首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Ordovician trimerellacean brachiopod shell beds
Authors:BARRY D WEBBY  IAN G PERCIVAL
Institution:Department of Geology &Geophysics, University of Sydney, Sydney, N.S.W.] 2006, Australia;31st May, 1982.
Abstract:The large, thick-shelled, inarticulate brachiopod Eodinobolus forms many conspicuous deposits of shells in the Upper Ordovician limestones of central western New South Wales. Both in situ and reworked shell beds arc preserved at recurrent intervals through the successions, in similar facies of both transgressivc and regressive phases of deposition. In situ shell beds arc best developed in transgressivc sequences, with up to four generations of shells exhibited in the individual in situ beds. These monotypic and very low diversity shell beds are interpreted as having formed in marginal marine, quiet water conditions: (1) on the fringes of an offshore island (in part the Molong High of the Tasman Orogen), with the island still providing a fairly continuous supply of terrigenous material: and, (2) after submergence of the island, on the resulting terrigenous-free, major offshore Bahamas-like platform. This may imply that the shell beds developed in different salinity regimes. Possibly Eodinobolus was capable of tolerating a wider than normal range of salinity, from slightly brackish through normal marine, even to marginally hypersaline. However, in both settings, Eodinobolus, in its role as the dominant member of the respective pioneer community, colonized similar substrates in the low energy mud zone. This appears to suggest depositional environments most directly analogous to those of Palaeozoic virgianid pentamerides, and perhaps also comparable with some modern marginal marine oyster and mussel-bed occurrences. ?Ordovician, Brachiopoda, Eodinobolus, palaeoecology, facies, shell beds. New South Wales.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号