PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Echinoids and pectinid bivalves from the Early Miocene Mishan Formation of Iran

Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Shallow marine echinoids and pectinid bivalves from the Early Miocene Guri Member of the Mishan Formation cropping out at the Gery Sheikh section north of Bandar Pohl in the area of the Hormuz Strait, Iran, are reported. The echinoid fauna indicates a Burdigalian age for the Guri Member. This is supported by new calcareous nannoplankton data from this unit, which suggest an age from Aquitanian to middle Burdigalian (NN1-NN3). From a palaeobiogeographic point of view the fauna of the Guri Member is related to the faunas from central Saudi Arabia, southeast Pakistan and northwest India. The absence of Western Tethyan elements supports earlier data suggesting that a faunal separation between Proto-Mediterranean and Proto-Indian Ocean faunas was well developed before the terminal Tethyan Event. The echinoids Fibularia damensis Kier, 1972 and Anisaster arabica Kier, 1972 are new records for Iran, having been known before solely from Saudi Arabia. Brissus daviesi Jain, 2002 is transferred to Rhynobrissus based on the characters of its fascioles, petalodium and plas tron; this constituting the first fossil record of the genus.
Rocznik
Strony
419--439
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 66 poz.,
Twórcy
autor
autor
autor
autor
autor
Bibliografia
  • 1. Adams, C.G. 1970. A reconsideration of the East Indian Letter Classification of the Tertiary. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology Series, 19, 87–137.
  • 2. Adams, C.G., Gentry, A.W. and Whybrow, P.J. 1983. Dating of the Terminal Tethyan Event. Utrecht Micropaleontological Bulletins, 30, 273–298.
  • 3. Aghanabati, A. 2004. Geology of Iran. Geological Survey of Iran, 586 pp. [In Farsi]
  • 4. Alsharhan, A.S. and Nairn, A.E.M. 1995. Tertiary of the Arabian Gulf: sedimentology and hydrocarbon potential. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 114, 369–384.
  • 5. Berggren, W.A., Kent, D.V., Swisher, C.C. and Aubry, M.–P. 1995. A revised Cenozoic geochronology and chronostratigraphy. In: Berggren, W.A., Kent, D.V., Aubry, M.-P. and Hardenbol, J. (Eds), Geochronology, Time Scales and Global Stratigraphic Correlations: A Unified Temporal Framework for a Historical Geology, SEPM Special Publication 54, 129–212. SEPM; Tulsa, OK.
  • 6. Beu, A.G. and Darragh, T.A. 2001. Revision of southern Australian Cenozoic fossil Pectinidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia). Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 113, 1–205.
  • 7. Clegg, E.L.G. 1933. Echinoidea from the Persian Gulf. Palæontologica Indica, New Series, Memoire, 22, 1–35.
  • 8. Cox, L.R. 1927. Neogene and Quarternary Mollusca from the Zanzibar Protectorate. Report on the Paleontology of the Zanzibare Protectorate. Gover. Zanz., 13–102 pp.
  • 9. Cox, L.R. 1930. Reports on Geological Collections from the Coastlands of Kenya Colony made by Miss M. McKinnon Wood. V: Miocene Mollusca. VI: Pliocene Mollusca. VII: Post-Pliocene Mollusca. Monographs of the Geological Department of the Hunterian Museum Glasgow University, 4, 103–163.
  • 10. Cox, L.R. 1936. Fossil Mollusca from southern Persia (Iran) and Bahrein Islands. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, New Series, 22, Memoir, 2, 1–69.
  • 11. Cox, L.R. 1939. Depositos terciaros e post-pliocenos do distrito de Inhambane estudo de Moluscos. Bo. Serv. Ind. Min. Geol. Col. Mocambique, 3, 21–58.
  • 12. Currie, E. D. 1930. The Echinoidea in the Mc-Kinnon Wood collection. Monographs of the Geological Department of the Hunterian Museum Glasgow University, 4, 169–179.
  • 13. d’Archiac, A. and Haime, J. 1853. Description des animaux fossiles du groupe nummulitique de l’Inde, précédée d’un résumé géologique et d’une monographie des nummulites. 3+373 pp. Gide and J. Baudry; Paris.
  • 14. Dijkstra, H.H. 1999. Type specimens of Pectinidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia) described by Linnaeus (1758–1771). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 125, 383–443.
  • 15. Douglas, J. A. 1928. Contributions to Persian Palaeontology, 3. Anglo-Persian Oil Company LTD, Britannic House, Finsbury Circus, Oxford,.
  • 16. Duncan, P. M. and Sladen, W. P. 1883. The Fossil Echinoidea of Kachh and Kattywar. Palaeontologia Indica, Ser., 14, 1, i-vi+1–91.
  • 17. Duncan, p. M. and Sladen, W. P. 1885. Fossil Echinoidea of western Sind and the Coast of Bilúchístán and of the Persian Gulf, from the Tertiary Formations. Fasc. V. The Fossil Echinoidea from the Gáj or Miocene series. Palaeontologia Indica, Ser., 14, 1, 273–367.
