BIOTIC CHANGE AND LATE DEVONIAN FLOODPLAIN DYNAMICS IN THE CATSKILL FORMATION (UPPER DEVONIAN) IN PENNSYLVANIA

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ted Daeschler ◽  
◽  
Walter Cressler
2018 ◽  
Vol 156 (5) ◽  
pp. 801-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
JEFFREY R. THOMPSON ◽  
TIMOTHY A. M. EWIN

AbstractMany of the most diverse clades of Late Palaeozoic echinoids (sea urchins) originated in the Devonian period. Our understanding of diversity dynamics of these Late Palaeozoic clades are thus informed by new systematic descriptions of some of their earliest members. The Proterocidaridae are a diverse and morphologically distinct clade of stem group echinoids with flattened tests and enlarged adoral pore pairs, which are first known from the Upper Devonian. We herein report on a new species of Hyattechinus, Hyattechinus anglicus n. sp., from the Upper Devonian of the North Devon Basin, Devon, UK. This is the first Devonian Hyattechinus known from outside of the Appalachian Basin, USA, and provides novel information regarding the palaeogeographic and stratigraphic distribution of proterocidarids in Late Devonian times. We additionally update the stratigraphic distribution of Devonian Hyattechinus from the Appalachian Basin, following recent biostratigraphic resolution of their occurrences. Hyattechinus appears to have been present in the Rheic echinoderm fauna during Late Devonian times, and comparison of the palaeoenvironmental setting of Hyattechinus anglicus with that of other Hyattechinus from the Famennian of the Appalachian Basin suggests that the genus may have preferred siliciclastic settings. Furthermore, this new taxon increases the diversity of echinoids from the Upper Devonian of Devon to three species.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. Shear

A new trigonotarbid arachnid, Gigantocharinus szatmaryi new genus and species, is described from Upper Devonian (Late Famennian) sediments in Pennsylvania. Devonian trigonotarbids were known before from only a single North American locality and several European ones. The new trigonotarbid occurs in what had previously been a significant time gap between the faunas of the Middle Devonian and the late Carboniferous. Gigantocharinus szatmaryi is assigned with some hesitation to the family Palaeocharinidae.


2012 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 355-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atike Nazik ◽  
Șenol Çapkinoğlu ◽  
Emine Șeker

Abstract Famennian (Late Devonian) ostracods of the Thuringian Mega-Assemblage were recovered for the first time from three incomplete sections of the Ayineburnu Member of the Büyükada Formation in the Denizliköy area (Gebze, NW Turkey), which were sampled for conodonts. Conodont faunas define an interval extending from the Upper rhomboidea? or Lower marginifera Zone into the Middle expansa Zone of the standard Upper Devonian conodont zonation. The ostracod faunas found here consist of species mainly with thin-walls, long spines and often smooth surfaces such as Rectonaria, Tricornina, Orthonaria, Triplacera, Beckerhealdia, Timorhealdia, Bohemina, Paraberounella and Acratia. These taxa indicate faunal relationship with Thuringia and the Rhenish Massif in Germany, the Cantabrian Mountains and Pyrenees in Spain, Holy Cross Mountains in Poland, North Africa and China.


1987 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 750-757 ◽  
Author(s):  
George C. Mcintosh

Two recently collected specimens of Bogotacrinus scheibei Schmidt, 1937, from the Devonian (Emsian–Eifelian) Floresta Formation of Colombia reveal that Bogotacrinus is a dicyclic camerate crinoid genus closely related to Pterinocrinus Goldring, 1923 (Lower–Upper Devonian of eastern North America and western Europe), and Ampurocrinus McIntosh, 1981 (Lower Devonian of Bolivia). The new diplobathrid camerate crinoid family Pterinocrinidae, characterized by species with low conical dicyclic cups and rami composed of compound, bipinnulate brachials, is herein proposed to accommodate these three genera. This family originated in western Europe and migrated into the Malvinokaffric and southern Eastern Americas Realms during the Early Devonian and into the northeastern Appalachian Basin by the Late Devonian.


