18 results on '"Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos"'
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2. Polar gigantism and remarkable taxonomic longevity in new palaeoscolecid worms from the Late Ordovician Tafilalt Lagerstätte of Morocco.
- Author
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García-Bellido, Diego C. and Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
GONDWANA (Continent) ,IRON oxides ,LONGEVITY ,TRILOBITES ,MUDSTONE ,BRYOZOA - Abstract
The Late Ordovician Tafilalt Biota of the Moroccan Anti-Atlas includes a diverse range of soft-bodied organisms, including palaeoscolecids, paropsonemid eldonioids, graptolites and cheloniellid arthropods, as well as a rich assemblage of mineralised taxa, among them conulariids, trilobites and echinoderms, often found as articulated skeletons. The new fossil locality, not far from the original Bou Nemrou site, has produced two new palaeoscolecid taxa, the new genus and species Anguiscolex africanus and the new species Wronascolex superstes. They are preserved as compression fossils in fine-grained mudstones, where the original phosphatic sclerites have been diagenetically substituted by pyrite and later weathered to iron oxides, giving them a characteristic rusty colour. This area of Gondwana was located adjacent to the Late Ordovician South Pole and both Anguiscolex africanus gen. et sp. nov. and Wronascolex superstes sp. nov. present a degree of polar gigantism, which has been suggested for other taxa in such high palaeolatitudes such as bryozoans, conulariids, trilobites and radiodonts. Lastly, the occurrence of Wronascolex extends the distribution of this typically Cambrian taxon into the Late Ordovician, indicating a total range for the genus exceeding 60 million years, more than any other palaeoscolecid genus described to date. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. The Sommerodde (Telychian, Silurian) positive carbon isotope excursion: why is its magnitude so variable?
- Author
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Loydell, David K., Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, and Štorch, Petr
- Subjects
CARBON isotopes ,MUDSTONE ,ORGANIC compounds - Abstract
The Sommerodde positive organic carbon isotope excursion (SOCIE) within the Oktavites spiralis graptolite Biozone (Telychian, Silurian) was first identified in the Sommerodde-1 core, Bornholm, Denmark, where it is the largest positive excursion within the Upper Ordovician–lower Silurian part of the core. Other published occurrences of the SOCIE are discussed here, including new δ
13 Corg data from the Jabalón River section, Corral de Calatrava, central Spain, where the SOCIE is only a very minor positive excursion. Very unusually, the SOCIE is best developed in deeper water settings, contrary to the typical pattern of declining excursion magnitude offshore. In the Sommerodde-1 core (Bornholm), and where it has been tentatively identified in the Vežaičiai-2 core (Lithuania), the SOCIE is developed in pale, organic-poor mudstones. It is considered likely that the magnitude of the SOCIE has been enhanced in the Sommerodde-1 core record by a change in organic matter composition in the deep-marine environment that did not have such a significant effect in shallower marine environments. Supplementary material: A table of organic carbon isotope data from the Jabalón River section, Corral de Calatrava, central Spain is available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6769514 Thematic collection: This article is part of the Chemical Evolution of the Mid-Paleozoic Earth System and Biotic Response collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/topic/collections/chemical-evolution-of-the-mid-paleozoic-earth-system [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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4. Filling the Silurian gap of solutan echinoderms with the description of new species of Dehmicystis from Spain.
- Author
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ZAMORA, SAMUEL and GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS
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ECHINODERMATA ,SPECIES ,DETRITUS ,SEDIMENTS ,SEA urchins - Abstract
Solutans were among the most enigmatic pre-radial and asymmetric echinoderms. A new species Dehmicystis ariasi sp. nov. is described from the upper part of the Llagarinos Formation, lower Ludlow (Silurian) of Northwest Spain. This is the first solutan formally described from Iberia and the first from the Silurian worldwide. Dehmicystis was previously known based on a small number of poorly preserved specimens from the Emsian, Lower Devonian Hunsrück Slate of Germany. New observations based on the newly studied material suggest that Dehmicystis displayed a feeding appendage facing towards the substrate, and the periproct on the opposite face of the theca. Comparisons with other solutans and new data suggest that Dehmicystis was a detritus feeder that moved over the substrate capturing organic particles from the sediment with a single feeding arm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. New fossil assemblages from the Early Ordovician Fezouata Biota.
