Synapsid Burrows and Associated Trace Fossils in the Lower Jurassic Navajo Sandstone, Southeastern Utah, U.S.A., Indicates a Diverse Community Living in a Wet Desert Ecosystem

2011 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 299-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Riese ◽  
S. T. Hasiotis ◽  
G. P. Odier
Palaios ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (11) ◽  
pp. 331-338
Author(s):  
BRENT H. BREITHAUPT ◽  
MARJORIE A. CHAN ◽  
WINSTON M. SEILER ◽  
NEFFRA A. MATTHEWS

ABSTRACT Within the eolian Lower Jurassic Navajo Sandstone, exposed in the Coyote Buttes area of Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona, a site (informally known as the “Dinosaur Dance Floor”) is reinterpreted as an enigmatic, modified (possibly pedogenic) eolian surface that was exposed and further modified and accentuated by modern weathering and erosion. The resultant surface is covered with small, shallow potholes or weathering pits, with no direct evidence of dinosaur activity.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. e9789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph J. W. Sertich ◽  
Mark A. Loewen

1972 ◽  
Vol 49 ◽  
pp. 1-30
Author(s):  
R.G Bromley ◽  
U Asgaard

Freshwater Cruziana from the Upper Triassic of Jameson Land, East Greenland.An occurrence of well-preserved Cruziana problematica (Schindewolf) in Triassic red-beds in Jameson Land allows a more detailed morphological description of these trace fossils than has hitherto been possible. Rheotactic orientation of the traces indicates the direction of palaeocurrents in the area. C. problematica has previously been ascribed to branchiopod crustaceans, but the present material allows a narrowing of the field to Notostraca, and is supported by field observations of the living notostracan Lepidurus arcticus (Pallas).The burrows and microcoprolites of Glyphea rosenkrantzi, a Lower Jurassic palinuran crustacean from Jameson Land, East Greenland.In Toarcian sediments in Jameson Land, phosphatic concretions at certain horizons contain well preserved Glyphea rosenkrantzi. These crustaceans are confined to the fill of Thalassinoides burrow systems and it is therefore probable that the burrows were constructed by Glyphea. It is possibIe that associated microcoprolites of rod-like shape, without internal canals, may also be ascribed to the Glyphea.A large radiating burrow-system in Jurassic micaceous sandstones of Jameson Land, East Greenland. Large trace fossils consisting of more or less straight burrows radiating from a verticaI shaft are described from Jurassic sandstones of Jameson Land. The mica orientation of the sediment reveals the internal construction of the burrows and aids the interpretation of their mode of formation. The trace fossil has not been previously named and is designated Phoebichnus trochoides ichnogen. et ichnosp. nov.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 (12) ◽  
pp. 1275-1304
Author(s):  
Stephen T. Hasiotis ◽  
Marjorie A. Chan ◽  
Judith Totman Parrish

ABSTRACT A model-independent, sequence stratigraphic approach is used to define bounding surfaces in the Navajo Sandstone in order to identify an architectural hierarchy of genetically related sedimentary packages and the surfaces that bound them across multiple scales of both eolian and non-eolian components of an erg system. Seven bounding surfaces and eight depositional units are defined, from small to large scale. A lamina-deviation surface bounds wedge- and tabular-shaped sets of laminae and/or laminasets, separating those that have different angle orientations on the dune slipface. A bed-deviation surface bounds a succession of beds (crossbeds) that lie at different angles or orientations to bedding above, below, or adjacent to it. A bedset-deviation surface is curved, inclined, and/or wavy and irregular that bounds bedsets and their internal stratification patterns; that is, bed-deviation surfaces, and lamina-deviation surfaces. A simple surface is gently inclined with or without small, concave or convex segments that bound beds and bedsets. A composite surface is horizontal with or without concave, curved, or irregular portions of that surface. A complex surface is laterally extensive (∼ 1–10+ km) that regionally bounds and truncates underlying conterminous and interfingered eolian and non-eolian strata. An amalgamated surface is a regionally extensive (∼ 10 to 100s km) mappable unconformity, merged unconformities, and their laterally equivalent conformable surface that can exhibit local to regional pedogenic modification, lags, and significant (meters to 10s m) paleotopographic relief. The genetically related sedimentary packages typically bounded by like or higher-rank surfaces are defined as laminae, laminasets, bed, bedsets, and simple, composite, complex, and amalgamated units. Field relationships of strata and surfaces are key to reconstructing the interactions between eolian and non-eolian deposits and the processes they represent at the local, regional, and basin scale. This classification scheme can be applied to erg-system strata to fully integrate changes in diverse facies within and between contiguous deposits.


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