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Rindsberg, 2012

Ichnotaxonomy: Finding Patterns in a Welter of Information

Rindsberg, A. K.
DOI
DOI10.1016/B978-0-444-53813-0.00002-2
Year2012
BookTrace Fossils as Indicators of Sedimentary Environments
Editor(s)Knaust, D., Bromley, R. G.
PublisherElsevier
Publisher placeAmsterdam
JournalDevelopments in Sedimentology
Belongs toKnaust & Bromley 2012 (eds)
Volume64
Pages45-78
Typechapter in book
LanguageEnglish
Id7195

Abstract

Naming trace fossils is necessary if we are to communicate ideas about them. In the absence of DNA-based molecular analysis, ichnologists must rely on morphologic characters to classify trace fossils. Careful observation and description of trace fossils are therefore essential to nomenclature in ichnology. Since 1953, trace fossils have been classified simultaneously according to several systems based on stratinomic, biologic, ethologic, and binominal systematic approaches. Each of these approaches has its uses, for example, the ethologic approach is the basis of the archetypical ichnofacies model, and the systematic (Linnean) approach, with ichnogenera and ichnospecies, is the one that is most commonly used for information retrieval. The best classifications are those that are the most objective and that allow the generation of new hypotheses and predictions, reflecting patterns in the data rather than in the mind of the observer.

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