Studying the spatial distribution of specific groups of marine invertebrates in the geological past and analyzing their geographic differentiation over time are crucial for understanding both their evolutionary patterns and the history of marine basin development. This study, based on modern paleontological and biostratigraphic data of the Boreal Triassic, refines the taxonomic composition and distribution of Ladinian ammonoids across various regions of the Boreal Realm. Zonal correlation on ammonoids of Ladinian deposits has been carried out for Northeast Asia, British Columbia, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, northern Greenland, Svalbard, and Franz Josef Land, providing a chronological basis for comparative analysis of coeval ammonoid faunas. The qualitative and quantitative comparative analysis of ammonoid assemblages for different phases of the Ladinian Age has established that Northeast Asia consistently belonged to the Siberian Province of the Boreal Realm. The separation of the Canadian Province of the Boreal Realm occurred at the end of the constantis Phase due to the penetration of trachyceratids (genus Protrachyceras) into the paleobasins of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Subsequently, starting from the maclearni Phase, the area of the Canadian province expanded due to the migration of Tethyan forms into the paleobasins of Svalbard. The migrations of trachyceratids, gymnitids, and lobitids into boreal paleobasins from the Tethys Ocean, as well as the dispersal of Boreal tsvetkovitids and nathorstitids into ecotonal and Tethyan paleowaters of British Columbia, were influenced not only by circumpolar currents but likely, by the lifestyle of ammonoids and their adaptation to a broader or narrower range of marine basin depths.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Article|
June 01, 2025
GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENTIATION OF BOREAL AMMONOIDS IN THE LADINIAN AGE (Middle Triassic) Available to Purchase
A.G. Konstantinov
Trofimuk Institute of Petroleum Geology and Geophysics, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, pr. Akademika Koptyuga 3, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
✉
E-mail: [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
✉
E-mail: [email protected]
Publisher: Novovsibirsk State University
Received:
18 Nov 2024
Accepted:
13 Jan 2025
First Online:
01 Apr 2025
Online ISSN: 1878-030X
Print ISSN: 1068-7971
© 2025, Novosibirsk State University
Novosibirsk State University
Russ. Geol. Geophys. (2025) 66 (6): 742–756.
Article history
Received:
18 Nov 2024
Accepted:
13 Jan 2025
First Online:
01 Apr 2025
- OpenGeoSci
-
Tools
- View This Citation
- Add to Citation Manager for
CitationA.G. Konstantinov; GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENTIATION OF BOREAL AMMONOIDS IN THE LADINIAN AGE (Middle Triassic). Russ. Geol. Geophys. 2025;; 66 (6): 742–756. doi: https://doi.org/10.2113/RGG20254837
Download citation file:
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Email alerts
Index Terms/Descriptors
- Ammonoidea
- Arctic region
- Arkhangelsk Russian Federation
- Asia
- assemblages
- biogeography
- biostratigraphy
- biozones
- Boreal Realm
- British Columbia
- Canada
- Cephalopoda
- Commonwealth of Independent States
- correlation
- Europe
- Franz Josef Land
- Greenland
- Ladinian
- Mesozoic
- Middle Triassic
- Mollusca
- Northern Hemisphere
- paleogeography
- Russian Arctic
- Russian Federation
- Siberia
- Svalbard
- taxonomy
- Tethys
- Triassic
- Western Canada
- Yakutia Russian Federation
- Eonathorstites dieneri
- Indigirites krugi
Latitude & Longitude
Citing articles via
Related Articles
Features of Dispersal of Late Anisian Ammonoids of the Boreal Realm
Russian Geology and Geophysics
Debatable questions of Boreal Triassic stratigraphy: boundary between middle and upper series
Russian Geology and Geophysics
High-Resolution Triassic Biostratigraphy of the Kotelny Island (New Siberian Islands, Arctic Siberia)
Russian Geology and Geophysics
Lower–Middle Jurassic foraminiferal and ostracode biostratigraphy of the Barents Sea shelf
Russian Geology and Geophysics
Related Book Content
Global Permian brachiopod biostratigraphy: an overview
The Permian Timescale
The Permian chronostratigraphic scale: history, status and prospectus
The Permian Timescale
The Pliensbachian–Toarcian (Early Jurassic) extinction: A North American perspective
Volcanism, Impacts, and Mass Extinctions: Causes and Effects
Dyke emplacement and crustal structure within a continental large igneous province, northern Barents Sea
Circum-Arctic Lithosphere Evolution