scholarly journals TRACE FOSSILS DIDYMAULICHNUS CF. TIRASENSIS AND MONOMORPHICHNUS ISP. FROM THE ESTONIAN LOWER CAMBRIAN, WITH A DISCUSSION ON THE EARLY CAMBRIAN ICHNOCOENOSES OF BALTICA

2001 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
S Jensen ◽  
K Mens
1984 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Liñán ◽  
T. Palacios ◽  
A. Perejón

AbstractThis paper comprises the first palaeontological correlation between the Upper Proterozoic–Lower Cambrian Series of Ossa-Morena, Luso-Oriental-Alcúdica and Galaico-Castellana Zones of the Iberian Peninsula.The authors show the palaeontological events on acritarchs, stromatolites, cyanophyta, soft-bodied metazoa, trilobites, archaeocyathans and skeletal microfossils from three representative sequences of the above mentioned zones and discuss the position of the Precambrian–Cambrian boundary in the sequences. The Sierra de Córdoba general Series (Ossa-Morena Zone) has an erosive discontinuity between the rocks with the first record of Cambrian metazoan activity (Skolithos sp., Monomorphichnus sp., Phycodes pedum and Rusophycus sp.) and the rocks with a palynological association (Bavlinella faveolata, Protosphaeridium flexosum, Trachisphaeridium sp., aff. Octoedryxium truncatum, Phycomicetes? sp. and cf. Ooidium sp.) which suggests a Lower–Middle Vendian age. For this reason we suggest that the Precambrian–Cambrian boundary be placed at this unconformity.The upper part of the Sierra de Guadalupe Series (Luso-Oriental-Alcúdica Zone) includes detrital beds with Phycodes pedum, Planolites sp. and Treptichnus sp. which are also the first record of Cambrian metazoan activity. In the middle part of the sequences, acritarchs attributed to the genus Micrhystridium are found at the top of the Calcareous Beds. This is taken to indicate an early Cambrian age. Vendotaenids and Bavlinella faveolata are found in abundance, thus indicating a Late Vendian age for the middle part of this unit. Thus, we propose the Precambrian–Cambrian boundary be located in the upper part of the Calcareous Beds.In the Rio Uso Series (Galaico-Castellana Zone), the Azorejo Sandstones contain Rusophycus gr. radwanskii, Planolites sp. and Gordia sp. Trace fossils produced by trilobite-like arthropoda (Monomorphichnus) have been cited in the upper part of the underlying Pusa Shales. Moreover, Octoedryxium truncatum and Bavlinella faveolata are found in the lower part of this unit which suggest that the Precambrian–Cambrian boundary could be situated in the Pusa Shales.Calcareous microfossils related to annelid polychaetes are found associated with Upper Vendian acritarchs in the Calcareous Beds of Sierra de Guadalupe. They are the oldest record of skeletal metazoa in the Spanish Series.The medusoids found are associated with a Vendian flora and they are also the oldest non-skeletal metazoa record known in the Iberian Peninsula.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 731-740 ◽  
Author(s):  
James W. Hagadorn ◽  
Christopher M. Fedo ◽  
Ben M. Waggoner

Ediacara-type fossils are rare in the southwestern United States, and Cambrian occurrences of soft-bodied Ediacaran-type fossils are extremely rare. We report both discoidal and frondlike fossils comparable to Ediacaran taxa from the western edge of the Great Basin. We describe one specimen of a discoidal fossil, referred to the form species ?Tirasiana disciformis, from the upper member of the Lower Cambrian Wood Canyon Formation from the Salt Spring Hills, California. Two fragmentary specimens of frond-like soft-bodied fossils are described from the middle member of the Lower Cambrian Poleta Formation in the White Mountains, California, and the upper member of the Wood Canyon Formation in the southern Kelso Mountains, California. On the basis of similarities with fossils from the lower member of the Wood Canyon Formation and from the Spitzkopf Member of the Urusis Formation of Namibia, these specimens are interpreted as cf. Swartpuntia. All fossils were collected from strata containing diagnostic Early Cambrian body and trace fossils, and thus add to previous reports of complex Ediacaran forms in Cambrian marine environments. In this region, Swartpuntia persists through several hundred meters of section, spanning at least two trilobite zones.


