PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Tetrapod trace fossils from lowermost Jurassic strata of the Moenave Formation, northern Arizona, USA

Autorzy
Treść / Zawartość
Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
At Moenkopi Wash along the Ward Terrace escarpment of northern Arizona strata of the upper Dinosaur Canyon Member of the Moenave Formation contain sedimentary structures we interpret as casts of tetrapod burrows. Sandstone casts and in situ burrows occur concentrated in two horizons that extend several hundred meters along the Ward Terrace escarpment. The structures, hosted in beds of eolian sandstone, form interconnecting networks of burrows that branch at right angles. Individual burrow casts have sub-circular cross sections and consist of nearvertical tunnels and horizontal to low-angle galleries that connect to larger chambers. Most burrow casts measure 5 to 15 cm in diameter, are filled by sandstone of similar grain size as the host rock, and have walls that are unlined and lack external ornamentation. Bedding plane exposure of the lower horizon reveals that the density of burrows exceeds 30 vertical tunnels per square meter. One exposure in the upper horizon reveals burrows concentrated in a mound-like structure with 1 m of relief. Rhizoliths, distinguished from burrows by their typical smaller diameters, calcareous infilling, and downward branching, co-occur with these burrows in the upper horizon. The fossil burrows in the Moenave Formation appear to have been constructed by a fossorial tetrapod with social behavior similar to the modern Mediterranean blind mole-rat. Although no skeletal remains are associated with the burrows, the fossil record suggests that the most likely producers of the Moenave burrows were tritylodontid cynodonts.
Słowa kluczowe
Czasopismo
Rocznik
Strony
133--141
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 48 poz.
Twórcy
autor
autor
Bibliografia
  • 1. Ahlbrandt T. S., Andrews S. and Gwynne D. T. 1978. Bioturbation in eolian deposits. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, 48: 839-848.
  • 2. Alonso-Zarza A. M. 2003. Palaeoenvironmental significance of palustrine carbonates and calcretes in the geological record. Earth-Science Reviews, 60: 261-298.
  • 3. Clemmensen L. R., Olsen H. and Blakey R. L. 1989. Erg-margin deposits in the Lower Jurassic Moenave Formation and Wingate Sandstone, southern Utah. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 101: 759-773.
  • 4. Ekdale A. A., Bromley A. G. and Pemberton S. G. 1984. Ichnology: the use of trace fossils in sedimentology and stratigraphy, 1-317, SEPM Sort Course 15, Tulsa.
  • 5. Gambaryan P. P. 1960. The adaptive features of the locomotory organs in fossorial mammals, 1-195, Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk Armyanskoy SSR, Yerevan [in Russian].
  • 6. Gee C. T., Sander P. M. and Petzelberger B. E. M. 2003. A Miocene rodent nut cache in coastal dunes of the lower Rhine Embayment, Germany. Paleontology, 46: 1133-1149.
  • 7. Glennie K. W. and Evamy B. D. 1968. Dikaka; plants and plant-root structures associated with eolian sand. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 4: 77-87.
  • 8. Gobetz K. E. 2006. Possible burrows of mylagaulids (Rodentia: Aplodontoidea: Mylagaulidae) from the late Miocene (Barstovian) Pawnee Creek Formation, northeastern Colorado. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 237: 119-136.
  • 9. Gobetz K. E. and Martin L. D. 2006. Burrows of a gopher-like rodent, possibly Gregorymys (Geomyoidea: Geomyidae: Entoptychtinae), from the early Miocene Harrison Formation, Nebraska. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 237: 305-314.
  • 10. Groenewald G. H. 1991. Burrow casts from the Lystrosaurus-Procolophon assemblage zone, Karoo sequence, South Africa. Koedoe, 34: 13-22.
  • 11. Groenewald G. H., Welman J. and MacEachern J. A. 2001. Vertebrate burrow complexes from the Early Triassic Cynognathus zone (Driekoppen Formation, Beaufort Group) of the Karoo basin, South Africa. Palaios, 16: 148-160.
