36 results on '"KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM"'
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2. Isotopic evidence for temperate oceans during the Cambrian Explosion
- Author
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Wotte, Thomas, Skovsted, Christian B., Whitehouse, Martin J., and Kouchinsky, Artem
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Early–Middle Cambrian stratigraphy and faunas from northern Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Alexander, Ruaridh, Bengtson, Stefan, Bowyer, Fred, Clausen, Sebastien, Holmer, Lars E., Kolesnikov, Kirill A., Korovnikov, Igor, Pavlov, Vladimir, Skovsted, Christian B., Ushatinkskaya, Galina, Wood, Rachel, and Zhuravlev, Andrey
- Abstract
New assemblages of skeletal fossils chemically extracted from carbonates of the Cambrian Stage 2–Drumian Stage are reported from the lower reaches of the Lena River as well as from the Khorbusuonka, Malaya Kuonamka, and Bol’shaya Kuonamka rivers in northern part of the Siberian Platform. The fauna studied with scanning electron microscopy includes brachiopods, molluscs, hyoliths, halkieriids, chancelloriids, tommotiids, lobopodians, palaeoscolecidans, bradoriids, echinoderms, anabaritids, hyolithelminths, and sponges showing similarity to previously described fossil assemblages from Siberia, Laurentia, and Gondwana. The material includes emended descriptions of Halkieria proboscidea, Hadimopanella knappologica, Archaeopetasus typicus, and first descriptions of Hadimopanella foveata Kouchinsky sp. nov. and Archaeopetasus pachybasalis Kouchinsky sp. nov. Affinity of Archaeopetasus to chancelloriids is suggested. Finding of an in-place operculum in a planispiral shell of Michniakia minuta enables reinterpretation of this form as a hyolith, not a mollusc. The cambroclavids Cambroclavus sp. and Zhijinites clavus and the earliest echinoderms belonging to the Rhombifera and Ctenocystoidea are reported respectively from the lower Botoman stage and Botoman–Toyonian transitional beds, correlated with Cambrian Stage 4. Carbon isotopes are analysed from sections of the Chuskuna (upper Kessyusa Group), Erkeket, Kuonamka, Olenyok, Yunkyulyabit-Yuryakh, Tyuser and Sekten formations. A major part of the δ13C record is obtained from the Cambrian Stage 4–Drumian Stage strata which remain incompletely characterised by chemostratigraphy. The Lower Anomocarioides limbataeformis Carbon isotope Excursion (LACE) from the Drumian Stage of the Khorbusuonka River is introduced herein. New chemostratigraphic data are used for regional and global correlation and facilitate study of the evolutionary development of animals and faunas through the “Cambrian explosion”.
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- 2022
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4. Middle Cambrian (Miaolingian Series, Wuliuan Stage) molluscs and mollusc-like microfossils from North Greenland (Laurentia)
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Peel, John Stuart, Kouchinsky, Artem, Peel, John Stuart, and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Abstract
Diverse assemblages of helcionelloid molluscs and mollusc-like microfossils are described from the upper Henson Gletscher Formation (Cambrian, Miaolingian Se-ries, Wuliuan Stage) of Lauge Koch Land and western Peary Land, North Greenland (Laurentia). The fauna compares closely to an assemblage of similar age from the Coonigan Formation of Australia, although the latter is preserved as silica replicas while the North Greenland fossils are dominantly preserved as phosphatized internal moulds. These internal moulds often retain a detailed impression of the inner surface of the shell, with a fine pitted texture typically present. Prominent deep grooves on the sub-apical surface in the erect helcionellids Dorispira and Erugoconus, correspond-ing to ridges on the shell interior, seem to be associated with control of water flow through the mantle cavity. Well-developed shell pores, preserved as tubercles on the internal mould, are common in species of the laterally compressed Mellopegma. New taxa: Dorispira avannga sp. nov., Dorispira septentrionalis sp. nov., Dorispira tavsenensis sp. nov., Dorispira tippik sp. nov., Erugoconus acuminatus gen. et sp. nov., Scenella? siku sp. nov., Sermeqiconus gen. nov., Tavseniconus erectus gen. et sp. nov., Vendrascospira troelseni gen. et sp. nov., Vendrascospira frykmani gen. et sp. nov.
