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Gogo Formation

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Journal Article
Published: 23 November 2021
Journal of the Geological Society (2022) 179 (1): jgs2021-105.
...Kate Trinajstic; Derek E. G. Briggs; John A. Long Abstract Discoveries from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation in the Canning Basin, Western Australia, have provided insights into the origin and evolution of many unique gnathostome features such as the origins of teeth, internal fertilization, air...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1997
Micropaleontology (1997) 43 (4): 333–369.
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1997
Micropaleontology (1997) 43 (4): 371–418.
Journal Article
Published: 12 January 1984
Micropaleontology (1984) 29 (4): 454–466.
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Vertebrate fossils from the Gogo Formation (a) embryo and preserved umbilical cord in the ptycotodont Materpiscis attenborouigh (Holotype, WAM 826 17.12.1); (b) embryos in the arthrodire Incisoscutum ritchiei (NHM P50934); (c) Incisoscutum ritchiei showing clasper and pelvic girdle (WAM 03.3.28; (d) arthrodire Holonema westolli showing articulated 3D preservation (above) and tail showing articulated squamation, vertebrae and clasper (below, MV P230241); (e) lower jaw of shark Gogoselachus lynbeazleyae (WAM 09.6.145); (f) tetrapodomorph Gogonasus andrewsae showing skull (left) and articulated pectoral girdle bones (right, both MV P221807); (g) Holotype skull of sarcopterygian Onychodus jandemarrai (WAM 92.8.2).
Published: 23 November 2021
Fig. 4. Vertebrate fossils from the Gogo Formation ( a ) embryo and preserved umbilical cord in the ptycotodont Materpiscis attenborouigh (Holotype, WAM 826 17.12.1); ( b ) embryos in the arthrodire Incisoscutum ritchiei (NHM P50934); ( c ) Incisoscutum ritchiei showing clasper and pelvic
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 November 2001
Economic Geology (2001) 96 (7): 1595–1610.
... of meters thick, occur along contacts between basinal shales (Gogo Formation) and marginal-slope limestones (Sadler Limestone) and adjacent to synsedimentary faults cutting the Gogo Formation. The mounds are limestone buildups, composed of stromatolites intergrown with barite and cut by iron sulfide veins...
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Published: 01 November 2001
in the Gogo Formation, Limestone Billy Hills area. D. Drill core showing a Gogo concretion formed around an ammonoid and strong compaction of equivalent shale in the Gogo Formation, Limestone Billy Hills area. E. Gogo concretions showing outer layers of fibrous calcite, Conglomerate 1 deposit. F. Fibrous
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 August 2009
Paleobiology (2009) 35 (3): 321–342.
... for 94 isolated arthrodire inferognathals from the Gogo Formation in Western Australia and the Cleveland Shale in Ohio. These data were used to address aspects of functional morphology, biomechanical disparity, and ecological structure in arthrodire placoderms from the Late Devonian. Results were...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 July 1966
Journal of Paleontology (1966) 40 (4): 777–842.
... by the Gogo formation, and in the fore-reef and inter-reef facies of the Virgin Hills formation. Associations of certain conodont and ammonoid taxa are identical with those in the classic antipodal Rhenish Schiefergebirge of Germany. Distribution patterns show that the conodont and ammonoid zones...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 February 2013
Geology (2013) 41 (2): 123–126.
... fossil preservation. Organic geochemical analyses of a 380 Ma invertebrate fossil, which included well-preserved soft tissues, from the Gogo Formation (Canning Basin, Western Australia) showed biomarkers and stable isotopic values characteristic of PZE and a consortium of sulfate-reducing bacteria, which...
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Published: 01 November 2001
F ig . 10. Diagram illustrating oxygen and carbon isotope values for stromatolites, Gogo concretions, Sadler Limestone, Gogo Formation, and Late Devonian primary marine cements. Analytical data from De Kever (1998) and Mason (1998 .
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Geology of the Canning Basin in the north of Western Australia, including the main fossil sites of the Gogo Formation, showing the extent of the Lennard Shelf Reef complexes (after Playford et al. 2009).
