Early Permian organogenic buildups within the Northern part of Timan-Pechora basin

Author(s):  
N. V. Evdokimov ◽  
V. A. Zhemchugova

Lower Permian organogenic buildups within the Northern part of Timan-Pechora basin are mounds-type structures. They are characterized by an extremely irregular distribution of reservoirs which are linked to facial zones and genetic features of the deposits. Two types of buildups were distinguished qualified as microbial and skeletal mounds formed by different paleo-communities of benthic organisms. The composition and textural-structural features of prevailing limestones within these buildups there is a key to understand the distribution of reservoirs within the area of study.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
David S Berman ◽  
Stuart S. Sumida ◽  
Amy C. Henrici ◽  
Diane Scott ◽  
Robert R. Reisz ◽  
...  

A comprehensive description of the holotype skeleton is presented here for the first time of the lower Permian (Artinskian) reptile Eudibamus cursoris from the Bromacker locality of Germany since the brief description of the holotype in 2000. The holotype is essentially complete and is the only known bolosaurid represented by a well-preserved articulated skeleton. Included in the description here is a superbly preserved, partial, articulated second specimen of E. cursoris discovered at the same locality that includes a short portion of the vertebral column associated with the pelvis and right hindlimb. Descriptions of the holotype and new specimen add substantially to features of the skull and postcranium that not only confirm a bolosaurid assignment, but also add significantly to an already long list of structural features supporting an ability unique among Paleozoic vertebrates to reach relatively high bipedal and quadrupedal running speeds employing a parasagittal stride and digitigrade stance with the limbs held in a near vertical posture. Structural differences between the two specimens are restricted to the tarsi and are attributed to different ontogenetic stages of ossification, with the holotype representing a more juvenile individual, and the larger second specimen representing a more mature animal.


2011 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 471-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Jasper ◽  
Dieter Uhl ◽  
Margot Guerra-Sommer ◽  
Abdalla M. B Abu Hamad ◽  
Neli T. G Machado

Fossil charcoal has been discovered in the Faxinal Coalfield, Early Permian, Rio Bonito Formation, in the southernmost portion of the Paraná Basin, Brazil. Three types of pycnoxylic gymnosperm woods recovered from a single tonstein layer are described and confirm the occurrence of paleowildfire in this area. A decrease of the charcoal concentration from the base to the top within the tonstein layer indicates that the amount of fuel declined during the deposition probably due to the consumption of vegetation by the fire. The presence of inertinite in coals overlying and underlying the tonstein layer indicates that fire-events were not restricted to the ash fall interval. The integration of the new data presented in the current study with previously published data for the Faxinal Coalfield demonstrates that volcanic events that occurred in the surrounding areas can be identified as one potential source of ignition for the wildfires. The presence of charcoal in Permian sediments associated with coal levels at different localities demonstrates that wildfires have been relatively common events in the peat-forming environments in which the coal formation took place in the Paraná Basin.


1989 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin H. Stevens ◽  
Barbara Rycerski

Twenty-two species of Early Permian colonial rugose corals belonging to 12 genera from 10 locations in the Stikine River area in northwestern British Columbia, Canada, are described. These include three new species ofFomichevella(F. magna, F. southeri, F. bamberi); two species ofHeintzella; five species ofHeritschioides, of which three are new (H. bagleyae, H. garvinae, H. hoganae); two new species ofParaheritschioides(P. jennyi, P. wickenae); one new species questionably assigned toKleopatrina(K.?stikinensis); two new species ofPetalaxis(P. guaspariniae, P. neriae); and two new species ofLytvophyllum(L.?mongeri, L. wersoni). In addition, five new species assigned to five new genera are here namedEastonastraea complexa, Fedorowskiella simplex, Pararachnastraea lewisi, Stikineastraea thomasi, andWilsonastraea rigbyi.These corals occur in rocks forming part of the Stikine terrane, the largest tectonostratigraphic unit in western Canada. This coral fauna shows a very close affinity with that of the Lower Permian McCloud Limestone of the eastern Klamath Mountains of northern California, and there is some similarity to the Coyote Butte fauna of central Oregon. Several species compare most closely with species from Spitsbergen, but there are few similarities with any cratonal North American faunas and none with Tethyan faunas.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 131-131
Author(s):  
Peter F. Holterhoff