  • 18. Eames, F.E. 1950. Notes on some Caenozoic molluscan species from the Far East. Proceedings of the Malacological Society, 28, 145–155.
  • 19. Eames, F.E. and Cox, L.R. 1956. Some tertiary Pectinacea from East Africa, Persia and the Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the Malacological Society, 32, 1–64.
  • 20. Ernst, G. 1973. Aktuopaläontologie und Merkmalsvariabilität bei mediterranen Echiniden und Rückschlüsse auf die Ökologie und Artumgrenzung fossiler Formen. Paläontologische Zeitschrift, 47, 188–216.
  • 21. Frauscher, K.F. 1886. Das Unter-Eocän der Nordalpen und seine Fauna. 1. Theil. Lamellibranchiata. Denkschriften der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Classe, 1886, 37–270.
  • 22. Goff, J.C., Jones, R.W. and Horbury, A.D. 1994. Cenozoic basin evolution of the Northern Part of the Arabian Plate and its control on hydrocarbon habitat. In M.I. Al-Husseini (Ed.), Middle East Petroleum Geosciences, GEO’94, pp. 402–412. Gulf PetroLink; Bahrain.
  • 23. Harzhauser, M., Kroh, A., Mandic, O., Piller, W.E., Göhlich, U., Reuter, M. and Berning, B. 2007. Biogeographic responses to geodynamics: a key study all around the Oligo-Miocene Tethyan Seaway. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 246, 241–256.
  • 24. Harzhauser, M., Piller, W.E. and Steininger, F.F. 2002. Circum-Mediterranean Oligo-Miocene biogeographic evolution – the gastropods’ point of view. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 183, 103–133.
  • 25. Harzhauser, M., Reuter, M., Piller, W.E., Berning, B., Kroh, A. and Mandic, O. 2009. Oligocene and Early Miocene gastropods from Kutch (NW India) document an early biogeographic switch from Western Tethys to Indo-Pacific. Paläontologische Zeitschrift, 83, 333–372.
  • 26. Hoeck Ostende, L.W. van den, Leloux, J., Wesselingh, F.P. and Winkler Prins, C.F. 2002. Cenozoic Molliscan types from Java (Indonesia) in the Mertin Collection (Division of Cenozoic Mollusca), National Museum of Natural History, Leiden. NNM Technical Bulletin, 5, 1–130.
  • 27. Iqbal, M.W.A. and Shah, S.M.I. 1980. A guide to the Stratigraphy of Pakistan. Records of the Geological Survey of Pakistan, 53, i-vi, 1–34.
  • 28. Iredale, T. 1929. Mollusca from the continental shelf of eastern Australia. Records of the Australian Museum Sydney, 17, 157–189.
  • 29. Jain, R. L. 2002. Echinoids from the Gaj Formation (Early and Middle Miocene) of Kathiawar, Gujarat, India. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, 47, 107–135.
  • 30. James, G.A. and Wynd, J.G. 1965. Stratigraphic nomenclature of Iranian oil consortium agreement area. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, 49, 2182–2245.
  • 31. Jauri, A.K. and Khare, N. 1990. Some observations on the Miocene foraminifera from Kachchh, Western India. Geoscience Journal, 11, 117–122.
  • 32. Jones, R.W. and Racey, A. 1994. Cenozoic stratigraphy of the Arabian Peninsula and Gulf. In M.D. Simmons (Ed.), Micropalaeontology and Hydrocarbon Exploration in the Middle East. Chapman and Hall, London, 273–307.
  • 33. Kalantari, A. 1992: Lithostratigraphy and microfacies of Zagros orogenic area South-West Iran. National Iranian Oil Company, exploration and production, geological laboratories Publication 12, 1–421.
  • 34. Kier, P.M. 1957. Tertiary Echinoidea from British Somaliland. Journal of Paleontology, 31, 830–902.
  • 35. Kier, P.M. 1972. Tertiary and Mesozoic Echinoids of Saudi Arabia. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 10, 1–105.
  • 36. King, L. 1953. A Miocene Marine Fauna from Zululand. Transactions and Proceedings of the Geological Society of South Africa, 56, 59–91.
  • 37. Kroh, A. and Mooi, R. (2010). World Echinoidea Database. Available online at http://www.marinespecies.org/echinoidea [online since 2010–08–26].
  • 38. Kroh, A. and Smith, A. B. 2010. The phylogeny and classification of post-Palaeozoic echinoids. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 8, 147–212.
  • 39. Lessios, H. A., Kessing, B. D. and Pearse, J. S. 2001. Population structure and speciation in tropical seas: global phylogeography of the sea urchin Diadema. Evolution, 55, 955–975.
  • 40. Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema Naturae. 10th edition, vol. 1. Laurentii Salvii, Stockholm, iii + 824 pp.
  • 41. Martin, K. 1916. Die Altmiocaene Fauna des West-Progogebirges auf Java. Sammlungen des Geologischen Reichs-Museums in Leiden, Neue Folge, 2, 223–296.
  • 42. Mohan, K. and Chatterji, A.K. 1956. Stratigraphy of the Miocene Beds of Kathiawar, Western India. Micropaleontology, 2, 349–356.
