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A silicified Early Triassic marine assemblage from Svalbard
Date Issued
2016-11-10
Date Available
2019-07-18T10:15:24Z
Abstract
Understanding how the marine biosphere recovered from the late Permian mass extinction event is a major evolutionary question. The quality of the global fossil record of this interval is, however, somewhat poor due to preservational, collection and sampling biases. Here we report a new earliest Induan (Hindeodus parvus Zone) marine assemblage from the Deltadalen Member of the Vikinghøgda Formation, central Spitsbergen, which fills a critical gap in knowledge. The fully silicified fossils comprise the oldest silicified assemblage known from the Triassic and provide critical new systematic data. For its age, the assemblage is exceptionally diverse with 14 species of bivalves and gastropods, as well as conodonts and ammonoids. Four new bivalve species (Austrotindaria antiqua, A. svalbardensis, Nucinella taylori and N. nakremi) and one new gastropod species (Glabrocingulum parvum) are described, and five families are recorded in the Induan for the first time. Some of the common and globally widespread Early Triassic taxa, such as Unionites, are also present, and their exceptional preservation reveals key morphological characters that are documented for the first time. Taxonomic and ecological revisions based on these new data suggest that shallow-infaunal deposit-feeders were a dominant component of pre-Spathian benthic communities. The gastropods and bivalves all possessed a planktotrophic larval stage, which may have been a particular advantage in the wake of the late Permian mass extinction.
Other Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisNatural Environment Research Council (NERC) grant [NE/I005641]
Journal
Journal of Systematic Palaeontology
Volume
15
Issue
10
Start Page
851
End Page
877
Copyright (Published Version)
2016 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1477-2019
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Foster et al., 2017a.pdf
Size
1.47 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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