scholarly journals Early Ordovician trilobites from the Wandel Valley Formation, eastern North Greenland

1986 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 15-25
Author(s):  
R.A Fortey

A small trilobite fauna is described from the Wandel Valley Formation of Kronprins Christian land, eastern North Greenland. It has a specific composition identical to the fauna from the Catoche Formation, western Newfoundland, which is typical of the shallow water bathyurid biofacies of the eastern part of the Ordovician Laurentian palaeocontinent. The fauna is of early Ordovician age, trilobite Zone H, equivalent to the early Arenig.

1990 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 11-32
Author(s):  
R. A. Fortey ◽  
]. S. Peel

A well-preserved, shallow water bathyurid trilobite fauna of early Ordovician age, and associated gastropods and an undetermined hyolith are described from the Poulsen Cliff Formation of Washington Land, western North Greenland. Two new bathyurid species, Licnocephala sminue and Pe/tabellia elegans, and a new gastropod species, Plethospira(?) floweri, are described. Biolgina Maximova is considered a junior subjective synonym of Peltabellia Whittington. The distribution of the genus is an example of close relationship between shallow water trilobite faunas of Laurentia and the North-east Siberian platform in the early Ordovician.


1989 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 5-15
Author(s):  
R.A Fortey ◽  
J.S Peel

The Christian Elv Formation (Early Ordovician) of Daugaard-Jensen Land, western North Greenland, is formally proposed and recognised from southern Hall Land, in the east, to western Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic Islands, to the west. The formation in its type section includes a shallow water trilobite fauna suggesting a mid-Tremadoc age; conodonts indicate the Rossodus manitouensis Zone af the North American Midcontinent Realm. Two species af hystricurid trilobites are present, of which one, Hystricurus scrofulosus, is dcscribed as a new species. The distribution of Hystricurus followed the early Ordovician palaeo-equator and was not confined by palaeocontinental boundaries. Paraplethopeltis is considered to be a subgcnus af Hystricurus.


Author(s):  
Jon R. Ineson ◽  
John S. Peel

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Ineson, J. R., & Peel, J. S. (1997). Cambrian shelf stratigraphy of North Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 173, 1-120. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v173.5024 _______________ The Lower Palaeozoic Franklinian Basin is extensively exposed in northern Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Islands. For much of the early Palaeozoic, the basin consisted of a southern shelf, bordering the craton, and a northern deep-water trough; the boundary between the shelf and the trough shifted southwards with time. In North Greenland, the evolution of the shelf during the Cambrian is recorded by the Skagen Group, the Portfjeld and Buen Formations and the Brønlund Fjord, Tavsens Iskappe and Ryder Gletscher Groups; the lithostratigraphy of these last three groups forms the main focus of this paper. The Skagen Group, a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic shelf succession of earliest Cambrian age was deposited prior to the development of a deep-water trough. The succeeding Portfjeld Formation represents an extensive shallow-water carbonate platform that covered much of the shelf; marked differentiation of the shelf and trough occurred at this time. Following exposure and karstification of this platform, the shelf was progressively transgressed and the siliciclastics of the Buen Formation were deposited. From the late Early Cambrian to the Early Ordovician, the shelf showed a terraced profile, with a flat-topped shallow-water carbonate platform in the south passing northwards via a carbonate slope apron into a deeper-water outer shelf region. The evolution of this platform and outer shelf system is recorded by the Brønlund Fjord, Tavsens Iskappe and Ryder Gletscher Groups. The dolomites, limestones and subordinate siliciclastics of the Brønlund Fjord and Tavsens Iskappe Groups represent platform margin to deep outer shelf environments. These groups are recognised in three discrete outcrop belts - the southern, northern and eastern outcrop belts. In the southern outcrop belt, from Warming Land to south-east Peary Land, the Brønlund Fjord Group (Lower-Middle Cambrian) is subdivided into eight formations while the Tavsens Iskappe Group (Middle Cambrian - lowermost Ordovician) comprises six formations. In the northern outcrop belt, from northern Nyeboe Land to north-west Peary Land, the Brønlund Fjord Group consists of two formations both defined in the southern outcrop belt, whereas a single formation makes up the Tavsens Iskappe Group. In the eastern outcrop area, a highly faulted terrane in north-east Peary Land, a dolomite-sandstone succession is referred to two formations of the Brønlund Fjord Group. The Ryder Gletscher Group is a thick succession of shallow-water, platform interior carbonates and siliciclastics that extends throughout North Greenland and ranges in age from latest Early Cambrian to Middle Ordovician. The Cambrian portion of this group between Warming Land and south-west Peary Land is formally subdivided into four formations.The Lower Palaeozoic Franklinian Basin is extensively exposed in northern Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Islands. For much of the early Palaeozoic, the basin consisted of a southern shelf, bordering the craton, and a northern deep-water trough; the boundary between the shelf and the trough shifted southwards with time. In North Greenland, the evolution of the shelf during the Cambrian is recorded by the Skagen Group, the Portfjeld and Buen Formations and the Brønlund Fjord, Tavsens Iskappe and Ryder Gletscher Groups; the lithostratigraphy of these last three groups forms the main focus of this paper. The Skagen Group, a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic shelf succession of earliest Cambrian age was deposited prior to the development of a deep-water trough. The succeeding Portfjeld Formation represents an extensive shallow-water carbonate platform that covered much of the shelf; marked differentiation of the shelf and trough occurred at this time. Following exposure and karstification of this platform, the shelf was progressively transgressed and the siliciclastics of the Buen Formation were deposited. From the late Early Cambrian to the Early Ordovician, the shelf showed a terraced profile, with a flat-topped shallow-water carbonate platform in the south passing northwards via a carbonate slope apron into a deeper-water outer shelf region. The evolution of this platform and outer shelf system is recorded by the Brønlund Fjord, Tavsens Iskappe and Ryder Gletscher Groups. The dolomites, limestones and subordinate siliciclastics of the Brønlund Fjord and Tavsens Iskappe Groups represent platform margin to deep outer shelf environments. These groups are recognised in three discrete outcrop belts - the southern, northern and eastern outcrop belts. In the southern outcrop belt, from Warming Land to south-east Peary Land, the Brønlund Fjord Group (Lower-Middle Cambrian) is subdivided into eight formations while the Tavsens Iskappe Group (Middle Cambrian - lowermost Ordovician) comprises six formations. In the northern outcrop belt, from northern Nyeboe Land to north-west Peary Land, the Brønlund Fjord Group consists of two formations both defined in the southern outcrop belt, whereas a single formation makes up the Tavsens Iskappe Group. In the eastern outcrop area, a highly faulted terrane in north-east Peary Land, a dolomite-sandstone succession is referred to two formations of the Brønlund Fjord Group. The Ryder Gletscher Group is a thick succession of shallow-water, platform interior carbonates and siliciclastics that extends throughout North Greenland and ranges in age from latest Early Cambrian to Middle Ordovician. The Cambrian portion of this group between Warming Land and south-west Peary Land is formally subdivided into four formations.