Published: 23 November 2021
Fig. 1. Geology of the Canning Basin in the north of Western Australia, including the main fossil sites of the Gogo Formation, showing the extent of the Lennard Shelf Reef complexes (after Playford et al. 2009 ).
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Published: 01 November 2001
F ig . 4. Diagrammatic section illustrating the development of stromatolite-barite-sulfide exhalative deposits in the Gogo Formation, associated with backstepping of platform deposits in the Pillara Limestone. Modified from Playford (1999) .
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Log of drill core HS showing facies of Virgin Hills Formation overlying Gogo Formation siltstones, total organic carbon (TOC, wt%), inorganic carbonate δ13C curve (from micrite; VPDB—Vienna Peedee belemnite), and regional relative sea-level curve (RSL; George et al., 2009, 2013). Depositional ages are constrained by conodont biostratigraphy (Biostrat.; arrows show samples) using Frasnian MN (Montagne Noire) zonal scheme. Two main extinction levels are shown in blue. Intervals with elevated TOC are shown in yellow (TOC1–TOC3). EX1, EX2, and EX3 are positive δ13C excursions. TOC1 and EX1 coincide, and are interpreted as burial of organic matter under anoxic-dysoxic bottom-water conditions. TOC2 and TOC3 precede positive δ13C excursions EX2 and EX3, respectively, and are interpreted as response to continental-derived nutrient input. Generalized temporal positions of upper and lower Kellwasser horizons from studies elsewhere are shown with gray shading for reference (UKW, LKW). Famennian rhomboidea conodont zone boundaries are approximate. Q—quartz sandstone; F–FB—Frasnian-Famennian boundary; lmst—limestone; siltst.—siltstone; med—medium; pel.— peloidal; intracl.—intraclastic.
Published: 01 April 2014
Figure 2. Log of drill core HS showing facies of Virgin Hills Formation overlying Gogo Formation siltstones, total organic carbon (TOC, wt%), inorganic carbonate δ 13 C curve (from micrite; VPDB—Vienna Peedee belemnite), and regional relative sea-level curve (RSL; George et al., 2009 , 2013
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 February 2013
Geology (2013) 41 (2): 287–288.
... in a carbonate concretion of Devonian age from the Gogo Formation, in the Canning Basin of Western Australia, deposited under PZE conditions, whereby persistent PZE was identified based on aryl isoprenoid distributions in the fossil’s free bitumen and desulfurized polar fractions. Chlorobi , when conducting...
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 11 February 2016
Paleobiology (2016) 42 (2): 289–304.
... , Ørvig 1961 , White 1962 , Krupina 1995 ), including the early Frasnian marine Bergisch Gladbach locality in Germany. The most recently described species, Rhinodipterus kimberleyensis (Clement 2012 ), hails from the shallow tropical reef deposits of the early Frasnian Gogo Formation...