1978 ◽  
Vol 115 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Brasier ◽  
R. A. Hewitt ◽  
C. J. Brasier

SummaryThe Hartshill Formation (c. 270 m) consists largely of shallow-water feldspathic sandstones and greywackes lying unconformably on Precambrian (Vendian?) volcanic rocks and below shales with the first olenellid trilobites. Five members are recognized. The Park Hill Member is conglomeratic and arkosic near the base, passing up into green-grey megarippled quartzites with some thick shale bands. The Tuttle Hill Member is more shaly and glauconitic with conspicuous bioturbation. The Jee's Member is of distinctly cross-laminated glauconitic, feldspathic greywackes and shales with numerous trace fossils. Conglomerates, shales, sandstones, phosphorites and limestones comprise the Home Farm Member, withadiverse Tommotiantype shelly fauna and stromatolites near the top. Massive arkoses and greywackes of the Woodlands Member yield similar shelly fossils in calcareous beds at the base and top while the overlying Purley Shale yields the first Lower Cambrian trilobites.


1988 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 54-54
Author(s):  
G Vidal ◽  
J.S Peel

Siliciclastic sediments of the Buen Formation of North Greenland yield the earliest Cambrian fossils known from North Greenland, with the exception of cyanobacteria described from dolomites of the underlying Portfjeld Formation (see Peel, this report). The fauna is dominated by olenellid and nevadiid trilobites indicating an Early Cambrian age (Poulsen, 1974; Blaker, this report) but hyolithids, bradoriids, sponges and other fossils also occur. Bergstrom & Peel (this report) described trace fossils from the Buen Formation. Of particular interest is the recent discovery of lightly skeletised arthropods comprising an assemblage similar to that of the Middle Cambrian Burgess shale of Canada (Conway Morris et al., 1987).


1987 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 898-926 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew H. Knoll ◽  
Keene Swett

Paleobiological studies of early metazoan evolution are critically dependent on the accurate stratigraphic subdivision and correlation of uppermost Proterozoic and Lower Cambrian sequences. Planktonic microfossils evolved rapidly during this period and are widely distributed and abundant in Vendian and Lower Cambrian rocks; therefore, they provide what is potentially one of the best means of correlating successions of this age. In Ny Friesland, Spitsbergen, tillite-bearing detrital rocks of the uppermost Proterozoic Polarisbreen Group are overlain without apparent unconformity by the Tokammane Formation, a tripartite lithologic sequence consisting of quartzarenites (Blårevbreen Member) overlain by dark shales with subordinate sandstone (Topiggane Member) and dolomites (Ditlovtoppen Member).Salterella, hyoliths, and other invertebrate remains occur in the upper part of the Tokammane succession; trace fossils are found in the Tokammane quartzarenites and shales, as well as in the uppermost few meters of the Polarisbreen sequence. Planktonic microfossils occur throughout the succession. They indicate that the Polarisbreen Group is Vendian in age and that a hiatus corresponding in time to the latest Vendian and (perhaps) earliest Cambrian coincides with the Polarisbreen/Tokammane boundary. Lower Topiggane shale samples contain acritarchs comparable to those found in the sub-HolmiaLontova Beds of Eastern Europe. Upper Topiggane samples contain diverse acritarch assemblages that indicate a lateHolmiaorProtolenusage, suggesting the presence of a second hiatus within the Tokammane Formation. Planktonic microfossils allow biostratigraphic correlation with other sequences both within (East Greenland) and between (East European Platform) paleocontinents. Like those from other areas, diversity trends exhibited by late Proterozoic and Early Cambrian acritarchs from Spitsbergen indicate a major Vendian episode of extinction followed by Early Cambrian rediversification of planktonic microfossils.


