a group of organisms for cost-benefit reasons. This does not mean that the adaptationist's approach is improper, or that random, historical, or constructional constraints routinely overwhelm adaptation. Rather, it means that cost-benefit analysis should take a larger part in functional studies, as it does in natural selection, and that theoretical ideals should be viewed with caution.


1968 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 961-962
Author(s):  
C. T. Harper

The K–Ar isotopic data indicate that two major periods of post-metamorphic uplift and cooling occurred in the Northern Appalachians, the first during Late Ordovician and Silurian times, the second during the Late Devonian Epoch. These recorded events were separated by the Acadian magmatic episode.


1995 ◽  
Vol 69 (6) ◽  
pp. 1186-1187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew B. Smith ◽  
Mark A. Wilson

Cyclocystoids are one of the rarest and most enigmatic of the extinct echinoderm groups. Despite recent systematic revision (Smith and Paul, 1982), their basic anatomy and functional morphology remain poorly understood. Smith and Paul (1982) recognized eight genera and 39 species ranging in age from Lower Ordovician to Late Devonian. Since then, one new genus and species,Monocycloides oelandicus, has been established by Berg-Madsen (1987), and the range of the genusSievertsiahas been extended to the Middle Devonian of the U.S.A (Fluegeman and Orr, 1990). In addition, undescribed cyclocystoid marginal ossicles have been found in the Lower Carboniferous of Ireland (G. D. Sevastopulo, personal communication). Here we record an additional new species from the Late Ordovician of Kentucky.


A little-explored line of evidence for the antiquity and nature of early vegetation on land is the soils in which they grew. Vegetation is one of a number of factors known to play an important role in forming modern soils and soil features. As in studies of the role of organisms in modern soil formation, what are needed are fossil soils that supported different ancient ecosystems, but for which other soil-forming factors, such as palaeoclimate, palaeogeographical setting, parent materials and duration of formation, were closely comparable. This preliminary petrographic and chemical study compares four palaeosols; three are from the states of Pennsylvania and New York, U.S.A., and the fourth from the Potwar Plateau region of northern Pakistan. All appear to have formed in a subhumid, seasonally dry, subtropical climate, on the alluvial outwash of major mountain ranges, largely formed of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks, and over periods of only a few thousand years. These palaeosols are here named the Potters Mills clay (late Ordovician), Lehigh Gap clay (late Silurian), Peas Eddy clay (late Devonian) and Lal clay (late Miocene). Successively younger palaeosols show increasing degree of weathering, more clayey texture and better soil structure. Deep burrows are abundant in late Ordovician palaeosols, and are evidence of sizeable (3-16 mm diameter) soil animals. Bioturbation in the surface of the late Silurian palaeosol may have been produced by animals or vascular land plants. Large root traces and remains of leaf litter are indications that the late Devonian palaeosol supported a low diversity, streamside gallery forest. Weak redistribution of iron in this palaeosol may have been produced by phenolic and other herbivore suppressant toxins from these early trees. The late Miocene palaeosol is extensively bioturbated, presumably by termites and other creatures. Judging from its root traces and associated sediments and fossils, it supported gallery forest in a region of grassy savanna groveland. These early results encourage the belief that fossil soils may provide useful evidence for the nature of early ecosystems on land, not only complementary to that of early terrestrial fossils, but also in sedimentary sequences too oxidized and acidic to allow preservation of fossil plants and animals.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Gueriau ◽  
Štěpán Rak ◽  
Krzysztof Broda ◽  
Tomáš Kumpan ◽  
Tomáš Viktorýn ◽  
...  

AbstractWith over 15,000 extant species, Decapoda—or ten-legged crustaceans such as crabs, shrimp, lobsters, and relatives— are among the most speciose and economically important group of crustaceans. Despite of their diversity, anatomical disparity, and remarkable fossil record extending back to the Late Paleozoic, the origins of Decapoda and their phylogenetic relationships with eumalacostracans remains elusive and inconclusive. Molecular dating suggests that decapods originated in the Late Ordovician (~450 Mya), but no reliable fossil crown groups are found until the Late Devonian. Moreover, there is no consensus on which lineages belong to stem groups, obscuring our understanding of the roots of the ten-legged decapod body plans as a whole, and how they relate to other non-decapod crustaceans. We present new, exceptional fossils from the Late Devonian of Czech Republic and Poland that belong to †Angustidontida, an odd shrimp-looking crustacean with a combination of anatomical features unlike those of any crown eumalacostracan known—extinct or extant. Our phylogenetic analyses, including representatives of all major lineages of crown eumalacostracans plus †Angustidontida, identify angustidontids as the only known stem-group decapod, and give hints about the transformation series, polarity of change, and evolutionary pathways leading to the modern decapod body plans seen today.


1986 ◽  
Vol 60 (S20) ◽  
pp. 1-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Keith Rigby ◽  
A. W. Potter

Extensive silicified faunules of Middle and Late Ordovician sphinctozoan sponges have been assembled from the northern part of the eastern Klamath Mountains in northern California. The sponges are from eugeosynclinal rocks that are the westernmost Middle Ordovician to Late Devonian rocks at that latitude in North America. Seventeen new species occur in the assemblages, including 10 porate and 7 aporate forms. New genera of porate forms areAmblysiphonelloidesandCorymbospongia, and new porate species include:Amblysiphonella grossa, Amblysiphonelloides tubula, A. reticulata, Imperatoria mega, I. media, I. minima, I. irregularis, Corymbospongia adnata, C. mica, andC.(?)perforata.These are the first reported occurrences ofAmblysiphonellaandImperatoriain the Ordovician. New aporate genera areCystothalamiellaandPorefieldia, and new aporate species include:Cystothalamiella ducta, C. craticula, C. tuboides, Porefieldia robusta, Girtyocoelia epiporata, andG. canna.This is the oldest known occurrence ofGirtyocoelia, which is generally considered a Late Paleozoic form.Cliefdenella obconican. sp. is characterized by an obconical growth form in contrast to other species of the genus that are more massive or explanate.Cliefdenellais considered here as an imperforate sphinctozoan.Minor isolated hexactines and hexactine-derived spicules of Hexactinellida were associated with the sphinctozoans. No particular taxa within the class can be distinguished from these individual elements.


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