Author(s):  
Olga A. Orlova ◽  
Natalia Zavialova ◽  
Sergey Snigirevsky ◽  
Aleftina Jurina ◽  
Anna Lidskaya

ABSTRACTThe morphology of sterile and fertile structures (terminal strobili) of the Upper Devonian heterosporous lycopsid Kossoviella timanica Petrosjan 1984 from northern Russia (North Timan) is re-described: the axes are dichotomously branched; sterile leaves are narrow with smooth margins; the transition from sterile axes to strobili is gradual; the strobili are narrow and cylindrical, occasionally dichotomously branched; sporophylls are long, lanceolate, with crenulated margins; megasporangia with thin, mostly destroyed, sporangium walls contain one or two tetrads of large megaspores without a gula; numerous microspore tetrads are present in the microsporangia; both mega- and microspores are cavate, with a two-layered sporoderm; the outer layer of the sporoderm of both mega- and microspores consists of a net of intertwined cylindrical elements; the inner layer of the megaspore sporoderm is a basal lamina; and the inner homogeneous layer of the microspore sporoderm is split into multilamellate zones near the arms of the proximal scar. A comparison between abortive and fertile megaspores, some of which apparently were not completely mature, allows us to hypothesise that the enlargement and lateral stretching of structural units of the sporoderm, and the spaces between them, took place during the final stages of ontogenesis of megaspores along with the additional accumulation of amorphous sporopollenin. Both layers of the megaspore sporoderm, as well as the cavity between them, developed early in the ontogenesis. Although Kossoviella timanica was certainly a unique Late Devonian plant, it bears some resemblance to the Givetian heterosporous, bisporangiate lycopsid Yuguangia ordinata in having dichotomously branching axes, sporophylls with spiny margins and strobili with proximal megasporangia and distal microsporangia. Kossoviella timanica is also similar to the Famennian bisporangiate lycopsid Bisporangiostrobus harrisii in lacking a ligula and in having dichotomously branching strobili with proximal megasporangia and distal microsporangia.


2015 ◽  
Vol 153 (4) ◽  
pp. 601-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
JIN-ZHUANG XUE ◽  
JAMES F. BASINGER

AbstractA new plant of Late Devonian (Famennian) age,Melvillipteris quadriseriatagen. et sp. nov., is reported from Melville Island, Nunavut, Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Main axes and two orders of lateral branches are recognized. The main axes are monopodial in habit, with a zigzag and/or upright appearance and dense adventitious roots attached on some internodes. First-order branches are inserted on the main axes in distichous pairs, showing a quadriseriate pattern (i.e. alternate pairs); they bear one or two sterile ultimate appendages on the proximal portions, and then distally bear alternate second-order branches. Second-order branches bear alternate ultimate appendages which may be fertile or sterile; the sterile ultimate appendages are composed of one or two successive dichotomies, terminating in oppositely recurved tips, and fertile appendages show an elaborate branching system. Each fertile appendage has an initial dichotomy forming two sister branches, each of which further divides three or four times to produce ultimate divisions terminated by sporangia. Two to four small fusiform sporangia are grouped in a truss which is supplied by penultimate division of the fertile appendage. The sporangia have a pointed tip and a longitudinal dehiscence. This new plant resembles other plants with a quadriseriate branching pattern (e.g.RhacophytonCrépin,CephalopterisNathorst,ProtocephalopterisAnaniev,EllesmerisHill, Scheckler & Basinger andProtopteridophytonLi & Hsü), and is assigned to the Rhacophytales. Its similarity to and divergence from the rhacophytaleans, cladoxylopsids and other related plants are discussed.


Fossil Record ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.-P. Schultze ◽  
J. Chorn

The fish fauna of Upper Devonian deposits of SW Colorado is described and compared with those of Central Colorado. The osteolepidid Litoptychus is redescribed including skull roof, cheek, palatoquadrate, cleithrum and postcranial elements. A second osteolepidid with cosmine-covered scales and bones is recognized in the Upper Devonian deposits of Colorado. A skull roof and a parasphenoid formerly attributed to Litoptychus, and a pterygoid, cleithrum, ribs and scales are assigned to dipnoans, partly to long-snouted dipnoans cf. Soederberghia. Comparison of the Late Devonian fish fauna of Colorado with that of Arizona places the fishes of Colorado into a coastal marine depositional environment. <br><br> Die oberdevonische Fischfauna von SW Colorado ist beschrieben und mit der von Zentral-Colorado verglichen. Die osteolepidide Gattung Litoptychus ist neu beschrieben einschließlich Schädeldach, Wangenreigion, Palatoquadratum, Cleithrum und postkranialer Elemente und diagnostiziert. Ein zweiter Osteolepidide mit Kosmin bedeckten Schuppen und Knochen wird von Litoptychus (ohne Kosmin) abgetrennt. Ein Schädeldach und ein Paraschenoid, die früher zu Litoptychus gestellt wurden, und ein Pterygoid, ein Cleithrum, Rippen und Schuppen werden zu Lungenfischen gestellt, z. T. zu langschnauzigen Lungenfischen cf. soederberghia. — Der Vergleich der spätdevonischen Fischfauna von Colorado mit der von Arizona deutet auf eine küstennahe marine Lebenswelt der Colorado-Fische hin. <br><br> doi:<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mmng.19980010104" target="_blank">10.1002/mmng.19980010104</a>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Baptiste P. Koehl