- Author
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Saleh, Farid, Vaucher, Romain, Vidal, Muriel, Hariri, Khadija El, Laibl, Lukáš, Daley, Allison C., Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, Candela, Yves, Harper, David A. T., Ortega-Hernández, Javier, Ma, Xiaoya, Rida, Ariba, Vizcaïno, Daniel, and Lefebvre, Bertrand
- Subjects
BIOTIC communities ,FOSSILS ,LIFE history theory ,SHALE - Abstract
The Fezouata Biota (Morocco) is a unique Early Ordovician fossil assemblage. The discovery of this biota revolutionized our understanding of Earth's early animal diversifications—the Cambrian Explosion and the Ordovician Radiation—by suggesting an evolutionary continuum between both events. Herein, we describe Taichoute, a new fossil locality from the Fezouata Shale. This locality extends the temporal distribution of fossil preservation from this formation into the upper Floian, while also expanding the range of depositional environments to more distal parts of the shelf. In Taichoute, most animals were transported by density flows, unlike the in-situ preservation of animals recovered in previously investigated Fezouata sites. Taichoute is dominated by three-dimensionally preserved, and heavily sclerotized fragments of large euarthropods—possibly representing nektobenthic/nektic bivalved taxa and/or hurdiid radiodonts. Resolving whether this dominance reflects a legitimate aspect of the original ecosystem or a preservational bias requires an in-depth assessment of the environmental conditions at this site. Nevertheless, Taichoute provides novel preservational and palaeontological insights during a key evolutionary transition in the history of life on Earth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Pentaradiate diploporites (Echinodermata) from the Spanish Middle Ordovician and their taxonomic significance.
- Author
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PAUL, Christopher R. C. and GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, Juan Carlos
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ECHINODERMATA classification ,ORAL interpretation ,ECHINODERMATA ,ORDOVICIAN-Silurian extinction event ,ECHINODERMATA populations ,SUTURES ,PERISTOME (Botany) ,SUTURING ,CARPENTERS - Abstract
Copyright of Spanish Journal of Palaeontology is the property of Socieadad Espanola de Paleontologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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7. A graptolite-rich Ordovician–Silurian boundary section in the south-central Pyrenees, Spain: stratigraphical and palaeobiogeographical significance.
- Author
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ŠTORCH, PETR, BERNAL, JOSEP ROQUÉ, and GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS
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GRAPTOLITES ,CARBON isotopes ,BIOSTRATIGRAPHY - Abstract
An Ordovician–Silurian boundary section marked by an uninterrupted, relatively high rate of black shale sedimentation and abundant, diverse graptolites is described from the south-central Pyrenees. The structurally simple Estana section comprises the uppermost part of the quartzite-dominated Bar Formation and overlying black shales of late Hirnantian and early Rhuddanian age, which have been dated by graptolites to the upper Metabolograptus persculptus and lower–middle Akidograptus ascensus–Parakidograptus acuminatus biozones. Due to the absence of M. persculptus , a Metabolograptus parvulus Biozone correlative with the upper part of the persculptus Biozone is recognized below the lowest occurrence of akidograptids, which indicate the base of the Silurian System. The graptolite fauna comprise 27 species including Normalograptus minor , N. lubricus , N. rhizinus , Hirsutograptus , Korenograptus bifurcus , K. bicaudatus, K. lanpherei and Nd. shanchongensis , most of which were formerly considered to be endemic to the low-latitude palaeobiogeographical province of China, Siberia and northern North America. Two new species, N. baridaensis and N. ednae , are described. The succession of graptolite assemblages in the Estana section, and occurrence of several cosmopolitan taxa in its parvulus and lower ascensus – acuminatus biozones that are unknown elsewhere in peri-Gondwanan Europe, suggest that strata immediately surrounding the Ordovician–Silurian boundary may be absent, highly condensed or oxic and barren of graptolites in other sections of northwestern peri-Gondwana. Common graptolite synrhabdosomes and abnormal rhabdosomes may indicate some environmental stress in the parvulus Biozone, although the rather uniform black shale lithology, total organic carbon content and δ
13 Corg values suggest uninterrupted sedimentation under stable, anoxic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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8. Evolution of trilobite enrolment during the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: insights from kinematic modelling.