2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (11) ◽  
pp. 1273-1283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian B Skovsted ◽  
John S Peel ◽  
Christian J Atkins

The cap-shaped Early Cambrian fossil Triplicatella, previously known only from Australia, is reported from the upper Lower Cambrian of North and North-East Greenland, western Newfoundland, and Siberia. The occurrence of Triplicatella in Laurentia strengthens faunal ties between Laurentia and the Australian margin of Gondwana in late Early Cambrian times and supports hypotheses advocating the close proximity for the two palaeocontinents. Two new species, Triplicatella sinuosa n. sp., and T. peltata n. sp. are described, morphological details of which help elucidate the functional morphology and taxonomic affinity of the group. Three opercular types attributable to Triplicatella are left in open taxonomy. The postulated affinity of Triplicatella to hyoliths is confirmed, although the genus can not be placed within either of the two orders of hyoliths currently recognized.


1988 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 43-53
Author(s):  
J Bergström ◽  
J.S Peel

Rusophyciform and cruzianaeform trace fossils are described from Lower Cambrian siliciciastic shelf deposits in North-West and North Greenland. Cruziana cf. C. dispar Linnarsson, 1869 is reported from the Dallas Bugt Formation of Inglefield Land while a new ichnospecies, Rusophycus marginatus, occurs in the Buen Formation of Peary Land and in the equivalent Humboldt Formation of Daugaard-Jensen Land. These species show no similarity to the Cruziana sp. previously described from East Greenland. The occurrence of C. cf. C. dispar could indicate some similarity in Cambrian trace fossil 'ichnofaunas' between Greenland and Europe but available material is insufficient to ciarify this relationship.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (5) ◽  
pp. 858-878 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Westrop ◽  
Ed Landing

The Hanford Brook Formation, one of the classic Cambrian units of Avalonian North America, contains at least eight species of endemic trilobites, including Berabichia milleri Westrop n. sp., that are assigned to seven genera. The vertical succession of faunas is far more complex than has been recognized previously, with each member containing a lithofacies-specific assemblage. These are, in ascending order: a bradoriid-linguloid Association without trilobites in the nearshore St. Martin's Member, a Protolenus Association in dysaerobic siltstones and sandstones of the Somerset Street Member, and a Kingaspidoides-Berabichia Association in hummocky cross-stratified sandstones of the Long Island Member that overlie a parasequence boundary at Hanford Brook. Due to the breakdown of biogeographic barriers in the late Early Cambrian, two new species-based zones, the Protolenus elegans and Kingaspidoides cf. obliquoculatus zones, share trilobite genera with the Tissafinian Stage of Morocco. This generic similarity has been the basis for correlation of this upper Lower Cambrian interval on the Avalon continent with the West Gondwanan lowest Middle Cambrian. However, the clear facies control on the occurrence of genera in the Hanford Brook Formation and the presence of an abrupt faunal break and unconformity at the base of the Tissafinian in Morocco makes this correlation questionable. The Hanford Brook Formation may represent a late Early Cambrian interval unknown in Gondwana. Sequence-stratigraphic criteria even raise the possibility that the Protolenus Association is the biofacies equivalent of Callavia broeggeri Zone faunas of the Brigus Formation of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and Massachusetts.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 349-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
James W. Hagadorn ◽  
Ben Waggoner

Ediacaran fossils from the southwestern Great Basin may help constrain regional Vendian-Cambrian biostratigraphy and provide biogeographic links between facies in this region and elsewhere. Locally, trace fossils suggest the Vendian-Cambrian boundary occurs within or below the upper third of the lower member of the Wood Canyon Formation. Ediacaran soft-bodied and tubular fossils, including the frondlike fossil Swartpuntia and tubular, mineralized or agglutinated fossils similar to Archaeichnium Cloudina Corumbella, and Onuphionella occur in the lowermost Wood Canyon Formation. Discoidal forms referred to Nimbia occur in both the lowermost Wood Canyon Formation and the underlying strata of the Stirling Quartzite. These fossils occur directly below Lower Cambrian trace fossils, including Treptichnus pedum, and confirm the persistence of the Ediacaran biota to near the base of the Cambrian. These faunas may also help strengthen previously proposed correlation schemes between the two main facies belts of the southwestern Great Basin (the Death Valley and White-Inyo facies), because a nearly identical Vendian-lowest Cambrian succession of faunas occurs in both regions. Lastly, lack of cosmopolitan Ediacaran faunas in these strata suggests a paleobiogeographic link between the southwestern U.S. and southern Africa in Vendian time.


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