Crinoids, hardgrounds, and community succession: The Silurian Laurel—Waldron contact in southern Indiana
DOI | 10.1111/j.1502-3931.1973.tb01197.x |
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Year | 1973 |
Publisher | Wiley |
Journal | Lethaia |
Volume | 6 |
Number | 3 |
Pages | 239-251 |
Type | article in journal |
Language | English |
Id | 10271 |
Abstract
The uppermost surface of the Silurian Laurel Limestone at its contact with the Waldron Shale in southeastern Indiana was a hardground lithified prior to the deposition of the Waldron. Evidence for this conclusion is the presence of attached palmate crinoid roots, auloporid corals, and craniid brachiopods on the Laurel surface; the irregularity of the contact with the Waldron; and a pyritic veneer at this contact. The hardground apparently had a submarine origin. In addition to the attached epifauna mentioned above, algal-sediment ‘clods’ formed on this surface. Some of these accumulated around the crinoid stems, causing them to produce cirral extensions. The resulting community was a crinoid ‘meadow’ with algal growths forming sediment traps around and between the crinoids. Later stages of Waldron Shale deposition led to the development of a soft-bottom community.