Abstract. The present study of field, petrological, exploration well and seismic data shows that backward-dipping duplexes comprised of phyllitic coal and bedding-parallel décollements and thrusts, which localized along lithological transitions in tectonically thickened Lower–lowermost Upper Devonian, uppermost Devonian–Mississippian and uppermost Pennsylvanian–lowermost Permian sedimentary strata of the Wood Bay and/or Widje Bay and/or Grey Hoek formations, of the Billefjorden Group and of the Wordiekammen Formation respectively, partially decoupled uppermost Devonian–Permian sedimentary rocks of the Billefjorden and Gipsdalen groups from Lower–lowermost Upper Devonian rocks of the Andrée Land Group and Mimerdalen Subgroup during early Cenozoic Eurekan deformation in central Spitsbergen. Eurekan strain decoupling along these structures explains differential deformation between Lower–lowermost Upper Devonian rocks of the Andrée Land Group/Mimerdalen Subgroup and overlying uppermost Devonian–Permian sedimentary strata of the Billefjorden and Gipsdalen groups in central–northern Spitsbergen without requiring an episode of (Ellesmerian) contraction in the Late Devonian. Potential formation mechanisms for bedding-parallel décollements and thrusts include shortcut faulting, and/or formation as a roof décollement in a fault-bend hanging wall (or ramp) anticline, as an imbricate fan, as an antiformal thrust stack, and/or as fault-propagation folds over reactivated/overprinted basement-seated faults. The interpretation of seismic data in Reindalspasset indicates that Devonian sedimentary rocks of the Andrée Land Group and Mimerdalen Subgroup might be preserved east of the Billefjorden Fault Zone, suggesting that the Billefjorden Fault Zone did not accommodate reverse movement in the Late Devonian. Hence, the thrusting of Proterozoic basement rocks over Lower Devonian sedimentary rocks along the Balliolbreen Fault and fold structures within strata of the Andrée Land Group and Mimerdalen Subgroup in central Spitsbergen may be explained by a combination of down-east Carboniferous normal faulting with associated footwall rotation and exhumation, and subsequent top-west early Cenozoic Eurekan thrusting along the Billefjorden Fault Zone. Finally, the study shows that major east-dipping faults, like the Billefjorden Fault Zone, may consists of several, discrete, unconnected (soft-linked and/or stepping) or, most probably, offset fault segments that were reactivated/overprinted with varying degree during Eurekan deformation due to strain partitioning and/or decoupling along sub-orthogonal NNE-dipping reverse faults.


2018 ◽  
Vol 92 (5) ◽  
pp. 838-849 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry P. Plax ◽  
James C. Lamsdell ◽  
Matthew B. Vrazo ◽  
Dmitry V. Barbikov

AbstractWe describe a new stylonurid eurypterid from the evaporitic potassium-salt deposits of the Upper Devonian (Famennian) Soligorsk Formation in the Pripyat Trough of Belarus. All specimens are assigned to Soligorskopterus tchepeliensis new genus new species, which represents the first formally described eurypterid species from Belarus. The occurrence of well-preserved eurypterids in these unusual evaporite deposits is most likely due to transport from freshwater stream habitats into a hypersaline setting following death. Soligorskopterus tchepeliensis n. gen. n. sp. appears to be intermediate between the traditionally considered parastylonurids and stylonurids and thus extends our understanding of stylonurid evolution in the mid-Paleozoic. Soligorskopterus n. gen. extends the occurrence of Famennian eurypterids into eastern Laurussia and the Stylonuridae into the Upper Devonian, and this taxon could be part of a global eurypterid habitat shift that took place in the Late Devonian.UUID: http://zoobank.org/466b0195-6199-495b-9270-6f032e2d7493


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 1091-1098 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Thomas Martel ◽  
D. Colin McGregor ◽  
John Utting

Late Devonian (late Famennian) miospores have been found in the lowermost 7.3 m of the Horton Group on Harding Brook in the type area, Windsor Subbasin, Nova Scotia, below Tournaisian miospores of the Emphanisporites rotatus – Indotriradites explanatus Zone. Extending the age of the Horton Group in the type area down into the latest Devonian shows that the lowest beds of the ~ 1000 m thick group are coeval with latest Devonian rocks elsewhere in the Maritimes Basin that have been excluded from the Horton Group by some authors. Evidence presented here favours the argument that Late Devonian rocks lithologically similar to the Horton Group, deposited on the Acadian unconformity, should be included in that group. Miospore evidence indicates a minimum age of about 355 Ma for exhumation of the northeastern part of the South Mountain Batholith.


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