The Middle Devonian (Givetian) ammonoid Pharciceras from the New Albany Shale, Kentucky

2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 1510-1515 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Work ◽  
Charles E. Mason ◽  
Gilbert Klapper

Pharciceras Hyatt, 1884 is the diagnostic ammonoid of the late middle Givetian Stage of the Middle Devonian Series. It occurs in the Rhenish Massif in Germany, the Montagne Noire in southern France, and in equivalent strata in the Anti-Atlas in southern Morocco. Verified North American occurrences of Pharciceras are confined to the New York succession, where the appearance of the ancestral species P. amplexum (Hall, 1886) in the Upper Tully Limestone represents an important and well-established biostratigraphic datum within the Taghanic onlap interval (see Aboussalam and Becker, 2001 for discussion). In this note we describe a second, distinctly younger, North American species, Pharciceras barnetti n. sp., from the New Albany Shale in eastcentral Kentucky that provides new evidence on the Taghanic onlap interval (Upper Tully/Geneseo Sequence of Baird and Brett, 2003) in the central Appalachian Basin. This occurrence is particularly significant because of its association with conodonts that provide a basis for refined correlations between the central Appalachian Basin and the Taghanic onlap succession in New York.

Fossil Record ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. S. Aboussalam ◽  
R. T. Becker

New ammonoid and conodont data from Germany, the Montagne Noire (France) and southeastern Morocco document a complex sequence of sedimentary events and faunal changes within an extended Givetian (late Middle Devonian) Taghanic Event Interval or Taghanic Biocrisis. Direct association of supposed typical middle Givetian ammonoids, trilobites and corals with upper Givetian marker taxa such as pharciceratids have been found, for example, in Moroccan and French time equivalents of the New York Upper Tully Limestone. The initial and eustatic Taghanic Onlap level is not known to be characterized by the first appearance of any widespread index conodont, goniatite or other taxon. A future upper Givetian substage, therefore, might be based either on the entry of <i>Ozarkodina semialternans</i> or on the first appearance of <i>Schmidtognathus hermanni</i>. The <i>semialternans</i> Zone correlates with a third sedimentary cycle within the Tully Limestone and with the spread of the first Pharciceratidae. Eobeloceratidae (<i>Mzerrebites juvenocostatus</i>) and Archoceratidae n. fam. (<i>Atlantoceras</i>). The (Lower) <i>hermanni</i> Zone is marked by a post-event transgression which led to a significant conodont radiation and to a further diversification of Pharciceratidae and Eobeloceratidae (<i>Mz. erraticus</i>). <br><br> Neue Ammonoideen- und Conodonten-Daten aus Deutschland, Frankreich (Montagne Noire) und aus Südost-Marokko belegen eine komplexe Abfolge sedimentärer Ereignisse und von Faunenwechseln in einem längerfristigen Taghanic-Event-Intervall bzw. einer Taghanic-Biokrise des Givetiums (oberes Mittel-Devon). Direkte Vergesellschaftungen von Ammonoideen, Trilobiten und Korallen, die früher als typische Mittel-Givetium-Formen angesehen wurden, mit Leitformen des Ober-Givetiums (z. B. Pharciceraten) konnten in Marokko und Frankreich in Zeitequivalenten des Oberen Tully-Kalkes von New York nachgewiesen werden. Der initiale und eustatisch bedingte Taghanic Onlap ist bisher nicht durch das Einsetzen eines weit verbreiteten Index-Conodonten, -Goniatiten oder eines Vertreters anderer Fossilgruppen gekennzeichnet. Eine künftige Ober-Givet-Unterstufe sollte daher entweder durch das Einsetzen von <i>Ozarkodina</i> <i>semialternans</i> oder durch das erste Auftreten von <i>Schmidtognathus hermanni</i> definiert werden. Die <i>semialternans</i>-Zone korreliert mit einem dritten Sedimentations-Zyklus im Tully-Kalk und mit der Ausbreitung erster Pharciceratidae, Eobeloceratidae (<i>Mzerrebites juvenocostatus</i>) und Archoceratidae n. fam. (<i>Atlantoceras</i>). Die (Untere) <i>hermanni</i>-Zone ist durch eine Post-Event-Transgression gekennzeichnet, welche eine wichtige Conodonten-Radiation und eine weitere Diversifizierung der Pharciceratidae und Eobeloceratidae (<i>Mz. erraticus</i>) ermöglichte. <br><br> doi:<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mmng.20010040107" target="_blank">10.1002/mmng.20010040107</a>


2020 ◽  
Vol 133 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 277-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien Pas ◽  
Anne-Christine Da Silva ◽  
D. Jeffrey Over ◽  
Carlton E. Brett ◽  
Lauren Brandt ◽  
...  

