Cornwallis Island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago provides one of the world’s best areas for establishing an integrated graptolite–conodont biozonation for the Late Ordovician – Silurian given the well-exposed interfingering relationship of the basinal shale and carbonate platform facies. Building on earlier graptolite work, 180 samples were collected from nine sections of the Cape Phillips Formation, of which 118 yielded approximately 7600 conodont elements representing 54 species in 25 genera, including one new genus and species, Mayrodus melchini; the conodonts are well preserved, with minimal thermal alteration (colour alteration index, CAI 1). Nine conodont zones are recognized and defined for this region, namely the Amorphognathus ordovicicus, Distomodus kentuckyensis, Aspelundia expansa, As. fluegeli, and Pterospathoduscelloni Interval zones, Pt. a. amorphognathoides Taxon-range Zone, Pt. pennatus procerus and Kockelella ranuliformis Highest-occurrence zones, and K. ortus absidata Taxon-range Zone. An integration of graptolite and conodont zones is documented. Earlier paleontological and isotope geochemical studies have demonstrated the dynamic nature of the Silurian ocean–climate system and identified major faunal turnovers or events. Five of these are recognized in the Cornwallis fauna and related to oceanographic and climate changes, in part referring to recent oxygen isotope data from conodonts from the Cornwallis collections: Hirnantian extinction event, Sandvika Event (late Aeronian, Llandovery), Snipklint Primo Episode (early Telychian, Llandovery), Ireviken Event (late Telychian, Llandovery–Sheinwoodian, Wenlock), and Mulde Event (early Homerian, Wenlock).
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Research Article|
August 08, 2017
Hirnantian (Ordovician) through Wenlock (Silurian) conodont biostratigraphy, bioevents, and integration with graptolite biozones, Cape Phillips Formation slope facies, Cornwallis Island, Canadian Arctic Islands1
Shunxin Zhang;
a
Canada–Nunavut Geoscience Office, P.O. Box 2319, 1106 Inuksugait IV, 1st floor, Iqaluit, NU X0A 0H0, Canada.Corresponding author: Shunxin Zhang (email: [email protected]).
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David M.S. Jowett;
David M.S. Jowett
b
15 Somerglen Place SW, Calgary, AB T2Y 3L5, Canada.
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Christopher R. Barnes
Christopher R. Barnes
c
School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Victoria, P.O. Box 1700, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada.
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a
Canada–Nunavut Geoscience Office, P.O. Box 2319, 1106 Inuksugait IV, 1st floor, Iqaluit, NU X0A 0H0, Canada.
David M.S. Jowett
b
15 Somerglen Place SW, Calgary, AB T2Y 3L5, Canada.
Christopher R. Barnes
c
School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Victoria, P.O. Box 1700, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada.Corresponding author: Shunxin Zhang (email: [email protected]).
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
24 Jan 2017
Accepted:
19 Jun 2017
First Online:
05 Oct 2017
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
Published by NRC Research Press
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2017) 54 (9): 936–960.
Article history
Received:
24 Jan 2017
Accepted:
19 Jun 2017
First Online:
05 Oct 2017
Citation
Shunxin Zhang, David M.S. Jowett, Christopher R. Barnes; Hirnantian (Ordovician) through Wenlock (Silurian) conodont biostratigraphy, bioevents, and integration with graptolite biozones, Cape Phillips Formation slope facies, Cornwallis Island, Canadian Arctic Islands. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2017;; 54 (9): 936–960. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2017-0023
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- apparatus
- assemblages
- biostratigraphy
- biozones
- C-13/C-12
- Canada
- Cape Phillips Formation
- carbon
- chemostratigraphy
- Conodonta
- Cornwallis Island
- Graptolithina
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- lithostratigraphy
- lower Paleozoic
- marine environment
- microfossils
- morphology
- N-15/N-14
- new taxa
- nitrogen
- Nunavut
- O-18/O-16
- Ordovician
- oxygen
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Parry Islands
- Queen Elizabeth Islands
- Silurian
- slope environment
- stable isotopes
- taxonomy
- Upper Ordovician
- Mayrodus melchini
Latitude & Longitude
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