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1.
Sci Adv ; 10(30): eadp2650, 2024 Jul 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39058778

RESUMO

The Emu Bay Shale (EBS) of South Australia is anomalous among Cambrian Lagerstätten because it captures anatomical information that is rare in Burgess Shale-type fossils, and because of its inferred nearshore setting, the nature of which has remained controversial. Intensive study, combining outcrop and borehole data with a compilation of >25,000 fossil specimens, reveals that the EBS biota inhabited a fan delta complex within a tectonically active basin. Preservation of soft-bodied organisms in this setting is unexpected and further underscores differences between the EBS and other Cambrian Lagerstätten. Environmental conditions, including oxygen fluctuations, slope instability, high suspended sediment concentrations, and episodic high-energy events, inhibited colonization of the lower prodelta by all but a few specialist species but favored downslope transportation and preservation of other largely endemic, shallow-water benthos. The EBS provides extraordinary insight into early Cambrian animal diversity from Gondwana. These results demonstrate how environmental factors determined community composition and provide a framework for understanding this unique Konservat-Lagerstätte.


Assuntos
Fósseis , Sedimentos Geológicos , Animais , Austrália do Sul , Biodiversidade , Baías , Ecossistema , Paleontologia
2.
Sci Adv ; 10(13): eadl3452, 2024 Mar 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38552008

RESUMO

The Cambrian explosion, one of the most consequential biological revolutions in Earth history, occurred in two phases separated by the Sinsk event, the first major extinction of the Phanerozoic. Trilobite fossil data show that Series 2 strata in the Ross Orogen, Antarctica, and Delamerian Orogen, Australia, record nearly identical and synchronous tectono-sedimentary shifts marking the Sinsk event. These resulted from an abrupt pulse of contractional supracrustal deformation on both continents during the Pararaia janeae trilobite Zone. The Sinsk event extinction was triggered by initial Ross/Delamerian supracrustal contraction along the edge of Gondwana, which caused a cascading series of geodynamic, paleoenvironmental, and biotic changes, including (i) loss of shallow marine carbonate habitats along the Gondwanan margin; (ii) tectonic transformation to extensional tectonics within the Gondwanan interior; (iii) extrusion of the Kalkarindji large igneous province; (iv) release of large volumes of volcanic gasses; and (v) rapid climatic change, including incursions of marine anoxic waters and collapse of shallow marine ecosystems.

3.
Geobiology ; 18(4): 486-496, 2020 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32243705

RESUMO

Morphologically complex trace fossils, recording the infaunal activities of bilaterian animals, are common in Phanerozoic successions but rare in the Ediacaran fossil record. Here, we describe a trace fossil assemblage from the lower Dunfee Member of the Deep Spring Formation at Mount Dunfee (Nevada, USA), over 500 m below the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary. Although millimetric in scale and largely not fabric-disruptive, the Dunfee assemblage includes complex and sediment-penetrative trace fossil morphologies that are characteristic of Cambrian deposits. The Dunfee assemblage records one of the oldest documented instances of sediment-penetrative infaunalization, corroborating previous molecular, ichnologic, and paleoecological data suggesting that crown-group bilaterians and bilaterian-style ecologies were present in late Ediacaran shallow marine ecosystems. Moreover, Dunfee trace fossils co-occur with classic upper Ediacaran tubular body fossils in multiple horizons, indicating that Ediacaran infauna and epifauna coexisted and likely formed stable ecosystems.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Fósseis , Animais , Ecossistema , Nevada
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