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Paraheritschioides
Paraheritschioides, a new rugose coral genus from the Upper Pennsylvanian of Idaho
Figure 3 —Stratigraphic distribution of fasciculate corals in the Pequop M...
Figure 7 — 1–3, 6 , Paraheritschioides nevadaensis n. sp.: 1–3 , holoty...
Fasciculate Rugose Corals from Gzhelian and Lower Permian Strata, Pequop Mountains, Northeast Nevada
NEW EARLY PERMIAN COLONIAL RUGOSE CORALS FROM THE CENTRAL CORDILLERAN MIOGEOCLINE, U.S.A
Paraheritschioides sp., GSC locality C-45444, hypotype GSC 133213: 1 – 6...
Figure 4 — 1, 5 , Paraheritschioides ? sp. aff. P .? californiense (Me...
An Unusual Occurrence of Bashkirian (Pennsylvanian) Rugose Corals from the Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
Figure 3 — 1 , 2 , 6 , 7 , Heintzella playfordi n. sp.: holotype from...
Permian Colonial Rugose Corals from the Wrangellian Terrane in Alaska
Middle Pennsylvanian Rugose Corals from the Baird Formation, Klamath Mountains, Northwestern California
Lower Permian Colonial Rugose Corals, Western and Northwestern Pangaea: Taxonomy and Distribution
Abstract: Permian rugose corals underwent evolutionary episodes of assemblage changeover, biogeographical separation and extinction, which are closely related to geological events during this time. Two coral realms were recognized, the Tethyan Realm and the Cordilleran–Arctic–Uralian Realm. These are characterized by the families Kepingophyllidae and Waagenophyllidae during the Cisuralian, Waagenophyllidae in the Guadalupian and the subfamily Waagenophyllinae in the Lopingian, and the families Durhaminidae and Kleopatrinidae during the Cisuralian and major disappearance of colonial and dissepimented solitary rugose corals from the Guadalupian to the Lopingian, respectively. The development of these coral realms is controlled by the geographical barrier resulting from the Pangaea formation. According to the changes in the composition and diversity of the Permian rugose corals, a changeover event might have occurred at the end-Sakmarian and is characterized by the mixed Pennsylvanian and Permian faunas to typical Permian faunas, probably related to a global regression. In addition, three extinction events are present at the end-Kungurian, the end-Guadalupian and the end-Permian, which are respectively triggered by the northward movement of Pangaea, the Emeishan volcanic eruptions and subsequent global regression, and the global climate warming induced by the Siberian Traps eruption.
Carboniferous biostratigraphy of rugose corals
Abstract Rugose corals are one of the major fossil groups in shallow-water environments. They played an important role in dividing and correlating Carboniferous strata during the last century, when regional biostratigraphic schemes were established, and may be useful for long-distance correlation. Carboniferous rugose corals document two evolutionary events. One is the Tournaisian recovery event, with abundant occurrences of typical Carboniferous rugose corals such as columellate taxa and a significant diversification of large, dissepimented corals. The other is the changeover of rugose coral composition at the mid-Carboniferous boundary, which is represented by the disappearance of many large dissepimented taxa with complex axial structures and the appearance of typical Pennsylvanian taxa characterized by compound rugose taxa. The biostratigraphic scales for rugose corals show a finer temporal resolution in the Mississippian than in the Pennsylvanian, which was probably caused by the Late Paleozoic Ice Age that resulted in glacial–eustatic changes and a lack of continuous Pennsylvanian carbonate strata. The Pennsylvanian rugose corals are totally missing in the Cimmerian Continent. High-resolution biostratigraphy of rugose corals has so far only been achieved in few regions for the Mississippian timescale. In most regions, more detailed taxonomic work and precise correlations between different fossil groups are needed.