Abstract Over the past decade the integration of astrochronology and U/Pb thermal ionization mass spectrometry dating has resulted in major improvements in the Devonian time scale, which allowed for accurate determination of ages and rates of change in this critical interval of Earth history. However, widely different durations have been published for the Middle Devonian Eifelian stage. Here we aim to solve this discrepancy by building an astronomically calibrated time scale using a high-resolution geochemical data set collected in the early to late Eifelian outer-ramp and deep-shelf deposits of the Seneca section (Appalachian Basin, Western New York, USA). The Middle Devonian Eifelian Stage (GTS2012; base at 393.3 ± 1.2 m.y. and duration estimate of 5.6 ± 1.9 m.y.), is bracketed by two major bioevents, respectively the Choteč event at its base and the Kačák event just prior to the Eifelian–Givetian boundary. To capture the record of Milankovitch-scale climatic cycles and to develop a model of the climatic and oceanographic variations that affected the Appalachian Basin during the Eifelian, 750 samples were collected at typically 2.5 cm intervals across the Seneca section. Major and trace elements were measured on each sample with an inductively coupled plasma–optical emission spectrometer. To estimate the duration of the Seneca section sampled, we applied multiple spectral techniques such as harmonic analysis, the multi-taper, and evolutionary spectral analysis, and we tuned the Log10Ti series using the short orbital eccentricity ∼100 k.y. cycle. Then, to assess the reliability of our cyclostratigraphic interpretation we ran the Average Spectral Misfit method on selected proxies for detrital input variation. The estimated duration derived using this method falls in the range of durations estimated with the tuning method. Using the approximate position of the Emsian–Eifelian and Eifelian–Givetian boundaries, constrained within &lt;1 m, the proposed estimation of the total duration of the Eifelian age is ∼5 m.y. Interpolated from the high-resolution U-Pb radiometric age available for the Tioga F Bentonite, the numerical ages of the Emsian–Eifelian and the Eifelian–Givetian were respectively recalibrated at 393.39 Ma and 388.24 Ma. The uncertainty from the radiometric date is respectively ± 0.86 Ma and ± 0.86 Ma.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 166-166
Author(s):  
Gilbert Klapper

Analysis of Frasnian conodont sequences in the Montagne Noire, southern France, results in the recognition of a conventional zonation consisting of thirteen zones. Graphic correlation of eight Montagne Noire sections with a total of 11 sections in the Alberta Rockies, the Hay River-Trout River areas of the southern Northwest Territories, Canada, the Midcontinent and New York sequences in the United States, and the Canning Basin, Western Australia divides the Frasnian into 34 composite standard units. Most of these sections are dominated by conodonts of the outer-shelf to basinal Palmatolepis biofacies, but those of Hay River-Trout River are occupied by the quite contrasting inner-shelf Polygnathus biofacies. Correlation of the latter with the Montagne Noire zonation is effected only through graphic correlation. The taxonomy of many of the critical species involved in the correlations is based on shape analysis and multielement taxonomy of Palmatolepis.Prevailing opinion is that the Frasnian was a time of cosmopolitanism as exemplified both by benthic organisms, especially corals and brachiopods, as well as conodonts. This contrasts with the Early and Middle Devonian which was a time of significant endemism in benthic fossils and in conodonts. The high point in conodont endemism according to the zone-by-zone analysis of the Early and Middle Devonian (Klapper and Johnson, 1980) was the early Eifelian when there were about 70% endemic species. Although endemism did not reach this high in the Frasnian, analysis of a limited number of intensively collected and studied sections in the Montagne Noire, U.S. and Canada, Western Australia, and the Russian Platform demonstrates levels of endemism ranging from about 30 to 45% in three composites of two zones each. Endemic species occur in both the Palmatolepis and Polygnathus biofacies. Using the Probabilistic Index of Similarity of Raup and Crick (1979), the null hypothesis of randomness is rejected for some paired comparisons between localities representing different biofacies, as would be expected, but it is also rejected between some localities representing the same biofacies on different continents. Although the explanation of significantly dissimilar faunas can be accepted at 95% confidence levels in only a limited number of instances, there are dissimilarities of somewhat lesser magnitude among various paired comparisons. This seems to indicate that the Frasnian was not a time of conodont cosmopolitanism even within the Palmatolepis biofacies.


2005 ◽  
Vol 142 (6) ◽  
pp. 751-763 ◽  
Author(s):  
JEAN VANNIER ◽  
MARK WILLIAMS ◽  
J. JAVIER ALVARO ◽  
DANIEL VIZCAÏNO ◽  
SYLVIE MONCERET ◽  
...  

The Lower Cambrian Pardailhan Formation of the Montagne Noire (Southern France) has yielded a diverse fossil assemblage including bivalved arthropods (the bradoriids Monceretia erisylvia gen. et sp. nov., Cambria danvizcainia sp. nov. and Matthoria? sp., together with Isoxys sp.) associated with trilobites, hyolithids, inarticulate brachiopods, sponge spicules, ichnofossils and chancelloriid sclerites. This assemblage provides new evidence about the biodiversity of Early Cambrian marine communities in palaeocontinental Gondwana. The bradoriids are Cambriidae, a family with widespread distribution in offshore shelf marine environments during Early Cambrian times. The present study confirms the presence of cambriids within a subtropical latitudinal belt that encompasses Laurentia, Siberia and the Gondwanan margins from Southern France to South China. Although knowledge of the distribution of fossil cambriids is patchy, at the generic level they appear to be provincial, with Petrianna from Laurentia, Shangsiella and Auriculatella from South China, Cambria from Siberia and Gondwana (Armorica), and Monceretia gen nov. from Gondwana (Armorica). The presence of Isoxys in the Montagne-Noire confirms the cosmopolitan distribution of this genus in the Early and Middle Cambrian tropics. Cambriid bradoriids occupy a biostratigraphically narrow time interval, probably equating to part of the Atdabanian and Botomian stages of Russian terminology. Their presence in the Pardailhan Formation supports the notion of a Botomian age, determined from archaeocyathan evidence. The North American bradoriid genus Matthoria, also possibly present in the Pardailhan Formation, is reassigned to the Cambriidae.


Author(s):  
Robert T. Ryder ◽  
Christopher S. Swezey ◽  
Michael H. Trippi ◽  
Erika E. Lentz ◽  
K. Lee Avary ◽  
...  

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