SHELL STRUCTURE AND ITS BEARING ON THE PHYLOGENY OF LATE ORDOVICIAN–EARLY SILURIAN STROPHOMENOID BRACHIOPODS FROM ANTICOSTI ISLAND, QUÉBEC

2004 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
KEITH DEWING
1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 84-84
Author(s):  
Keith Dewing ◽  
W.G.E. Caldwell

A combination of shape and form, mode of preservation, and degree of variation makes the strophomenoids one of the more difficult groups of brachiopods to study taxonomically. In turn, taxonomic confusion may explain why the strophomenoids have not been used to the same extent as other groups of brachiopods as a basis for biostratigraphic classification and correlation, and for elucidating biogeographic provincialism. Such conclusions certainly seem warranted following a detailed investigation of the strophomenoids present in the Late Ordovician-Early Silurian carbonate sequence of Anticosti Island, Quebec.The abundance and superb preservation of Anticosti strophomenoids permit a thorough analysis of external and internal features and the high degree of variation that some of these exhibit. Serial sections are critical to reconstructing the interiors of articulated specimens, establishing taxonomic relationships among discrete valves, and exposing developmental changes in shell structure. When subject to such detailed treatment, at least seventeen genera and twenty-seven species of strophomenoids can be securely identified. Variation among these taxa is such that some features - shape, convexity, ornamentation, and outline of muscle field - hitherto depended upon for taxonomic purposes, have little value in this respect. Other features - pattern of pseudopuncta, form of foramen, pseudodeltidium, chilidium, cardinal process, teeth, dental plates, and socket plates, and presence of ridges and septa bounding and dividing the muscle field - are demonstrably more reliable.The Ordovician-Silurian boundary in the Anticosti sequence is broadly characterized by change from a plectambonitid-rafinesquinid-strophomenid fauna in the Vaureal Formation (Ashgill), through a plectambonitid-leptaenid-stropheodontid-Fardenia fauna in the Ellis Bay Formation (uppermost Ashgill), to a leptaenid-stropheodontid-Fardenia fauna in the Becscie to Chicotte formations (Llandovery). Considerable overlap occurs between Ordovician and Silurian taxa. The oldest known chonetid and the oldest stropheodontid on Anticosti Island occur in the Vaureal Formation. Plectambonitids and strophomenids are rare in the late Llandovery Jupiter Formation.Taking a more rigorous biostratigraphical approach, however, distribution of the twenty-seven well-constrained species allows numerous sequential biozones of different type (assemblage, range, overlapping range) to be recognized, up to six of them in the Ashgill section alone. Some zones are distinguished by cosmopolitan species, others by species known from basins well removed from the Anticosti Basin, others again by species seemingly endemic to the Anticosti Basin. These replacements point to a changing pattern of faunal provincialism as Late Ordovician gave way to Early Silurian time. In the Ordovician portion of the section in particular, the biostratigraphic refinement of the potential strophomenoid zones exceeds that of such other brachiopod groups as rhynchonellids or of conodonts.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Stewart ◽  
Charles E. Mitchell

Three-dimensionally preserved specimens of Late Ordovician graptolites have been isolated from Vauréal Formation limestone samples collected from Anticosti Island, Quebec. The morphology, astogeny, and systematics of Anticostia macgregorae n.gen., n.sp. are described. These specimens show a new astogenetic pattern (pattern K) described for the first time. The similar glyptograptid species Glyptograptus hudsoni Jackson, Glyptograptus tenuissimus Ross and Berry, and Orthograptus fastigatus Davies all possess a pattern K astogeny. These species, along with Glyptograptus lorrainensis, which possesses the less-derived pattern G astogeny, are included within Anticostia n.gen. Anticostia tenuissima (Ross and Berry) is redescribed and Normalograptus? occidentalis (Ruedemann) is refigured based on their type specimens from coeval rocks in Nevada and Idaho.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 1821-1832 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. F. Long ◽  
Paul Copper

