The ichnological optimum: Enhanced trace fossil diversity in the Cambrian offshore driven by ecology, sedimentation, and outcrop
DOI | 10.1144/jgs2024-220 |
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Aasta | 2025 |
Ajakiri | Journal of the Geological Society |
Tüüp | artikkel ajakirjas |
Keel | inglise |
Id | 51408 |
Abstrakt
The trace fossil record provides a valuable archive of the Cambrian Explosion and its variable expressions at the local level. To characterize factors controlling such variability, we present a framework that deconstructs local ichnodiversity into 1) ‘ original ichnodiversity’, reflecting ecology and behavioural diversity; 2) ‘ registered ichnodiversity’, reflecting colonization windows and substrate preservation; and 3) ‘ observable ichnodiversity’, reflecting present-day outcrop quality. An environment with favourable controls on all three levels results in an ichnological optimum , exemplified by environments between storm- and fairweather wave base. We illustrate this with reference to the Cambrian Stage 3 Redalen Member (southern Norway), from which we report 28 ichnogenera. Its depositional environment hosted a heterogenous assortment of low-diversity communities, indicating that substrate variability and faunal segregation contributed to original ichnodiversity. Further, non-erosive episodic sedimentation without intervening wave-action extended colonization windows and facilitated preservation, promoting registered ichnodiversity. Finally, thin-bedded heterolithic successions incompletely homogenized by bioturbation are conducive to ichnotaxon identification in outcrop, enhancing observable ichnodiversity. Relative to the Cambrian ichnological optimum, sedimentary conditions restricted shallower-marine registered ichnodiversity, while limited colonization restricted original ichnodiversity in deeper-marine and tidal flat settings. Future consideration of original, registered, and observable fossil records will refine how we decipher spatially heterogeneous evolutionary patterns.