Late Ordovician Orthide and Billingsellide Brachiopods from Anticosti Island, Eastern Canada

Late Ordovician Orthide and Billingsellide Brachiopods from Anticosti Island, Eastern Canada

Author: Jisuo Jin

Publisher: NRC Research Press

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13: 0660197898

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A monographic study that deals with a major marine faunal turnover during the Late Ordovician global greenhouse/icehouse episodes. It aims to document the diversity change of brachiopods (one of the major groups of marine life during the Ordovician Period) from pre-extinction to extinction times.


Current Developments in Bioerosion

Current Developments in Bioerosion

Author: Max Wisshak

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-06-02

Total Pages: 501

ISBN-13: 3540775978

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It has become apparent from the literature that bioerosional processes affect a wide range of biological and geological systems that cross many disciplines among the sciences. This book is dedicated to crossing those traditional disciplinary boundaries to present a united and current perspective on the pattern and process of bioerosion. The book opens with papers on the evolutionary significance of bioerosion. It concludes with a primer on the bioerosion bibliography website.


High Resolution Stratigraphy of the Lower Silurian (Rhuddanian-Aeronian) Paleotropical Neritic Carbonates, Anticosti Island, Québec

High Resolution Stratigraphy of the Lower Silurian (Rhuddanian-Aeronian) Paleotropical Neritic Carbonates, Anticosti Island, Québec

Author: Pascale Daoust

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Anticosti Island, located in Eastern Canada, displays one of the most complete, best exposed, and most fossiliferous carbonate successions spanning the Ordovician-Silurian (O/S) Boundary in the World. This study develops a new high-resolution framework for the post End-Ordovician extinction strata ( ̃260 m thick) exposed in coastal outcrops and recovered from a continuous drill core (La Loutre #1), both located in the western part of the island. In total, eight facies, all associated with a storm-dominated carbonate system, were recognized and organized into a multi-order depositional cycles. A new high resolution isotopic curve with more than 300 data points from well-preserved bulk micrite samples covers the late Hirnantian to Early Aeronian time interval and corresponds to the upper Ellis Bay, Becscie, Merrimack and lower Gun River formations. Two distinct positive carbon isotope excursions are present in the late Hirnantian part of the Ellis Bay Formation (+5?) and in the lower Aeronian part of the Gun River Formation (+2?). These positive isotopic carbon excursions provide a distinctive chemostratigraphic signature for regional and global correlations with other O/S sections. Like the Quaternary ?18O marine signal, our ?18O record is largely coupled with multi-order cyclic facies changes. This study demonstrates the importance of glacio-eustasy following the End-Ordovician glacial maxima as one of the primary factors controlling the stratigraphic architecture of paleotropical neritic carbonates during the Early Silurian.