  • 12. Harshbarger J. W., Repenning C. A. and Irwin J. H. 1957. Stratigraphy of the uppermost Triassic and the Jurassic rocks of the Navajo Country. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, 291: 12-26.
  • 13. Hasiotis S. T. 2002. Continental trace fossils, 1-128, SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), Denver.
  • 14. Hasiotis S. T. 2004. Reconnaissance of Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation ichnofossils, Rocky Mountain region, USA: paleoenvironmental, stratigraphic, and paleoclimatic significance of terrestrial and freshwater ichnocoenoses. Sedimentary Geology, 167: 177-268.
  • 15. Hasiotis S. T. and Mitchell C. E. 1993. A comparison of crayfish burrow morphologies: Triassic and Holocene fossil, paleo- and neo-ichnological evidence, and the identification of their burrowing signatures. Ichnos, 2: 291-314.
  • 16. Hasiotis S. T., Wellner R. W., Martin A. J. and Demko T. M. 2004. Vertebrate burrows from Triassic and Jurassic continental deposits of North America and Antarctica: their paleoenvironmental and paleoecological significance. Ichnos, 11: 103-124.
  • 17. Hickman G. C. 1990. Adaptiveness of tunnel system features in subterranean mammal burrows. In: E. Nevo and O. A. Reig (Eds), Evolution of subterranean mammals at the organismal and molecular levels, 185-210, Wiley-Liss, New York.
  • 18. Hildebrand M. 1974. Analysis of vertebrate structure, 1-710, John Wiley, New York.
  • 19. Hildebrand M. 1985. Digging of quadrupeds. In: M. Hildebrand, D. M. Bramble, K. F. Liem and D. B. Wake (Eds), Functional vertebrate morphology, 89-109, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
  • 20. Irby G. V. 1996. Synopsis of the Moenave Formation. In: M. Morales (Ed.), Guidebook for the Geological Excursion of the Continental Jurassic Symposium, Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, 3-14.
  • 21. Kielan-Jaworowska Z., Cifelli R. L. and Luo Z. 2004. Mammals from the age of dinosaurs, 1-630, Columbia University Press, New York.
  • 22. Klappa C. F. 1980. Rhizoliths in terrestrial carbonates: classification, recognition, genesis and significance. Sedimentology, 27: 613-629.
  • 23. Lockley M. G., Conrad K., Paquette M. and Farlow J. O. 1992. Distribution and significance of Mesozoic vertebrate trace fossils in Dinosaur National Monument. University of Wyoming National Park Service Report, 16: 64-85.
  • 24. Lockley M. G., Lucas S. G., Hunt A. P. and Gaston R. 2004. Ichnofaunas from the Triassic-Jurassic boundary sequences of the Gateway area, western Colorado: implications for faunal composition and correlations with other areas. Ichnos, 11: 89-102.
  • 25. Lucas S. G. 1993. The Chinle Group: revised stratigraphy and chronology of Upper Triassic nonmarine strata in the western United States. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin, 59: 27-50.
  • 26. Lucas S. G. and Heckert A. B. 2001. Theropod dinosaurs and the Early Jurassic age of the Moenave Formation, Arizona-Utah, USA. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Monatshefte, 7: 435-448.
  • 27. Lucas S. G. and Tanner L. H. 2007. Tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology of the Triassic-Jurassic transition on the southern Colorado Plateau, USA. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 244: 242-256.
  • 28. Lucas S. G., Gobetz K. E., Odier G. P., McCormick T. and Egan C. 2006. Tetrapod burrows from the Lower Jurassic Navajo Sandstone, southeastern Utah. New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 37: 147-154.
  • 29. Lucas S. G., Heckert A. B., Estep J. W. and Anderson O. J. 1997. Stratigraphy of the Upper Triassic Chinle Group, Four Corners region. In: Mesozoic Geology and Paleontology of the Four Corners Region. New Mexico Geological Society Guidebook, 48: 81-108.