1988 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 61-92
Author(s):  
J.S Peel ◽  
M.P Smith

Members are formally described within the Wandel Valley Formation (Early - Middle Ordovician) of the Ryder Gletscher Group in central and eastem North Greenland. In Peary Land the names Pyramideplateau Member (the combined lower and middle informal members of previous usage) and Vestervig Elv Member (the upper member) are proposed. In Kronprins Christian Land, the Alexandrine Bjerge Member (new) overlies the previously named Danmarks Fjord and Amdrup Members. Conodont studies, supported by the macrofauna, indicate that the Pyramideplateau, Danmarks Fjord and Amdrup Members are of late Canadian (Early Ordovician) age. The Canadian-Whiterockian boundary lies within the lowermost part of the Vestervig Elv and Alexandrine Bjerge Members. The top of the former is of earliest Late Whiterockian age while the Alexandrine Bjerge Member only extends into the late Middle Whiterockian. The members of the Wandel Valley Formation are correlated with coeval successions in western North Greenland, East Greenland, the Canadian Arctic Islands and Svalbard.


1986 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 27-37
Author(s):  
J.R Ineson ◽  
J.S Peel ◽  
M.P Smith

The name Sjælland Fjelde Formation is introduced for a varied sequence of shallow-water platform dolomites and dolomitic limestones, about 105 m in thickness, in Kronprins Christian Land, eastern North Greenland. The new formation lies between the previously described Wandel Valley and Børglum River Formations. Conodont faunas indicate that the Sjælland Fjelde Formation is of Middle to earliest Late Whiterockian (early Middle Ordovician) age and that it can be eorrelated with the upper part of the Wandel Valley Formation of Peary Land to the north-west.


1980 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 68-68
Author(s):  
J.S Peel

The name Ceratopea is generally associated with a horn or claw-shaped operculum locally common in late Early Ordovician carbonates, the parent gastropod shell being much less well known (Yochelson & Bridge, 1958; Yochelson, 1979). Ceratopea is recorded from both North and East Greenland. Yochelson & Peel (1975) described C. ankylosa and C. unguis from the Wandel Valley Formation of Peary Land, eastem North Greenland, and the latter species also occurs in the Nunatami Formation of Washington Land, some 600 km to the west (Peel & Yochelson, 1979). In 1964, Yochelson described two species of Ceratopea from the Narwhale Sound Formation of East Greenland, one in open nomenclature and the second, a new species to which he gave the name C. billingsi.


