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Bromley, 2004a

A stratigraphy of marine bioerosion

Bromley, R. G.
DOI
DOI10.1144/GSL.SP.2004.228.01.20
Year2004
BookThe Application of Ichnology to Palaeoenvironmental and Stratigraphic Analysis
Editor(s)McIlroy, D.
PublisherGeological Society of London
JournalGeological Society, London, Special Publications
Belongs toMcIlroy, 2004 (eds)
Volume228
Number1
Pages455-479
Typearticle in book
LanguageEnglish
Id6033

Abstract

About 65 ichnogenera and a number of bioerosional trace fossils that are unnamed are catalogued with respect to their stratigraphic ranges. In most cases, corresponding stratigraphic studies of the trace-makers are not possible because (1) the rank of taxonomic ascription is too high to be meaningful and (2) not all members of a hightaxon are bioeroders. For example, radulation traces of chitons are known from Jurassic to Recent, whereas chitons havea body fossil record back to the Early Palaeozoic. Similarly, whereas the round drill-hole Oichnus paraboloides is known from Cambrian to Recent, the only identified makers of this trace fossil, naticid gastropods, range from Cretaceous to Recent. The stratigraphic ranges of bioerosion ichnotaxa emphasize the two marine revolutions of the Phanerozoic: there is marked increase in diversification during the Ordovician-Devonian interval and since the Triassic.

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