- Author
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Esteve, Jorge, Gutiérrez‐Marco, Juan Carlos, Rubio, Pedro, and Rábano, Isabel
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ORDOVICIAN radiation (Evolution) ,TRILOBITES ,CAMBRIAN explosion (Evolution) ,ARTHROPODA ,PHACOPIDA - Abstract
The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) represents a diversification at lower taxonomic levels of most body plans that had appeared during the Cambrian explosion. Among trilobites, several novelties related to enrolment evolved during the GOBE. A kinematic analysis by means of 3D modelling of some new enrolment types shows no relationship with those of the Cambrian trilobites. While some structures emerged for the first time in Ordovician trilobites (e.g. articulations and panderian organs), other structures (e.g. anterior and posterior arch in head and tail) appear earlier in Cambrian trilobites. Our results suggest that the evolution of some groups was clearly rooted in the Cambrian explosion while others clearly appeared during the GOBE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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9. The dawn of a dynasty: life strategies of Cambrian and Ordovician brachiopods.
- Author
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Topper, Timothy P., Zhang, Zhifei, Gutiérrez‐Marco, Juan Carlos, and Harper, David A. T.
- Subjects
BRACHIOPODA ,CAMBRIAN explosion (Evolution) ,PALAEOCOPIDA ,ORDOVICIAN-Silurian extinction event ,MARINE ecology - Abstract
Brachiopods are among the first animal phyla to emerge from the Cambrian Explosion, rapidly diversifying to all major palaeocontinental blocks within 20 million years. The group underwent another steep rise in diversity during the Ordovician, and their relative abundance and diversity made them one of the most successful invertebrate groups during the entire Palaeozoic. During this time, brachiopods lived in a range of environments and represented a significant component of marine ecosystems, yet information regarding their modes of life and ecology is somewhat limited. Recent studies, primarily from the Chengjiang and Burgess Shale Lagerstätten, have revealed that by the Middle Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) brachiopods from across the phylum had already developed a range of ecological strategies and life modes. Cambrian brachiopods occupied distinct trophic niches on soft and hard substrates and exhibited at least five types of lifestyles: pedicle attachment, pedicle anchoring, cemented, free‐lying and semi‐infaunal. Comparisons with Ordovician benthic assemblages show that despite the explosion of brachiopod taxa witnessed in the Ordovician, with the exception of the appearance of burrowing brachiopods, life strategies of brachiopods remained largely the same. Indicating that the majority of life modes observed in brachiopods had rapidly evolved and was already in place prior to the Great Ordovician Biodiversity Event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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10. The Bohemo-Iberian regional chronostratigraphical scale for the Ordovician System and palaeontological correlations within South Gondwana.
- Author
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Gutiérrez‐Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, Artur A., García‐Bellido, Diego C., and Rábano, Isabel
- Subjects
ORDOVICIAN paleoecology ,ORDOVICIAN Period ,PALEOZOIC paleoecology ,ORDOVICIAN radiation (Evolution) ,BENTHIC animals - Abstract
The Bohemo-Iberian regional scale for South Gondwana, involving the 'Mediterranean Province', comprises five regional stages (Arenigian, Oretanian, Dobrotivian, Berounian and Kralodvorian) plus the global Tremadocian and Hirnantian. The predominance of shallow-water taxa in those high-latitude faunas imposes serious difficulties for correlating the regional succession with the formal global chronostratigraphy because of the almost total absence of the key graptolites and conodonts defining the base of the standard series, stages and stage slices. Instead, the abundant benthic faunas (trilobites, brachiopods, molluscs, echinoderms) of South Gondwanan origin largely dominated in the area from the middle Darriwilian to the late Katian. The poleward faunal migration of originally Avalonian, Baltic, Laurentian and even Asiatic taxa during the Boda Event of global warming progressively ends with the endemicity in the region, where the ensuing benthic assemblages were severely affected by the Hirnantian glaciation. The regional scale significantly improves the precision of correlations between Ordovician strata from SW and central Europe, North Africa and a large part of the Middle East. An updated record of palaeontological data from areas where Mediterranean faunas remain practically unknown, or are still poorly investigated, is also included. Palaeobiogeographical relationships based on the distribution of faunas across South Gondwana are suggested as an improvement for positioning many territories in modern palaeogeographical reconstructions and offer a constructive approach to problems related to the pre-Variscan and pre-Alpine orogenic puzzles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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11. New Late Ordovician cornulitids from Peru.