  • 30. Lucas S. G., Tanner L. H. and Heckert A. B. 2005. Tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology across the Triassic-Jurassic boundary in northeastern Arizona. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin, 29: 84-94.
  • 31. Luo Z. and Wible J. R. 2005. A Late Jurassic digging mammal and early mammalian diversification. Science, 308: 103-107.
  • 32. Martin L. D. and Bennett D. K. 1977. The burrows of the Miocene beaver Palaeocastor, western Nebraska, USA. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 22: 173-193.
  • 33. Marzolf J. E. 1993. Palinspastic reconstruction of early Mesozoic sedimentary basins near the latitude of Las Vegas; implications for the early Mesozoic Cordilleran cratonal margin. In: G. C. Dunne and K. A. McDougal (Eds), Mesozoic paleogeography of the western United States. Field Trip Guidebook – Pacific Section SEPM: 71: 433-462.
  • 34. Miller M. F., Hasiotis S. T., Babcock L. E., Isbell J. L. and Collinson J. W. 2001. Tetrapod and large burrows of uncertain origin in Triassic high paleolatitude floodplain deposits, Antarctica. Palaios: 16, 218-232.
  • 35. Molina-Garza R. S., Geissman J. W. and Lucas S. G. 2003. Paleomagnetism and magnetostratigraphy of the lower Glen Canyon and upper Chinle Groups, Jurassic-Triassic of northern Arizona and northeast Utah. Journal of Geophysical Research, 108, B4: 1-24.
  • 36. Nevo E. 1961. Observations of Israeli populations of the mole-rat Spalax ehrenbergi Nehring 1898. Mammalia, 25: 127-144.
  • 37. Nowak R. M. 1999. Walker’s Mammals of the World, 1-1936, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
  • 38. Pipiringos G. N. and O’Sullivan R. N. 1978. Principal unconformities in Triassic and Jurassic rocks, western interior United States – a preliminary survey. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, 1035-A: 1-29.
  • 39. Rainforth E. C. and Lockley M. G. 1996. Tracking life in a Lower Jurassic desert: vertebrate tracks and other traces from the Navajo Sandstone. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin, 60: 285-289.
  • 40. Reichman O. J. and Smith S. C. 1987. Burrows and burrowing behavior by mammals. Current Mammalogy, 2: 197-235.
  • 41. Schultz-Pittman R. J., Lockley M. G. and Gaston R. 1996. First reports of synapsid tracks from the Wingate and Moenave formations, Colorado Plateau region. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin, 60: 271-273.
  • 42. Shult M. F. and Farlow J. O. 1992. Vertebrate trace fossils. In: C. G. Maples and R. R. West (Eds), Trace fossils: the paleontological society, 34-63, Short Courses in Paleontology no. 5, Knoxville.
  • 43. Smith R. M. H. 1987. Helical burrow casts of therapsid origin from the Beaufort Group (Permian) of South Africa. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 60: 155-170.
  • 44. Sues H-D. 1986. The skull and dentition of two tritylodontid therapsids from the Lower Jurassic of western North America. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 151: 217-268.
  • 45. Tanner L. H. and Lucas S. G. 2007. The Moenave Formation: sedimentologic and stratigraphic context of the Triassic-Jurassic boundary in the Four Corners area, southwestern U.S.A. Palaeogeography, Palaeoecology, Palaeoclimatology, 244: 111-125.
  • 46. Tanner L. H., Lucas S. G. and Smith D. L. 2006. Terrestrial trace fossils of the Upper Triassic- Lower Jurassic Dinosaur Canyon Member, Moenave Formation, northern Arizona. Ichnos, 13: 1-9.
  • 47. Wilson R. F. 1967. Whitmore Point, a new member of the Moenave Formation in Utah and Arizona. Plateau, 40: 29-40.
  • 48. Winkler D. A., Jacobs L. L., Congleton J. D. and Downs W. R. 1991. Life in a sand sea: biota from Jurassic interdunes. Geology, 19: 889-892.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BSL9-0067-0011
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.