Laterally discontinuous, mixed carbonate–siliciclastic sandstones in the upper Vaureal and lower Ellis Bay formations of Anticosti Island were deposited on an equatorial carbonate ramp with a slope of less than 1°. The 10–18 m thick sandstones are interpreted as subaqueous sand-wave complexes analogous to detached parts of modern shoreface-connected sand ridges. These record storm-enhanced, tidal modification of a northerly derived shoal retreat massif that may have formed in response to recovery from global sea-level lowstands in the Late Ordovician (Ashgill: late Rawtheyan – Hirnantian). The sand-wave complexes formed within a tidal embayment that was confined by the Precambrian Shield to the north and northwest by rising tectonic highlands of the Humber Zone in Newfoundland to the east, and by active tectonic highlands in the Quebec Appalachians (Gaspésie) to the south. Paleocurrent distributions, parallel to the western margins of the Strait of Belle Isle, suggest that the north end of the embayment was closed in Late Ordovician time. Low-diversity faunas within the sand units consist mostly of sowerbyellid, strophomenid, and rhynchonellid brachiopods, bivalves, gastropods, large aulacerid stromatoporoids, and large, domed favositid corals. These "sandy fades" faunas belong to communities significantly different from those found in the laterally interfingering and overlying carbonates and shales, suggesting that the sand waves played an important role in local community modification.


1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 1562-1571 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Lake

Relatively thin organic buildups in the Ellis Bay Formation of Anticosti Island developed in a shallow subtidal regressive marine shelf environment during the Late Ordovician. The Ellis Bay Formation has been subdivided into six members by Bolton. Two buildups, one in each of members 4 and 6, were studied in detail. The member 6 mud mound on the Salmon River (8 m thick) is bound by calcareous algae, stromatoporoids, and corals, and consists of a micritic bafflestone core capped by crinoidal lime grainstone. Early marine cementation permeated nearly all of the primary porosity. Cathodoluminescence indicates at least five stages of cementation of the mound. Constructive mound development was terminated by progressively shallowing, agitated marine conditions.The member 4 mound is a small coral (ecological) reef exposed on the Vaureal River.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 1807-1820 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. F. Long ◽  
Paul Copper

Marked facies changes occur in Late Ordovician strata, assigned to the uppermost Vaureal and Ellis Bay formations (Ashgill: Rawtheyan–Hirnantian) on Anticosti Island, Quebec. Western Anticosti features shales and carbonates, whereas outcrops along the eastern coast contain prominent, discontinuous, mixed siliciclastic–carbonate units. Detailed section measurement along the northeast coast allows, for the first time, accurate definition of seven new members within this uninterrupted sequence. Sands present in the upper Vaureal and lower Ellis Bay formations in the east appear to have deterred the growth of muddy-bottom brachiopod communities comparable to those in the western and central regions of Anticosti. Sand units within the upper Vaureal Formation contain 1 m diameter colonies of Paleofavosites; coeval small coral patch reefs are found in the central part of the island, where sands are absent. The uppermost Ellis Bay Formation of northeast Anticosti is marked by a shallow, subtidal, coral–algal oncolite bed or by small (2–4 m across, 1–2 m thick) local coral patch reefs, the tops of which have been used to define the Ordovician – Silurian boundary. No supratidal or intertidal sediments and faunas are evident in the Anticosti succession, suggesting that Late Ordovician sea-level drawdown was insufficient to provide shelf-emergent conditions in this region.


2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah L. Sheffield ◽  
William I. Ausich ◽  
Colin D. Sumrall

Hirnantian (latest Ordovician) localities containing echinoderm fossils are rare; the few that have been discovered primarily contain disarticulated crinoid ossicles. Therefore, relatively little is known about echinoderm evolutionary dynamics across the Late Ordovician – early Silurian boundary, especially noncrinoid echinoderms. New diploporitan echinoderms, Holocystites salmoensis and an unidentified holocystitid, from reefal facies of the Upper Ordovician Ellis Bay Formation of Anticosti Island provide a critical data point concerning diploporitan biogeography and evolutionary pathways undertaken during the Ordovician and Silurian. These fossils also provide a crucial link in understanding the ancestry of the Silurian Holocystites Fauna, an unusual diploporitan fauna from the middle Silurian of North America, whose origination dates back at least 15 million years earlier than previously thought with the discovery of taxa described here. New fossil data such as these stress the importance of uncovering new localities from underrepresented times and places in Earth’s history, so that these evolutionary transitions can be better understood.


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