- Author
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VINN, OLEV and GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS
- Subjects
BRACHIOPOD shells ,BRACHIOPODA ,STROPHOMENIDA ,CHONETIDAE - Abstract
Two new species of cornulitids, Cornulites zatoni sp. nov. and Cornulites vilcae sp. nov., are described from the lower part (Sandbian) of the Calapuja Formation of south-western Peru. Late Ordovician cornulitid diversities of Peru (Gondwana) and Estonia (Baltica) are similar. Aggregative growth form dominates among the cornulitids of the Sandbian of Peru. Multiple oriented C. zatoni sp. nov. specimens on a strophomenid brachiopod likely represent a syn vivo encrustation. Cornulitids from the Sandbian of Peru differ from those known from the Sandbian of Baltica. C. zatoni sp. nov. possibly also occurs in the Late Ordovician of Laurentia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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12. Ordovician graptolites from the basal part of the Palaeozoic transgressive sequence in the Karadere area, Zonguldak Terrane, NW Turkey.
- Author
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Göncöglu, M. Cemal, Sachanski, Valeri, Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, and Okuyucu, Cengiz
- Subjects
GRAPTOLITES ,GEOLOGICAL formations ,ORDOVICIAN stratigraphic geology ,ORDOVICIAN Period - Abstract
The Karadere area to the east of Safranbolu in NW Anatolia is one of the very few localities in Turkey where the contact between the Cadomian basement and the Lower Palaeozoic transgressive succession is well exposed. The Ordovician graptolite Rhabdinopora flabelliformis (Eichwald) ssp. was found in the basal part of the Bakacak Formation, indicating an Early to early Late Tremadocian age for the beginning of the Palaeozoic transgression in the Zonguldak terrane. A few metres above this occurrence, another horizon contains Paradelograptus cf. antiquus (T. S. Hall), which mainly ranges into the Late Tremadocian. Higher up in the Ordovician succession, a new graptolite bed confirms an early Darriwilian (Dw1) age for the middle part of the Karadere Formation with the occurrence of the biozonal index Levisograptus austrodentatus (Harris & Keble) and the first record of Tetragraptus cor (Strandmark) in the area. The palaeobiogeographic distribution of these Karadere fossils is in agreement with a peri-Gondwanan affinity of the Zonguldak Terrane of the Pontides, NW Anatolia, during the Early-Middle Ordovician. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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13. First Furongian (late Cambrian) trilobites from the Cantabrian Zone (north-western Spain).
- Author
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ACEŇOLAZA, GUILLERMO F., ALBANI, ROBERTO, BERNÁRDEZ, ENRIQUE, GARCÍA-BELLIDO, DIEGO C., GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS, RÁBANO, ISABEL, and SÁ, ARTUR A.
- Subjects
CRUSTACEA ,TRILOBITES ,ACRITARCHS ,TRACE fossils ,ORDOVICIAN paleontology ,CANTABRIANS - Abstract
The first Furongian trilobites are described herein from the Cambrian of the Cantabrian Zone, NW Spain. They were collected during the construction of the "Túnel Ordovícico del Fabar" from the shales of "El Fabar Beds" in the La Matosa member of the Barrios Formation. The assemblage includes the aphelaspidine genus Maladioidella, with a specimen identified as M. cf. colcheni, a species previously known from Sierra de la Demanda (Spain), and possibly Sardinia and Oman. Fragments of an indeterminate olenid trilobite and phyllocarid crustaceans have also been recorded. Based on the acritarch assemblage, these beds are considered as late Jiangshanian or earliest Stage 10 of the Cambrian System. The ichnofossil Cruziana semiplicata has also been collected in the tunnel from the upper part of the Ligueria Member (Tremadocian) of the Barrios Formation, clearly postdating the occurrence of Maladioidella colcheni, its supposed tracemarker according to some authors. The separate record of both taxa (a Furongian trilobite and a Cambro-Ordovician trace fossil) does not support this statement, so their relationship would be refuted in this case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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14. The extent of the Middle Ordovician Dapingian Stage in peri-Gondwanan Europe and north Africa: stratigraphic record, biostratigraphic tools and regional chronostratigraphy.
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, Artur Abreéu, García-Bellido, Diego Capdevila, and Rábano, Isabel
- Subjects
ORDOVICIAN paleontology ,BIOSTRATIGRAPHY ,SANDSTONE ,GRAPTOLITES - Abstract
The boundaries and subdivisions of the global Dapingian stage cannot be adequately characterized in the extensive south-polar Gondwana continental shelves. Correlatable sediments, dated to some extent by palynomorphs, are generally highly condensed in shale facies ( < 10 m thick) or are entirely lacking, whereas in shallow-water sandstones they may locally reach more than 100 m thick. In the absence of valuable data derived from key macrofossils (graptolites and conodonts), the regional chitinozoan biostratigraphy has gone through numerous conceptual variations in the last 20 years, which has not helped a precise definition of the base of the Dapingian, provisionally included in the “upper” Arenigian regional stage of peri-Gondwana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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15. Middle Ordovician harknessellid brachiopods (Dalmanellidina) from the Mediterranean margin of Gondwana.
