TY - JOUR
T1 - Ediacaran mineralized microfossils from the basinal facies of the Doushantuo Formation in northwestern Hunan Province, South China
AU - Furuyama, Seishiro
AU - Kano, Akihiro
AU - Kunimitsu, Yoko
AU - Osanai, Yasuhito
AU - Adachi, Tatsuro
AU - Liu, Xinchun
AU - Wang, Wei
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2013/8
Y1 - 2013/8
N2 - The Ediacaran sediments in the Yangtze Block preserve valuable records of biological evolution and drastic climate changes. However, most of the Ediacaran fossil occurrences have been reported from the shallow platformal facies, and few fossils have been described from the deep basinal facies in the Yangtze Block. Here, we report mineralized microfossils from the basinal facies of the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation at Fengtan in northwestern Hunan Province, China. The submillimeter-sized microfossils with oval-discoidal shapes have apatite walls of variable thickness. The lack of morphological regularity, ornamentation, and distinct apertures indicates that they are not protozoan shells or tests. The apatite walls have more likely replaced the recalcitrant organic walls of prasinophyte phycomata and/or algal resting cysts. These fell from shallow water and were quickly preserved in a deeper setting, associated with a local decline in pH caused by bacterial decomposition and elevated concentration of phosphate in seawater. This discovery provides new insight into the stratigraphic correlation between the shallow and basinal facies of the Chinese Ediacaran.
AB - The Ediacaran sediments in the Yangtze Block preserve valuable records of biological evolution and drastic climate changes. However, most of the Ediacaran fossil occurrences have been reported from the shallow platformal facies, and few fossils have been described from the deep basinal facies in the Yangtze Block. Here, we report mineralized microfossils from the basinal facies of the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation at Fengtan in northwestern Hunan Province, China. The submillimeter-sized microfossils with oval-discoidal shapes have apatite walls of variable thickness. The lack of morphological regularity, ornamentation, and distinct apertures indicates that they are not protozoan shells or tests. The apatite walls have more likely replaced the recalcitrant organic walls of prasinophyte phycomata and/or algal resting cysts. These fell from shallow water and were quickly preserved in a deeper setting, associated with a local decline in pH caused by bacterial decomposition and elevated concentration of phosphate in seawater. This discovery provides new insight into the stratigraphic correlation between the shallow and basinal facies of the Chinese Ediacaran.
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U2 - 10.2517/1342-8144-17.3.241
DO - 10.2517/1342-8144-17.3.241
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84881507759
SN - 1342-8144
VL - 17
SP - 241
EP - 250
JO - Paleontological Research
JF - Paleontological Research
IS - 3
ER -