1981 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
pp. 1-46
Author(s):  
A.R Palmer ◽  
J.S Peel

Twenty-five species of trilobites are described, some in open nomenclature. They represent four faunules of Dresbachian age and one faunule of possibie pre-Dresbachian age from the lower 150 m of the Cass Fjord Formation in Daugaard-Jensen Land, western North Greenland. The Cass Fjord Formation ranges in age from Middle Cambrian-Early Ordovician, although until recently it was widely assumed to be entirely of Ordovician age. All the trilobites are typical North American endemic forms. New taxa include: Bonneterrina greenlandica n. sp., Prolonchocephalus spinosus n. gen. n. sp., Kingstonia peltate n.sp., and Terranovella arcuata n. sp. Biogeographic affinities of the older faunules are with faunas of the inner part of the carbonate belt of the Cordilleran region, while the younger faunules have affinities with faunas from the outer(?) part of the carbonate belt in the northern Appalachian region. Evidence of extension of the Dresbachian-Franconian cratonic unconformity to western North Greenland is presented and the problem of repetition of trilobites in the crisis fauna at the base of the Pterocephaliid biomere is discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 925-947 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Franco Tortello ◽  
Susana B. Esteban

The upper part of the Santa Rosita Formation (Ordovician, Tremadocian) in the Nazareno area, Cordillera Oriental, northwestern Argentina, records the vertical passage of high-energy, shallow water platform environments to offshore settings. Eighteen trilobite species are described from this locality for the first time. Although the taxa from the lower part of the succession (Leptoplastidessp.,Asaphellussp.) are scarce and non-age diagnostic, those from the upper part include diverse assemblages partially assigned to the late TremadocianNotopeltis orthometopaZone. Systematic descriptions of several species (Geragnostus nesossiiHarrington and Leanza,G. callaveiformisHarrington and Leanza,Asaphellus jujuanusHarrington,Notopeltis orthometopa[Harrington],Mekynophrys nannaHarrington,Ceratopyge forficuloidesHarrington and Leanza,Apatokephalus tibicenPřibyl and Vanĕk) are improved, the genusNileusDalman (includingN. australisn. sp.) is first reported from the Tremadocian of western Gondwana, and new species ofAsaphellusCallaway (A. nazarenensisn. sp.),ConophrysCallaway, andApatokephalusBrøgger are described. The trilobites have their closest affinities with faunas from Norway and Sweden.Notopeltis orthometopaandMekynophrys nannaare restricted to the uppermost part of the succession, well above the first records of most other trilobites recognized.


1986 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 7-13
Author(s):  
M.P Smith ◽  
J.S Peel

Conodonts of late Early Ordovician age (late Canadian, early-middle Arenigian) are identified from the Danmarks Fjord Member of the Wandel Valley Formation at its type locality near the head of Danmark Fjord, eastern North Greenland. The identifications confirm recent suggestions of an Early Ordovician age for the member made on lithostratigraphic grounds, and refute earlier opinions that the dolomite was probably of Early Cambrian age.


Author(s):  
D. M. Williams

ABSTRACTIn the W of Ireland the Ordovician rocks of South Mayo and Clew Bay are now juxtaposed but a comparison of the sedimentary histories of these two sequences shows that they accumulated in basins which were probably separated during most of their history. The large amount of terrigenous detritus present in the Arenig to Llanvirn elements of the South Mayo succession is not manifest in that of Clew Bay until the Llandeilo/Caradoc, by which time sedimentation in South Mayo had ceased. A comparison of the South Mayo Ordovician with that of Girvan in Scotland demonstrates that both sequences had a similar provenance. This source contained an ophiolite, granites and some (probably pre-Dalradian) metamorphic rocks. Sediment dispersal directions for the two sequences are opposite in sense, being primarily northward in South Mayo and southward at Girvan. The two stratigraphies indicate that basement subsidence behaviour in South Mayo was virtually the opposite of that at Girvan where initial shallow water sedimentation was rapidly succeeded by deep water environments at the end of the Llanvirn. The two basins may thus have been marginal to a single Ordovician arc complex. One reason for the opposite sense of basin subsidence may lie in the suggested reversal of subduction polarity during the Ordovician. In this scenario the South Mayo basin may be envisaged as lying to the N of a northward-facing arc during the early Ordovician. A new, northward, subduction direction instigated during the Llanvirn, resulted in a fore-arc basin at Girvan complemented by a closing back-arc basin in South Mayo.


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