  • 43. Mortensen, T. 1951. A Monograph of the Echinoidea. V, 2. Spatangoida II. Amphisternata II. Spatangidæ, Loveniidæ, Pericosmidæ, Schizasteridæ, Brissidæ, 593 pp. C. A. Reitzel; Copenhagen.
  • 44. Motiei, H. 1993. Treatise on Geology of Iran, Stratigraphy of Zagros. In: Hushmandzadeh (Ed.), Geological Survey of Iran, 536 pp. [In Farsi]
  • 45. Noetling, F. 1901. Fauna of the Miocene beds of Burma. Palaeontologia Indica, New Series, 1, 1–378.
  • 46. Renema, W. 2007. Fauna Development of Larger Benthic Foraminifera in the Cenozoic of Southeast Asia. In: Renema, W. (Ed.), Biogeography, Time and Place: Distributions, Barriers and Islands. Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 179–215.
  • 47. Renema, W. 2008. Internal architecture of Miocene Pseudotaberina and its relation to Caribbean archaiasins. Palaeontology, 51, 71–79.
  • 48. Reuter, M., Piller, W. E., Harzhauser, M., Berning, B. and Kroh, A. 2011. The Quilon Limestone, Kerala Basin, India: an archive for Miocene Indo-Pacific seagrass beds. Lethaia, 44, 76–86.
  • 49. Reuter, M., Piller, W.E., Harzhauser, M., Mandic, O., Berning, B., Rögl, F., Kroh, A., Aubry, M.P., Wielandt-Schuster, U. and Hamedani, A. 2009. The Oligo-/Miocene Qom Formation (Iran): evidence for an early Burdigalian restriction of the Tethyan seaway and closure of its Iranian gateways. International Journal of Earth Science, 98, 627–650 [available online since 2007].
  • 50. Roman, J. 1976. Echinides eocenes et miocenes du Qatar (Golfe Persique). Annales de Paleontologie, Invertebres, 62, 49–85.
  • 51. Smith, A. B. 1979. Peristomial tube feet and plates of regular echinoids. Zoomorphology, 94, 67-80.
  • 52. Smith, A. B. (editor) 2010. The Echinoid Directory. World Wide Web electronic publication. http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/projects/echinoid-directory/index [accessed 9. July 2010]
  • 53. Sowerby, J. de C. 1840. Explanations of the Plates and Wood-Cuts. To Illustrate Capt. Grant’s Memoir on Cutch. In: Anonymous (Ed.) Plates and maps in illustration of the Transactions of the Geological Society of London, Second Series, Volume V, No. 2 [not paginated].
  • 54. Srivastava, D. K. and Singh, S. K. 1999. Echinolampas - a cassiduloid echinoid from the Tertiary rocks of Kachchh, India. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, 44, 25–47.
  • 55. Stephenson, D. G. 1968. An aberrant species of Fibularia from Kenya and Madagascar. Geological Magazine, 105, 136–139.
  • 56. Stöcklin, J. and Setudehnia, A. 1991. Stratigraphic Lexicon of Iran. Geological Survey of Iran Report, 18, 1–376.
  • 57. Teppner, W.V. 1922. Lamellibranchiata tertiaria. „Anisomyaria“ II. In diener, F. (Ed.), Fossilium Catalogus. I: Animalia. Junk, Berlin, 296 pp.
  • 58. Tornquist, A. 1905. Über eine eocäne Fauna von der Westküste von Madagaskar. Abhandlungen der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft, 27, 323-337.
  • 59. Vredenburg, E. 1928. Description of Mollusca from the Post – Eocene Tertiary formations of North – Western India. Gastropoda (in part) and Lamellibranchiata. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, 50, 351–463.
  • 60. Waller, T.R. 1969. The evolution of the Argopecten gibbus stock (Mollusca: Bivalvia), with emphasis on the tertiary and Quaternary species of eastern North America. Paleontological Society Memoir, 3, 1–125.
  • 61. Waller, T.R. 1978. Morphology, morphoclines and a new classification of the Pteriomorphia (Mollusca, Bivalvia). Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London, B 284, 345–365.
  • 62. Waller, T.R. 1991. Evolutionary relationship among commercial scallops (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Pectinidae). In: Shumway, S.E. (Ed.), Scallops – Biology, Ecology and Aquaculture. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 73 pp.
  • 63. Waller, T.R. 1993. The Evolution of “Chlamys” (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Pectinidae) in the Tropical Western Atlantic and Eastern Pacific. American Malacological Bulletin, 10, 195–249.
  • 64. Waller, T.R. 2006. New Phylogenies of the Pectinidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia. Reconciling Morphological and Molecular Approaches. In: Shumway, S.E. and Parsons, G.J. (Eds), Scallops: Biology, Ecology and Aquaculture, 44 pp. Elsevier; Amsterdam.
  • 65. Wilkes, J. 1810. Conchology. In Encyclopaedia Londinensis. J. Adlard, London, pp. 14–41.
  • 66. Wynd, J.G. 1965. Biofacies of the Iranian Oil Consortium Agreement Area. Unpublished report.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BGPK-3453-3074
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.