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Goniomya
Goniomya from the Trichinopoly Group, Upper Cretaceous, Tamil Nadu
Implication of the Middle Jurassic Pholadomyoids of Kachchh in the Palaeobiogeography of the Middle East and South Asia: A Review
New range data for marine invertebrate species across the early Toarcian (Early Jurassic) mass extinction
Representative pholadomyoid bivalves from the Middle Jurassic of Kachchhh: ...
Figure 2. Examples of shell beds viewed from the bedding surface. A, Thin-...
Increase of shell-crushing predation recorded in fossil shell fragmentation
Six key bivalve species found in the Whitby Mudstone Formation, Yorkshire, ...
Distinguishing between oxygen and substrate control in fossil benthic assemblages
C, O, and Sr Isotope Compositions of Belemnites from the Bajocian–Bathonian of Arctic Siberia: Implications for Global Correlations and Paleogeographic Reconstructions
Stratigraphical log for the Yorkshire section from Kemp (2006 ), except fo...
STAGES IN DEVELOPMENT OF MOLLUSKS, PALEOBIOGEOGRAPHY OF BOREAL SEAS IN THE EARLY-MIDDLE JURASSIC AND ZONAL SCALES OF SIBERIA
BIOSTRATIGRAPHY OF NEOCOMIAN DEPOSITS IN THE NORTHERN OB’ REGION
Upper Cretaceous in Western Peace River Plains, Alberta
Observations on Marine Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy of North America, with Special Reference to United States
Opening of the Hispanic Corridor and Early Jurassic bivalve biodiversity
Abstract The Hispanic Corridor is a postulated marine seaway linking the eastern Pacific and western Tethyan oceans as early as Early Jurassic times. Two existing hypotheses relate the Pliensbachian-Toarcian bivalve extinction and recovery to immigration of bivalve species through the Hispanic Corridor. The extinction hypothesis implies that, in South America, the Pliensbachian-Toarcian extinction can be partly explained by the immigration of bivalves through the Hispanic Corridor and subsequent competitive replacement. The recovery hypothesis states that, in NW Europe, the renewed rise in diversity in the late Toarcian/Aalenian was largely a consequence of immigration of taxa from Andean South America via the Hispanic Corridor. To test these hypotheses, I calculated immigration and origination rates of bivalves per million years. In both regions, early Pliensbachian to Aalenian immigration rates remained at low levels, thus disproving both hypotheses. By comparison, the origination of new species generally played a much more important role than immigration in controlling overall diversity of both regions. Future research should investigate if this is a more general pattern in the recovery of post-extinction biotas. The apparently global Pliensbachian-Toarcian diversity crisis may be best explained by a combination of physicochemical factors, invoking intense volcanism, sea-level highstand and widespread anoxia, as well as biological factors. Recovery from this mass extinction commenced when origination rates increased again, which, in the Andean basins, was in the Aalenian and in NW Europe, the late Toarcian.
A Revision of the Rare Genus Cyclolampas (Echinoidea) Using Morphometrics with Description of a New Species from the Upper Callovian of Burgundy (France)
Long duration of benthic ecological recovery from the early Toarcian (Early Jurassic) mass extinction event in the Cleveland Basin, UK
Stratigraphy of the Sundance Formation and Related Jurassic Rocks in Wyoming and Their Petroleum Aspects
The Early Jurassic (late Hettangian to early Toarcian) bivalve fauna of the Sierra de Santa Rosa Formation of the Antimonio terrane (Sonora, NW Mexico) is analyzed taxonomically and biogeographically. Fifty taxa are recognized, representing 36 genera and subgenera. Thirty-four of these taxa have not been mentioned from the Jurassic of this region previously. This fauna is of great biogeographical interest, because Early Jurassic bivalves from low paleolatitudes of the tectonically complex western margin of North America are still poorly documented. About half of the described species are also known from other localities along the eastern Pacific margin. The second largest group is composed of widespread taxa, which, in addition to eastern Pacific occurrences, are also reported from other regions, particularly from Europe. The smallest group is endemic taxa that appear to be limited to Sonora during the analyzed time intervals. Geological evidence indicates that the Antimonio terrane was tectonically transported southeastward between the Middle and Late Jurassic from an original position at the southwestern margin of the United States by the Mojave-Sonora megashear. We calculated similarities of contemporaneous pectinoid bivalve faunas from seven eastern Pacific regions to independently constrain Early Jurassic paleolatitudinal positions of this terrane. Cluster analyses and similarity coefficients tentatively suggest that tectonic displacement of the Antimonio terrane toward lower paleolatitudes may already have started in Early Jurassic (Pliensbachian) time.
Abstract Climate change is undermining the health and integrity of seafloor ecosystems, with declines in bioturbation expected to impact future ecosystem functioning. We explored changes in the nature and degree of bioturbation during Early Jurassic global warming and ocean deoxygenation. Understanding how these communities responded can help anticipate how bioturbation and ecosystem functioning might change over large spatial and temporal scales. Trace and body fossils from outcrop and core in the Cleveland Basin, UK show how healthy seafloor communities deteriorated through the Pliensbachian spinatum Zone, and macroinfaunal behaviour fluctuated across the Pliensbachian–Toarcian boundary coincident with mass extinction. Deoxygenation began above the stage boundary, and conditions deteriorated until bioturbation ceased completely (upper tenuicostatum Zone) for 0.6–2.5 Ma, longer than anywhere else in NW Tethys. The macroinfaunal record revealed new details on the progression and timing of deoxygenation, benthic recovery and fluctuations in the palaeoredox boundary. After the oceanic anoxic event infauna were fewer, smaller and did not mix sediments to depth, and while the depth and diversity of bioturbation had increased by the fibulatum Subzone ( bifrons Zone), the benthos had not recovered to late Pliensbachian pre-oceanic anoxic event state. Bioturbation collapse over large parts of the Northern Hemisphere probably contributed to regional-scale changes in ecosystem functioning.