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Linguliform brachiopods across a Cambrian-Ordovician (Furongian, Early Ordovician) biomere boundary; the Sunwaptan-Skullrockian North American stage boundary in the Wilberns and Tanyard Formations of central Texas

Rebecca L. Freeman, James F. Miller and Benjamin F. Dattilo
Linguliform brachiopods across a Cambrian-Ordovician (Furongian, Early Ordovician) biomere boundary; the Sunwaptan-Skullrockian North American stage boundary in the Wilberns and Tanyard Formations of central Texas
Journal of Paleontology (September 2018) 92 (5): 751-767

Abstract

The Cambrian-Ordovician Diversity Plateau, between the Cambrian Explosion and the Ordovician Radiation, is punctuated by a series of well-documented Laurentian trilobite extinction events. These events define the bounding surfaces of trilobite 'biomeres' that correspond to North American stages, including those of the Sunwaptan and Skullrockian. Trilobites show a consistent pattern of recovery across these boundaries, and commonly each extinction and replacement of taxa is interpreted as a single event as changing environmental conditions spurred shoreward migration of shelf or oceanic faunas that displaced established cratonic faunas. Linguliform brachiopods are also abundant in strata of this interval, and we investigate their stratigraphic distribution across the Sunwaptan-Skullrockian Stage boundary in Texas through high-resolution stratigraphic sampling of subtidal sediments. We document complete genus- and species-level turnover of the linguliform brachiopod fauna coincident with trilobite extinction events, suggesting that these brachiopods were affected by the same factors that affected trilobites. The Skullrockian replacement fauna was cosmopolitan, with ties to Gondwana and Kazakhstan and to the Laurentian shelf environment. The timing of appearances of taxa suggests that the faunal migration onto the Laurentian shelf came from elsewhere during a transgression. The disappearance of the Sunwaptan fauna and the arrival of the Skullrockian fauna are distinct events. We suggest that 'biomere' events may be complex, and the cause of the extinction is not necessarily the same event that facilitates the appearance of a replacement fauna. We describe one new species, Schizambon langei. UUID: http://zoobank.org/f6a5c11f-cd3d-4c16-b184-d808d3a5285f


ISSN: 0022-3360
EISSN: 1937-2337
Coden: JPALAZ
Serial Title: Journal of Paleontology
Serial Volume: 92
Serial Issue: 5
Title: Linguliform brachiopods across a Cambrian-Ordovician (Furongian, Early Ordovician) biomere boundary; the Sunwaptan-Skullrockian North American stage boundary in the Wilberns and Tanyard Formations of central Texas
Affiliation: University of Kentucky, Department of Earth and Environmental Science, Lexington, KY, United States
Pages: 751-767
Published: 201809
Text Language: English
Publisher: Paleontological Society, Lawrence, KS, United States
References: 114
Accession Number: 2019-005264
Categories: Invertebrate paleontology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: NSF grants EAR-8108621, EAR-8407281, and EAR-8804352
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 2 plates, geol. sketch map
N30°28'00" - N30°28'00", W99°07'00" - W99°07'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Missouri State University, USA, United StatesIndiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, The Paleontological Society. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 2019

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