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11.
Abstract: The Taseko Lakes area yields the most diverse and well‐preserved late Hettangian ammonite assemblage in British Columbia. In total, 27 ammonite taxa are described, of which Fergusonites hendersonae, Eolytoceras constrictum and Pseudaetomoceras victoriense are new. Based on this study, Phylloceras cf. asperaense Hillebrandt, Togaticeras togatum (Neumayr), T. aff. goisernense Rakús, Eolytoceras aff. guexi Taylor, Discamphiceras aff. silberlingi Guex, Schlotheimia cf. cuevitensis Hillebrandt and Franziceras aff. graylockense Taylor are newly recognized in the North American Mineralense Zone whereas Nevadaphyllites psilomorphus (Neumayr), N. aff. compressus Guex, Fergusonites hendersonae sp. nov., Eolytoceras chongi Hillebrandt, E. constrictum sp. nov., Paracaloceras spp. A and B, P.? spp., Metophioceras? sp. and Schreinbachites? aff. laqueoides (Hyatt) are newly recognized in the Rursicostatum Zone. Discamphiceras silberlingi, D. sp. nov., Alsatites aff. bipartitus (Hillebrandt), Alsatites sp., Pseudaetomoceras victoriense sp. nov. and Paracaloceras aff. varaense Hillebrandt are newly recognized in both the Mineralense and Rursicostatum zones. The Taseko Lakes fauna allows clear correlations with contemporaneous strata in other areas of North America as well as with the Canadensis Zone and probably the Arcuatum horizon of the South American succession. Broad correlations are also possible with Hettangian or lowest Sinemurian strata in New Zealand and the eastern Tethys. Furthermore, the Taseko Lakes fauna permits correlation of the Mineralense and Rursicostatum zones with the circum‐Mediterranean Marmoreum Zone. Finally, this fauna suggests that the Mineralense Zone and the lower to middle portion of the Rursicostatum Zone in Taseko Lakes are equivalent to the Complanata Subzone whereas the upper portion of the Rursicostatum Zone correlates with the Depressa Subzone of the north‐west European Angulata Zone.  相似文献   
12.
A rare example of a North American Jurassic hardground is found in the Carmel Formation of southwestern Utah. The Carmel hard‐ground was formed across a carbonate lagoon from an oolitic shoal seaward to a subtidal shelly facies landward. It has an abundant bivalve fauna consisting of thick layers of encrusters (the oyster Liostrea and the plicatulid Plicatula), borers (the ichnofossil Gastro‐chaenolites with the mytilid Lithophaga often preserved inside), and nestlers (the mytilid Modiolus). A rare soft‐bodied bryozoan (Arach‐nidium) is preserved by bioimmuration in the attachment scars of Liostrea; this is the first bioimmuration recorded from the Jurassic of North America, and the first bioimmuration recorded from a hard‐ground. The phoronid boring Talpina is present in some Liostrea shells; it was apparently excavated after the death of these oysters. The Carmel hardground community does not contain other fossils, such as serpulids, brachiopods, foraminiferans, and skeletal bryo‐zoans, typical of Jurassic hardgrounds elsewhere. It represents a low diversity molluscan community developed in a restricted marine environment.  相似文献   
13.
During the 20th century, because of urbanization, most palaeontological sites yielding plants (Hettangian–Sinemurian in age) from the city of Mende have disappeared, or they have been forgotten. This article presents a synthesis of sites yielding plants, from their discoveries in the 19th century to recent prospecting. New lithostratigraphic and palaeobotanical data are brought for two historic sites (Ravin del Pouset and Petit Séminaire), as well as two new localities (Causse d’Auge road and Gardès road). This study reveals the diversity of plant-containing lithofacies (dolomudstone, marl, limestone/calcarenite and oo-bioclastic limestone) and the diversity of plant preservations (charcoalified compressions with or without cuticle, isolated cuticle, external casts/impressions). Microfaciological study of plant beds demonstrates the diversity of depositional environments. Protected, restricted and shallow environments with low wave exposure and probable euryhaline conditions are clearly the most favourable to the accumulation and the preservation of fossil plants. These early Liassic palaeofloras, among the southernmost yet reported for Laurasia, are of significance for the plant geography and global paleoecology at that time.  相似文献   
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