The first named Ediacaran body fossil, Aspidella terranovica

被引:212
作者
Gehling, JG
Narbonne, GM
Anderson, MM
机构
[1] S Australian Museum, Div Nat Sci, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia
[2] Queens Univ, Dept Geol Sci, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.0031-0239.2000.00134.x
中图分类号
Q91 [古生物学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 070903 ;
摘要
Aspidella terranovica Billings, 1872 was first described from the late Neoproterozoic Fermeuse Formation (St. John's Group) on the Avalon Peninsula of eastern Newfoundland, approximately 1 km stratigraphically above the famous Ediacaran biota at Mistaken Point, and several kilometres below the base of the Cambrian. Aspidella has been reinterpreted perhaps more than any other Precambrian taxon, and has variously been regarded as a fossil mollusc or 'medusoid', a gas escape structure, a concretion, or a mechanical suction mark. Our studies indicate that Aspidella includes a wide variety of preservational morphs varying from negative hyporeliefs with a raised rim and ridges radiating from a slit (Aspidella-type preservation), to flat discs with a central boss and sharp outer ring (Spriggia preservation), to positive hyporeliefs with concentric ornamentation (Ediacaria preservation). Specimens occur in a continuum of sizes, with preservational styles dependent on the size of the specimen and the grain size of the host lithology; the elongation of specimens is tectonic. Aspidella is confirmed as a body fossil from observations of complex radial and concentric ornamentation, mutually deformed borders in clusters of specimens, and occurrence on the same bedding planes as certain distinctive Ediacaran taxa. Aspidella is indistinguishable from, and has priority over, several of the most common genera of late Neoproterozoic discoidal body fossils worldwide. Similar fossils from Australia are interpreted as holdfasts of frond-like organisms. The density of specimens in the Aspidella beds suggests levels of benthic biomass in the Neoproterozoic that could rival those of modern marine communities. The serial growth forms, Palaeopascichnus, Intrites, Neonereites renarius and Yelovichnus, associated with Aspidella, are interpreted as body fossils of unknown affinities rather than trace fossils. A new, trilobed, Ediacaran body fossil, Triforillonia costellae gen. et sp. nov., is described from the Aspidella beds of the Fermeuse Formation.
引用
收藏
页码:427 / 456
页数:30
相关论文
共 85 条
[1]  
Anderson M.M., 1981, Earth's Pre-Pleistocene Glacial Record, P760
[2]   FOSSILS FOUND IN PRE-CAMBRIAN CONCEPTION GROUP OF SOUTH-EASTERN NEWFOUNDLAND [J].
ANDERSON, MM ;
MISRA, SB .
NATURE, 1968, 220 (5168) :680-&
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1976, IZV AN SSSR GEOL+
[4]  
[Anonymous], MEMOIRS GEOLOGICAL S
[5]  
[Anonymous], 1981, T GEOLOGICHESKIY INS
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1980, PALEONTOL J+
[7]  
[Anonymous], 1984, Patterns of change in Earth evolution, DOI DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-69317-5_10
[8]  
BANKS NL, 1970, GEOL J, V3, P1
[9]  
Bekker Yu. R., 1977, IZV AN SSSR GEOL+, V3, P90
[10]  
BENUS AP, 1988, B NEW YORK STATE MUS, V463, P1