首页> 外文期刊>Journal of the Geological Society >An early Pennsylvanian waterhole deposit and its fossil biota in a dryland alluvial plain setting, Joggins, Nova Scotia
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An early Pennsylvanian waterhole deposit and its fossil biota in a dryland alluvial plain setting, Joggins, Nova Scotia

机译:在新斯科舍省乔金斯的干旱冲积平原上,宾夕法尼亚州的一个早期水坑矿床及其化石生物群

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The terrestrial ecology of Pennsylvanian tropical wetlands is understood in detail, but coeval dryland ecosystems remain highly enigmatic. To fill this gap in our knowledge, a Pennsylvanian (Langsettian) continental red-bed succession was studied at the classic Joggins locality, Nova Scotia. These units represent the deposits of seasonally dry, alluvial plains traversed by anastomosed drainage networks. One channel complex informally known as the ‘Hebert beds’ (the focus of this study) contains an unusual fossil assemblage and is interpreted as an alluvial waterhole deposit that formed following drought-induced cessation of channel flow. Adpressed and charred fossil plant remains indicate that the alluvial plain surrounding the waterhole was covered by fire-prone cordaite vegetation, with hydrophilic lycopsids and sphenopsids restricted to waterlogged riparian niches. Gigantic unionoid freshwater bivalves, locally in life position, and occurring in large numbers in the waterhole, were probably infaunal suspension feeders during periods of fluvial activity, but aestivated in channel bottom muds when flow ceased. Abundant terrestrial gastropods found clustered around fossil plant detritus may have been deposit feeders scavenging dry portions of channel floors. Common partially articulated remains of small to medium-sized tetrapods possibly represent animals drawn to the waterhole during drought when surface water was scarce elsewhere. In terms of both sedimentology and biology, the Hebert beds alluvial complex bears a very close similarity to the seasonal drainages and waterholes of present-day central and northern Australia. This unique deposit sheds significant new light on the nature of Pennsylvanian dryland tropical ecology.
机译:宾夕法尼亚热带热带湿地的陆地生态学已被详细了解,但同时代的旱地生态系统仍然高度神秘。为了填补我们的知识空白,在 经典的Joggins地点新斯科舍省研究了宾夕法尼亚州的(Langsettian)大陆红床演替。这些单位表示 吻合排水网络穿越的季节性干燥冲积平原的沉积物。一个非正式地被称为“赫伯特河床”(本研究重点)的渠道复杂地 包含一个不寻常的化石组合,并被解释为 冲积物。干旱导致河道水流 停止后形成的水坑沉积物。受压和烧焦的化石植物 的遗迹表明,水坑 周围的冲积平原被易生火的堇青石植被覆盖,亲水性 lycopsids和蝶粉受到限制淹没河岸的 生态位。在生活 位置上局部存在并大量出现在水坑中的巨大的工会类淡水双壳类动物,在河流 活动期间可能是 ,但是在停止流动时会被沟渠底部的泥浆吸引。 发现在化石 植物碎屑周围的大量陆生腹足纲动物可能是沉积物饲养者,清除了干的通道楼层。小到中型四脚架的常见的部分铰接的残骸 可能代表在干旱期间其他地方地表水稀少的情况下被抽到水坑中的动物 。在沉积学和生物学方面, 赫伯特河床冲积层与当今中部的季节性排水和水坑有非常相似的 和澳大利亚北部。这种独特的沉积物为宾夕法尼亚州旱地热带生态学的性质提供了重要的 新的认识。

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