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Updated compilation of the distribution of exceptional faunas in marine deposits (adapted from Allison and Briggs, 1993, fig. 1), with added localities throughout the Phanerozoic and Ediacaran. Locales included: Ediacaran: Ediacara Hills (H†), Mistaken Point–Avalon Peninsula, Nama Group, Doushantuo Formation, White Sea, Gaojiashan Formation (G), Miaohe biota, Khatyspyt Formation, Tsagaan Gol Complex; Cambrian: Burgess Shale, Chengjiang biota–Maotianshan Shale, Sirius Passet, Emu Bay Shale, House Range–Marjum Formation–Wheeler Shale (F), Alum Shale–Orsten, Kinzers Formation, Spence Shale (E), Kaili Formation; Ordovician: Beecher's Trilobite Bed, Fezouata biota (D), Walcott-Rust Quarry, Soom Shale, Winneshiek, Llanfawr Mudstones–Welsh Gold; Silurian: Lesmahagow, Waukesha, Wenlock-Herefordshire; Devonian: Hunsrück Slates, Wissenbach Slate, Cleveland Shale, Canowindra–New South Wales, Gogo Formation, Arkona Shale; Carboniferous: Granton Lower Oil Shale, Bear Gulch Limestone, Mecca-Logan, Mazon Creek; Triassic: Grès à Voltzia, Montral-Alcover, Monte San Giorgio; Jurassic: Osteno, Holzmaden-Posidonia Shale, Christian Malford, La Voulte-sur-Rhône, Cordillera de Domeyko, Solhnhofen Plattenkalk; Cretaceous: Montsech, Santana Romualdo–Crato Formations, Haqel-Hadjula-al-Nammoura, Smoky Hill Chalk, Cenozoic (Paleogene–Neogene combined): Monte Bolca, Chita, Fur Formation. Fossils shown in A–H (with approximate geologic time represented by labeled arrows) taken from papers assembled as part of this special issue: A*) SEM micrograph of transverse sections of Larix conifer leaf needles from the middle Miocene Ballast Brook Formation, Banks Island, Canada (Witkowski et al., 2012, fig. 2B); B*)  Damselfly from the upper Eocene Florissant Formation, Colorado, United States (Smith, 2012, fig. 1A); C) articulated Eldredgeops rana cluster from the Middle Devonian Hamilton Group, Windom Shale, New York, United States (photo courtesy of Matt Phillips and Rich Spencer; Brett et al., 2012, fig. 5D); D) concretion-hosted anomalocaridid specimen from the Lower Ordovician Fezouata biota, eastern Anti-Atlas, Morocco (photo courtesy of Peter Van Roy; Gaines et al., 2012b, not figured); E) middle Cambrian Spence Shale trilobite Leanchoilia superlata?, Utah, United States (Olcott Marshall et al., 2012, specimen shown in fig. 1); F) middle Cambrian Wheeler Shale coiled algal morphotype, House Range, Utah, United States (Handle and Powell, 2012, fig. 3); G) Shaanxilithes ribbonlike fossil and associated discoidal structures from the terminal Ediacaran Gaojiashan biota, Dengying Formation, southern Shaanxi Provence, South China (Meyer et al., 2012, fig. 2H); H†) Modern experimental replication of Ediacara-type death mask preservation using larvae of Galleria mellonella as model organisms (Darroch et al., 2012, fig. 2); *indicates nonmarine deposits, †indicates modern laboratory experimental approach to investigate taphonomic pathway.
Published: 01 May 2012
Wales, Gogo Formation, Arkona Shale; Carboniferous: Granton Lower Oil Shale, Bear Gulch Limestone, Mecca-Logan, Mazon Creek; Triassic: Grès à Voltzia, Montral-Alcover, Monte San Giorgio; Jurassic: Osteno, Holzmaden-Posidonia Shale, Christian Malford, La Voulte-sur-Rhône, Cordillera de Domeyko
Journal Article
Published: 03 February 2017
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2017) 54 (3): 233–241.
... the Late Devonian Frasnian-aged Gogo Formation in Australia, and is represented by the well-known species O. jandamarrai ( Andrews et al. 2005 ). ROM 00198 consists of a well-preserved, articulated right jaw preserved in lateral view ( Fig. 2 ), with an overall mandibular length of 28 cm (30 cm...
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Journal Article
Published: 15 July 2009
Geological Magazine (2009) 146 (5): 743–760.
... taxa based solely on them (Denison, 1978 ). Articulated ptyctodonts are less common; however, from the Gogo Formation, NW Western Australia, three genera of articulated, three-dimensionally preserved ptyctodonts, Materpiscis attenboroughi (Long et al . 2008 ), Campbellodus...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1958
Journal of Paleontology (1958) 32 (1): 58–96.
...Brian F. Glenister Abstract Describes 15 species of early upper Devonian (Frasnian) ammonoids, of which 14 are new, belonging to nine genera (including Mesobeloceras n.g.), from the Sadler, Gogo, Virgin Hills, and Fossil Downs formations of the Fitzroy basin, Western Australia. GeoRef, Copyright...