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Ordovician biogeography and continental drift
Authors:Clive Burrett
Institution:Department of Geology, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia
Abstract:The changeable biogeography of the Ordovician is reviewed, quantitatively analysed and used to assess possible positions and relative movements of the continental plates. Plate boundaries are defined as precisely as possible using geological and palaeontological data. The trilobites, corals, brachiopods, cephalopods, echinoderms, graptolites and ostracods are found to be useful in defining plate boundaries and relative plate movements. Oceanic barriers are considered to be the simplest explanation for the maintenance of faunal provincialisms. The faunal barriers between South America and Africa and between Australia and Gondwanaland may have been climatic and land barriers. The present Asian continent is divided into Kazakhstan, the Siberian Platform, South Asian, Northern China, India and the Jano-Kolymian block. These areas had different faunal histories and are considered to have had different drift histories. The North China and South Asian plates were separated by the Tsinling Ocean, the Northern European plate from the North American plate by Wilson's Proto-Atlantic and the Siberian Platform plate from the Northern European by the Uralian Ocean. Southern and Central Europe are shown to have been joined to Africa and separated from the Northern European plate by a Mid-European Ocean. If Australia is considered as part of an Ordovician Gondwanaland then the best explanation for the faunal histories of most plates is provided by an anticlockwise rotation of Gondwanaland about the South palaeo-pole.
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