Cyclothems (fifth - order depositional sequences) are the fundamental stratigraphic motif of the Upper Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian of the North American mid - continent. Through this interval, sequences display an overall second order regression modulated by intermediate frequency sea-level fluctuations. Thus, shelfward incursions of offshore (basinal) facies are more extensive in the lower Upper Pennsylvanian, while merely shoaling facies characterize marine units of many higher sequences.Within basal Upper Pennsylvanian (Missourian) sequences, species of the Erisocrinacea are ubiquitous members of nearshore and offshore crinoid assemblages. However, the species Erisocrinus typus and Delocrinus subhemisphericus display significant ecophenotypic variation between facies: smaller mean and maximum size characterizes offshore/transgressive populations while larger size characterizes nearshore/regressive populations. It is proposed that these are hydrographically - controlled phenotypes: offshore, quiet bottom waters inhibit effective filtration, imposing a metabolic energy threshold beyond which larger morphologies are not viable while nearshore populations are able to assume larger body sizes.Shifting now to the Catacrinidae within the Erisocrinacea, as the frequency of interbasinal drowned shelf conditions waned through the Late Pennsylvanian, new species, inhabiting regressive facies, increased maximum body size and diversity for the family. Thus, lower Virgilian assemblages are highly variable in characteristic size, with smaller, ancestral D. subhemisphericus dominant in offshore facies while robust D. vulgatus, Pyndaxocrinus sp., and Arrectocrinus sp. dominate nearshore facies. Speciation may have involved the stabilization and subsequent diversification of the earlier nearshore phenotype.Through the remainder of the Virgilian and into the Early Permian, near the terminal late Early Permian regression, larger morphologies, represented by D. brownsvillensis, D. vastus, and A. abruptus, dominate midcontinent crinoid assemblages; smaller offshore species had been lost, thus increasing body size for the clade as a whole.Thus, it appears that the same parameters which controlled morphological expression at the fifth - order level (ecophenotypic variation) may also have acted at the second - order level (phylogenetic trend). The interrelationship between sub-cycle and super-cycle sea - level and metabolic viability is paramount to understanding potential morphologies for this clade. However, these factors may not have ultimately influenced clade diversity.


1989 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 919-930 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter W. Dalquest ◽  
M. John Kocurko ◽  
John V. Grimes

A newly discovered locality of aestivation burrow casts containing the lungfish, Gnathorhiza serrata, is reported from the early Permian Arroyo Formation of Wilbarger County, north-central Texas. Remains preserved in the burrow casts provide sections of mummified Gnathorhiza and new information about the postcranial skeleton of this fish. Scales of Gnathorhiza resemble those of the modern lungfishes such as Lepidosiren in their microanatomy. No traces of paddle-like pectoral or pelvic fins were found and paired fins of Gnathorhiza may have resembled those of Lepidosiren. The axial skeleton and median fins of Gnathorhiza seem to resemble those of Lepidosiren except that the tail area and caudal fin of Gnathorhiza were stout and strong rather than slender and tapering. Gnathorhiza, which aestivated tail-down in its burrow, may have required a stout tail for support.


2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 245-260
Author(s):  
V. A. Zhemchugova ◽  
N. V. Evdokimov ◽  
J. Poort ◽  
G. G. Akhmanov

1995 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 805-812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin H. Stevens

The discovery of a new locality yielding giant Guadalupian (Lower Permian) fusulinids in east-central Alaska extends the range of these forms much farther north than previously known, and into a tectonostratigraphic terrane from which they previously had not been reported. The number of areas from which giant parafusulinids are known in North America is thus raised to eight. Three of these localities are in rocks that previously had been referred to the allochthonous McCloud belt arc, and one, West Texas, is known to have been part of Paleozoic North America. Comparison of species from all areas suggests that there are two closely related species groups: one represented in Texas and Coahuila, and the other represented in Sonora, northern California, northeastern Washington, southern and northern British Columbia, Alaska, and apparently in Texas. These groups may differ because they are of slightly different ages or because interchange between the faunas of Texas–Coahuila area and the other regions was somewhat inhibited during the Early Permian.


1986 ◽  
Vol 123 (6) ◽  
pp. 673-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. M. Raven ◽  
Ben A. Van Der Pluijm

AbstractConodont colour alteration index (CAI) values from Upper Paleozoic rocks in the Cantabrian zone of northern Spain show that temperatures during Hercynian metamorphism locally exceeded 300 °C. Various temperature domains have been defined, which are generally separated by fundamental structures. These domains do not correspond with the tripartite subdivision based on stratigraphic analysis.The observed CAI values of conodonts are in general agreement with the mineral paragenesis. Areas with high CAI values display extensive alteration and mineralization, and where CAI values exceed 4–4.5 (>200 °C) slaty cleavage has developed.The Cantabrian zone is an area of very low grade metamorphism, where peak conditions were reached in Upper Carboniferous to Lower Permian times. The characteristics of the metamorphism and its spatial relationship with major faults suggest that fluids were the main source for regional heating and that fluid transport was focussed along crustal-scale structural features.The overall deformation regime in this part of the Variscan orogen of western Europe is interpreted to be large-scale transtension. This is in agreement with earlier proposed models for the formation of Upper Palaeozoic basins in this area.


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