Trace fossils from the Cambro-Ordovician cow head group, newfoundland, and their paleobathymetric implication

Autor: Jansa, Lubomir F.
Zdroj: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology; January 1974, Vol. 15 Issue: 4 p233-244, 12p
Abstrakt: U-shaped burrows identified as the trace fossil Arenicolitesoccur in the Cambro-Ordovician Cow Head Group, a series of thin-bedded limestones interbedded with graptolitic shale and thick beds of limestone breccia and conglomerate. The lithology, limestone petrography, and trace fossils indicate deposition on a submarine slope of a slowly submerging carbonate platform. The limestone bed containing Arenicolitesprobably represents a period of slow deposition. The steeply inclined U-shaped burrows are assumed to have been formed by polychaete worms of the family Mochtyellidae which thrived in an argillaceous carbonate mud bottom of a carbonate platform slope, in depths exceeding 200 m. Although Arenicolitesis believed to denote a shallow-water environment, its presence in the Cow Head extends the ecological niche of the Arenicolites-producing organisms into the outer shelf and continental slope. The domichnia of suspension feeders thus extends from shallow- to deep-water environments.
Databáze: Supplemental Index