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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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North America
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Appalachians (2)
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Canadian Shield (2)
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United States
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New York
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Clinton County New York (1)
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Dutchess County New York (1)
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Saint Lawrence County New York (1)
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Saratoga County New York (1)
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Washington County New York (5)
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Vermont
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Addison County Vermont (1)
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Chittenden County Vermont (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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Arthropoda
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Trilobitomorpha
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Trilobita (3)
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Mollusca
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Cephalopoda (3)
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microfossils
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Conodonta (3)
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geologic age
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Upper Cambrian
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Furongian (1)
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Ordovician
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Lower Ordovician
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Tremadocian (1)
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Primary terms
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Invertebrata
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Arthropoda
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Trilobitomorpha
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Trilobita (3)
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Mollusca
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Cephalopoda (3)
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North America
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Appalachians (2)
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Canadian Shield (2)
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paleoecology (1)
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paleogeography (1)
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Upper Cambrian
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Furongian (1)
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Ordovician
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Lower Ordovician
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Tremadocian (1)
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plate tectonics (1)
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United States
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New York
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Clinton County New York (1)
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Dutchess County New York (1)
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Saint Lawrence County New York (1)
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Saratoga County New York (1)
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Washington County New York (5)
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Vermont
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Addison County Vermont (1)
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Chittenden County Vermont (1)
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rock formations
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Little Falls Formation (3)
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Rathbunville School Limestone Member
Figure 2 —Steves Farm section, Washington County, New York, in the upper L...
Figure 3 —Late Cambrian cephalopods from the upper Little Falls Formation ...
The Oldest Cephalopods from East Laurentia
Figure 2 —Uppermost Cambrian–Lower Ordovician stratigraphic nomenclature o...
UPPERMOST CAMBRIAN–LOWER ORDOVICIAN FAUNAS AND LAURENTIAN PLATFORM SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY, EASTERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT
Left behind – delayed extinction and a relict trilobite fauna in the Cambrian–Ordovician boundary succession (east Laurentian platform, New York)
CEPHALOPODS AND PALEOENVIRONMENTS OF THE FORT CASSIN FORMATION (UPPER LOWER ORDOVICIAN), EASTERN NEW YORK AND ADJACENT VERMONT
Tribes Hill–Rochdale formations in east Laurentia: proxies for Early Ordovician (Tremadocian) eustasy on a tropical passive margin (New York and west Vermont)
The Great American Carbonate Bank in Eastern Laurentia: Its Births, Deaths, and Linkage to Paleooceanic Oxygenation (Early Cambrian–Late Ordovician)
Abstract The Cambrian–Ordovician carbonate platform units on the New York promontory of eastern Laurentia reflect the south tropical location of the area. The slow subsidence of the region through much of the Cambrian–Ordovician meant that strong eustatic rises and falls defined unconformity-bound carbonate formations. These depositional sequences aid in paleoocean-ographic reconstruction as they correlate with organic-rich dysoxic–anoxic mudstones on the Laurentian continental slope. Eustatic rise increased insolation as epeiric seas covered the platform and produced climate maximums with reduced deep-water circulation. The oldest carbonate platform unit (Forestdale Marble and equivalents, upper Lower Cambrian) overlies rift facies deposited with the Rodinia breakup and origin of the Iapetus Ocean and marks the transition to a passive margin. Drowning of the Forestdale platform occurred, and the overlying anoxic black mudstone (Moosalamoo Phyllite) abruptly shoals up into tidalite sandstone (Cheshire Formation). This depositional history records a decreased rate of sea level rise as the Cheshire Formation continued to onlap middle Proterozoic basement. Super-Cheshire Cambrian carbonate platform units in the northern Appalachian are mostly hydrothermally dolomitized, record eustatic highs (Dunham, Winooski, and Little Falls Formations), and correlate with black mudstone macroscale units on the slope (Browns Pond and Hatch Hill dysoxic– anoxic intervals). The latest Early Cambrian Hawke Bay regression ended carbonate platform deposition of the Dunham Formation, led to quartz arenite or red shaly dolostone of flap or shoaling deposits on the platform, and was coeval with oxic green mudstone on the continental slope (Hawke Bay oxic interval in Taconian allochthons). Subsequent Middle Cambrian eustatic rise is recorded by dolostone (Winooski and upper Stissing), but carbonate deposition was again suppressed as quartz sand swept toward the shelf margin (Danby Formation) coincident with cratonic transgression by the upper Potsdam Formation (uppermost Middle Cambrian–lower Upper Cambrian). Post-Potsdam depositionwas carbonate dominated through the middle Late Ordovician and included the Beekmantown, Chazy, Black River, and Trenton Groups. The Cambrian-Ordovician boundary is an unconformity between platform carbonates (Little Falls and Tribes Hill Formations of the Beekmantown Group). The Lower Ordovician–lower Upper Ordovician is a series of unconformity-bound platform depositional sequences (Tribes Hill, Rochdale, Fort Cassin, and Providence Island Formations of the upper Saukmegasequence and Chazy Group of the lower Tippecanoe megasequence). The Ordovician depositional sequences coincide with eustatic highs and show a repeated depositional motif (lower transgressive sandstone, upper highstand carbonate). The Ordovician eustatic highs also correlate with thin (as much as 10 m [33 ft] thick) macroscale dysoxic–anoxic black mudstones on the slope. The black mudstones alternate with oxic greenish mudstones, locally with debris flows with giant carbonate blocks on the upper slope (Levis conglomerates), which indicate platform-margin caving during eustatic falls. Ordovician green mudstones are composed of mesoscale redox-carbonate mudstone cycles (Logan cycles) on the upper slope. A major development was the abrupt formation of the latest Early Cambrian–Early Ordovician Franklin Basin in northwestern Vermont. The dysoxic–anoxic Franklin Basin resulted from fault-driven foundering of part of the carbonate platform that overlay the failed arm of the Ediacaran triple junction. This faulting is coeval with the oldest (late Early Cambrian) onlap in the Ottawa-Bonnechere aulocogen. Late Ordovician collision with the Ammonusuc arc ended carbonate platform deposition in the New York promontory region, as sands and muds eroded from the Taconic orogen filled a fore-arc basin and extinguished carbonate deposition across eastern Laurentia.
Abstract Cephalopods have their earliest occurrence in Late Cambrian shallow-water carbonates on the North China Platform and rapidly dispersed across the globe within the latest Cambrian. Latest Cambrian and initial Ordovician cephalopod occurrences are restricted to the palaeotropical realm. The Ordovician records a unique morphological diversification and expansion of cephalopod habits and habitats which is expressed in a massive morphological diversification and unique palaeogeographical patterns of dispersal. The Ordovician cephalopod diversification was a complex process of appearance and disappearance of higher groups with a specific palaeogeographical signature and a clear selective component. A general Ordovician trend showed decreasing evolutionary turnover rates, increasing number of widespread genera, decreasing proportion of endemic genera, and decreasing beta-diversity. This is interpreted as a result of an increasing ecosystem stability during this time interval.