Tagasi otsingusse
Gregory, 1991

New trace fossils from the Miocene of Northland, New Zealand: Rorschachichnus amoeba and Piscichnus waitemata

Gregory, M. R.
DOI
DOI10.1080/10420949109386352
Aasta1991
AjakiriIchnos
Köide1
Number3
Leheküljed195-205
Tüüpartikkel ajakirjas
Keelinglise
Id26710

Abstrakt

Additional discoveries of well‐preserved trace fossils in the Miocene Waitemata Group of Northland, New Zealand, have permitted recognition of two new ichnotaxa. Rorschachichnus amoeba is a small, crudely globose trace fossil of irregularly reticulate outline. It is interpreted as a mining trace, possibly by a small meiofaunal arthropod progenitor, and is typically associated with the Nereites ichno‐facies that is characteristic of flysch sequences. Piscichnus waitemata is a large, plug‐shaped trace fossil, considered to be an analog of modern eagle ray (elasmobranch) foraging pits, and is conspicuous in shallow‐marine deposits.

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