Conodonts and brachiopods from the Volkhov Stage (Lower Ordovician) microbial mud mound at Putilovo Quarry, north-western Russia
DOI | 10.37570/bgsd-2003-50-05 |
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Aasta | 2003 |
Ajakiri | Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark |
Kuulub kogumikku | Harper & Stouge, 2003 (eds) |
Köide | 50 |
Number | 1 |
Leheküljed | 63-74 |
Tüüp | artikkel ajakirjas |
Keel | inglise |
Id | 3900 |
Abstrakt
Microbially mediated clay mud mounds are widely developed in the Lower Ordovician succession east of St. Petersburg (Russia) and are associated with a diverse and abundant fauna of brachiopods, ostracodes, echinoderms, bryozoans and conodonts. The lithology of one such mud mound in Putilovo Quarry has previously been studied, but the faunas associated with the mounds have not been investigated to date. Clay lenses in the Putilovo mud mound yield conodont assem- blages belonging to the Baltoniodus triangularis and lowermost part of the Paroistodus originalis zones and these stratigraphical intervals are much thicker in the mud mound than in the coeval Lower Ordovician succession lateral to the mound. The compositions of the conodont and brachiopod assemblages are generally the same in the mud mound as in contemporaneous beds. The occurrence of relatively fewer conodont elements in the mud mound than in the surrounding successions probably indicates the higher rate of accumulation of the mud mound clays. Juvenile brachiopods are more numerous in the clays of the mud mound than outside the build-up, sup- porting the hypothesis that the mounds included ecologically stressed environments.