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Biomats, biofilms, and bioglue as preservational agents for arthropod trackways
Authors:Adolf Seilacher  
Institution:aEngelfriedshalde 25, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
Abstract:Due to divergent taphonomic selection, corresponding body and trace fossils are rarely found in the same rocks. In addition to this general rule, arthropod trackways are preferentially preserved in particular settings: (1) lithographic limestones, where toxic bottom waters account for the exceptional preservation of body fossils at the end of their “mortichnial” trackways; (2) estuarine and lacustrine biolaminites that yield blurred surface tracks as well as the sharper undertracks; and (3) Cambrian intertidal sands before the Precambrian/Cambrian substrate revolution had reached this environment. In all these ichnotopes, the original presence of protective microbial films can be inferred from sedimentary structures. By analogy, it is hypothesised that microbes (“bioglue”) may have been involved in the preservation of trackways in eolian dune sands. The absence of arthropod tracks in Ediacaran sands and silts means either that arthropods had not yet evolved or that they were as yet too tiny to pierce the tougher biomats of the time.
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