The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: Insights from the Tafilalt Biota, Morocco

About 40 million years after the Cambrian Explosion, the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) represents a second and dramatic burst in marine biodiversity, with major changes in the structure of ecosystems and the progressive replacement of the distinctive Cambrian Evolutionary Fauna by the Paleozoic Evolutionary Fauna. However, the GOBE is not a single, worldwide, short-term event, but rather the complex sum of successive diversifications occurring in distinct taxonomic groups, trophic guilds and regions. This book focuses on the Late Ordovician Tafilalt Biota, Anti-Atlas Morocco, which provides a snapshot of the GOBE in high-latitude regions of the Southern Hemisphere. A series of contributions explore different aspects of the Tafilalt Biota, including its geological setting, the international fossil trade in this area and a series of detailed systematic contributions describing many new taxa of marine invertebrates. This volume represents a significant contribution to the understanding of the Tafilalt Biota and its significance to the GOBE.
The Late Ordovician Tafilalt Biota, Anti-Atlas, Morocco: a high-latitude perspective on the GOBE
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Published:May 24, 2022
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CiteCitation
Bertrand Lefebvre, Peter Van Roy, Samuel Zamora, Juan Carlos Gutiérrez-Marco, Martina Nohejlová, 2022. "The Late Ordovician Tafilalt Biota, Anti-Atlas, Morocco: a high-latitude perspective on the GOBE", The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: Insights from the Tafilalt Biota, Morocco, A. W. Hunter, J. J. Álvaro, B. Lefebvre, P. Van Roy, S. Zamora
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Abstract
The extensive, predominantly siliciclastic deposits of the Upper Ordovician of the Tafilalt have long been the subject of scientific investigation. In the past 25 years, intensified collecting for commercial purposes has resulted in the discovery of several exceptionally-preserved faunas (Konservat-Lagerstätten) in the Tafilalt region, preserving a range of non-biomineralized and soft-bodied organisms. The preservation of these fossils in the coarse clastic sediments of the Tafilalt is surprising, and in the case of soft-bodied organisms, remarkably similar to the preservational mode of typical Ediacaran biotas. These relatively recent discoveries have increased the scientific significance of the Tafilalt Biota, providing an unparalleled insight into the composition and temporal evolution of the shallow, open-marine ecosystems and their denizens during the later stages of the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event. At least nine different phyla, in addition to several soft-bodied problematica are represented in the Tafilalt. While the highly diverse and remarkably well-preserved echinoderm and euarthropod faunas are most emblematic for the Tafilalt Biota, further studies have revealed a relatively high diversity of molluscs and brachiopods. Among soft-bodied fossils, the problematic paropsonemid eldonids are iconic for the Tafilalt and stand out both through their abundance, and their wide temporal and geographical range throughout the area.
- affinities
- Africa
- Annelida
- Anti-Atlas
- Arthropoda
- Atlas Mountains
- biodiversity
- biogeography
- biomineralization
- Brachiopoda
- Bryozoa
- Cnidaria
- depositional environment
- Echinodermata
- fossilization
- Graptolithina
- Hemichordata
- ichnofossils
- Lagerstatten
- marine environment
- Mollusca
- Moroccan Atlas Mountains
- Morocco
- North Africa
- Ordovician
- paleoecology
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- preservation
- problematic fossils
- Pterobranchia
- shallow-water environment
- soft parts
- Tafilalt
- taxonomy
- uncertainty
- Upper Ordovician
- worms
- Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event