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A ROWELLELLA (LINGULATA, BRACHIOPODA) NESTLER IN A TRYPANITES BORING FROM THE MIDDLE ORDOVICIAN OF ESTONIA: AN EARLY COLONIZER OF HARD SUBSTRATE BORINGS
Cambrian (Stage 4 to Wuliuan) brachiopods from Sonora, Mexico
Brachiopods from the Latham Shale Lagerstätte (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4) and Cadiz Formation (Miaolingian, Wuliuan), California
Early Cambrian (Stage 4) brachiopods from the Shipai Formation in the Three Gorges area of South China
First report of acrotretoid brachiopod shell beds in the lower Cambrian (Stage 4) Guanshan Biota of eastern Yunnan, South China
Mollusks from the upper Shackleton Limestone (Cambrian Series 2), Central Transantarctic Mountains, East Antarctica
The attachment strategies of Cambrian kutorginate brachiopods: the curious case of two pedicle openings and their phylogenetic significance
Pentameroid brachiopod Karlsorus new genus from the upper Wenlock (Silurian) Slite Beds, Gotland, Sweden
Ordovician–Silurian Chileida—first post-Cambrian records of an enigmatic group of Brachiopoda
Abstract The biogeographical patterns shown by Ordovician linguliform and craniiform brachiopods are greatly influenced by their dominance in low-diversity associations in marginal environments. This is particularly evident in the Early Ordovician, when linguliform-dominated dysaerobic assemblages are widely distributed along the deep shelves of Gondwana, the Kazakhstanian terranes and in Baltica. By the Darriwilian, micromorphic linguliforms are characteristic components of the pantropical climatic-controlled faunas of Laurentia, Cuyania and Kazakhstanian terranes, which – in spite of separation by extensive oceans – retain a distinct similarity. Analysis of craniiform biogeographical distribution is impeded significantly by the poor state of craniide taxonomy and lack of reliable data from most regions. However, in general their biogeographical dispersion is similar to other groups of the Palaeozoic Evolutionary Fauna. Unlike the linguliforms, which are important members of the Cambrian Evolutionary Fauna, there is no convincing Cambrian craniiform record; they may have evolved and dispersed from Gondwana and associated microcontinents and island arcs. The earliest well-established record is from the late Tremadocian of temperate to high-latitude peri-Gondwana. During most of the Ordovician, they have a peri-Iapetus distribution. They are very rare or absent in tropical Gondwana, South China and Kazakhstanian terranes and are not yet documented from Siberia. The trimerellides probably evolved in tropical peri-Gondwanan island arc settings. Their dispersion and major features of biogeography mirror those of atrypides. Gold Open Access: This article is published under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ .
An Obolellate Brachiopod with Soft-Part Preservation from the Early Cambrian Chengjiang Fauna of China
Homologous skeletal secretion in tommotiids and brachiopods
Abstract Two separate tectonic blocks in the southwestern segment of the Kazakhstanian orogen, the Chu–Ili terrane and the Karatau–Naryn terrane (with particular attention to Malyi Karatau), are selected to illustrate their geological history and major biogeographical signatures from the Cambrian to the early Silurian. Mid- to Late Ordovician brachiopod and trilobite faunas of Chu–Ili show increased endemicity of shallow shelf assemblages, whereas distinct links to equatorial (‘east’) peri-Gondwanan are more evident in trilobite assemblages of the outer shelf. In the Late Ordovician, strong biogeographical affinities to equatorial Gondwanan faunas became firmly established and they are also traceable into the Silurian. Early Cambrian faunas of Malyi Karatau show remarkable similarity to those of South China. From the Middle Cambrian this region evolved as an isolated carbonate seamount, but until the Early Ordovician links to South China faunas were still evident. Benthic faunas from both regions show weak links to contemporaneous faunas of Baltica and little in common with Cambrian and Ordovician faunas of the Siberian craton. This suggests their location in low southern latitudes, in relative proximity to East Gondwana, which places some constraints on plate-tectonic reconstructions in relation to the southern cluster of Kazakhstanian terranes, including Karatau–Naryn, North Tien Shan and Chu–Ili.
The scleritome of Eccentrotheca from the Lower Cambrian of South Australia: Lophophorate affinities and implications for tommotiid phylogeny
ENDOSYMBIOSIS IN ORDOVICIAN–SILURIAN CORALS AND STROMATOPOROIDS: A NEW LINGULID AND ITS TRACE FROM EASTERN CANADA
LOWER ORDOVICIAN (TREMADOCIAN) LINGULATE BRACHIOPODS FROM THE HOUSE AND FILLMORE FORMATIONS, IBEX AREA, WESTERN UTAH, USA
Neodymium isotopic composition of Cambrian–Ordovician biogenic apatite in the Baltoscandian Basin: implications for palaeogeographical evolution and patterns of biodiversity
THE OLDEST-KNOWN METAZOAN PARASITE?
LINGULATE BRACHIOPODS FROM THE CAMBRIAN-ORDOVICIAN BOUNDARY BEDS OF UTAH
Abstract Brachiopod-dominated palaeocommunities incorporating a structure typical of faunal groups within the Palaeozoic Evolutionary Fauna were already present in North and East Gondwana and associated terranes as early as the mid-Cambrian, confined exclusively to shallow marine, inshore environments. The late Cambrian and Tremadoc record of these faunas is incomplete, because of pronounced global sea-level lowstand and subsequent break-up and destruction of the Cambrian Gondwanan margin. It is likely, however, that those groups later forming the core of the Palaeozoic Evolutionary Fauna evolved originally in shallow-water environments of low-latitude peri-Gondwana, and dispersed widely when favourable ecological conditions developed. Conspicuous sea-level rise through the early to mid-Arenig provided newly available habitats in the expanding epeiric seas, where the new faunas evolved and diversified by the mid-Ordovician, when rapid drift separated the early Palaeozoic continents. Relatively short-lived precursor and transitional brachiopod assemblages can be identified on most of the main palaeocontinents prior to the Ordovician radiation of the Palaeozoic Evolutionary Fauna.