- Author
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REYES-ABRIL, JAIME, VILLAS, ENRIQUE, GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS, JIMÉNEZ-SÁNCHEZ, ANDREA, and COLMENAR, JORGE
- Subjects
BRACHIOPODA ,ORDOVICIAN Period ,PHYLOGENY ,DALMANELLIDAE ,GONDWANA (Continent) - Abstract
The family Harknessellidae Bancroft, 1928 (Orthida, Dalmanellidina) was designed to embrace an assemblage of species referred previously to Harknessella Reed, 1917, and included five genera known mainly from the Middle and Upper Ordovician of England. Herein, we suggest reassigning to this family the genus Cacemia Mitchell, 1974, widespread in the middle Darriwilian (upper Middle Ordovician) of the Iberian and Armorican massifs. Since its designation, Cacemia was placed among the dalmanellidin heterorthids, in spite of its strongly mucronate hinge line, which is totally unknown within this Mediterranean family. A new harknessellid has been identified from the upper Darriwilian beds of the Central Iberian Zone (Central Spain): Isabelella fascicostellata Reyes-Abril & Villas gen. et sp. nov. It is similar to Horderleyella Bancroft, 1928 for its coarsely fascicostellate radial ornamentation and obtuse cardinal angles, although its convexoplane to convexoconcave profile allows discrimination from the typically dorsibiconvex Horderieyella. A phylogenetic analysis of the family places both Cacemia and Isabelella in basal positions of their clades, which fits with their early stratigraphic record. Based on our study, the family Harknessellidae appears to have originated in the high latitude Mediterranean margins of Gondwana during pre-Darriwilian times, before the detachment of Avalonia from Gondwana. The family reached its highest diversification in Avalonia throughout the Late Ordovician, keeping connections with the Mediterranean and Proto-Andean margins of Gondwana, as well as with the mid-latitude palaeocontinents of Baltica and South China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Orthid brachiopods from the Middle Ordovician of the Central Iberian Zone, Spain.
- Author
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Reyes-Abril, Jaime, Villas, Enrique, and Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. The new chronostratigraphic classification of the Ordovician System and its relations to major regional series and stages and to δ13C chemostratigraphy.
- Author
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BERGSTRÖM, STIG M., XU CHEN, GUTIÉRREZ-MARCO, JUAN CARLOS, and DRONOV, ANDREI
- Subjects
GRAPTOLITES ,CONODONTS ,ORDOVICIAN stratigraphic geology ,CARBONATES ,SHALE - Abstract
The extensive work carried out during more than a decade by the International Subcommission on Ordovician Stratigraphy has resulted in a new global classification of the Ordovician System into three series and seven stages. Formal Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Points (GSSPs) for all stages have been selected and these and the new stage names have been ratified by the International Commission on Stratigraphy. Based on a variety of biostratigraphic data, these new units are correlated with chronostratigraphic series and stages in the standard regional classifications used in the UK, North America, Baltoscandia, Australia, China, Siberia and the Mediterranean-North Gondwana region. Furthermore, based mainly on graptolite and conodont zones, the Ordovician is subdivided into 20 stage slices (SS) that have potential for precise correlations in both carbonate and shale facies. The new chronostratigraphic scheme is also tied to a new composite δ
13 C curve through the entire Ordovician. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Reprint of: The Bohemo-Iberian regional chronostratigraphical scale for the Ordovician System and palaeontological correlations within South Gondwana.
- Author
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Gutiérrez‐Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, Artur A., García‐Bellido, Diego C., and Rábano, Isabel
- Subjects
ORDOVICIAN Period ,ANIMALS ,TRILOBITES ,BRACHIOPODA - Abstract
A reprint of article "The Bohemo-Iberian regional chronostratigraphical scale for the Ordovician System and palaeontological correlations within South Gondwana" published in journal ins presented. The article outlines faunas found in Mediterranean Province such as trilobites, brachiopods, and molluscs; palaeobiogeographical relationships based on the distribution of faunas across South Gondwana; and Ordovician system discovered by Charles Lapworth.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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