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- 2022
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5. Lower–Middle Cambrian faunas and stratigraphy from northern Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary, Bengtson, Stefan, additional, Skovsted, Christian B., additional, Clausen, Sébastien, additional, Holmer, Lars E., additional, Korovnikov, Igor, additional, Pavlov, Vladimir, additional, Ushatinskaya, Galina, additional, Zhuravlev, Andrey, additional, and Kolesnikov, Kirill, additional
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- 2022
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6. (Re)proposal of three Cambrian Subsystems and their Geochronology
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Landing, Ed, primary, Geyer, Gerd, additional, Schmitz, Mark D., additional, Wotte, Thomas, additional, and Kouchinsky, Artem, additional
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- 2021
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7. Cnidarian-like embryos associated with the first shelly fossils in Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, and Gershwin, Lisa-ann
- Subjects
Siberia -- Natural history ,Coelenterata -- Research ,Marine bacteria -- Research ,Fossils -- Identification and classification ,Earth sciences - Abstract
Phosphatized spheroids, [approximately]0.5 mm in diameter, in the Lower Cambrian Manykay Formation at the Bol'shaya Kuonamka River in northern Sakha (Yakutia) are interpreted as cnidarian embryos of late developmental stages. One of the poles has a double cross-like structure, consisting of two sets of four bands each. The bands of the upper set radiate at 90 [degrees] from each other; those of the lower set also radiate at about right angles from each other, but the set is rotated 45 [degrees] in respect to the upper set. Although there is a resemblance to the cross-like arrangements of cells in pregastrulation spiralian eggs, in particular those of annelids, the combined evidence favors an interpretation of the bands as incipient tentacles of a cnidarian actinula larva. The embryos occur with one of the first assemblages of shelly fossils in northern Siberia, that of the Angustiochrea lata zone. The co-occurring shelly fossils, anabaritids, probably also represent the phylum Cnidaria, but because their tubes have a consistent triradial symmetry, the connection with the tetraradially symmetrical embryos is problematic. The size of the embryos suggests that they are nonplanktotrophic, and the presence of actinula-like features suggests the lack of a free planula stage.
- Published
- 1999
8. Goldschmidt Abstracts
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Dahl, Tais W., Connelly, James N., Li, Da, Kouchinsky, Artem, Gill, Benjamin C., Porter, Susannah M., Maloof, Adam C., Bizzarro, Martin, and Geosciences
- Abstract
Large, motile animals proliferated during the Cambrian explosion,540–515 million years ago,and this period has been associated with both rising and declining O2levels on Earth [1–3]. To explore this conundrum, we reconstructed the global extent of seafloor oxygenation at ~sub-million year resolution based on U isotope compositions in 187 marine limestone samples from China, Siberia and Morocco,and coupled this record to simulations of atmospheric O2 levels using a mass balance model constrained by carbon, sulfur and strontium isotopes in the same rocks.The studied samples were investigated petrographically and geochemically to disentangle isotope fractionation processes occurring locally during diagenesis from secular changes in open seawater. We find that Sr/Ca, Mg/Ca and G18O help discriminate carbonate samples with a larger G238U offset from contemporaneous seawater, and decipher the signal that can be ascribed to global changes in the oceanic U pool. Our data demonstrate two significant expansions of seafloor anoxia in the aftermath of an interval with declining atmospheric pO2levels.The combination of atmospheric and oceanic O2records offers a self-consistent and highly dynamic picture of atmosphere-ocean oxygenation in which the evolving animal ecosystems might have both responded and contributed to global environmental change.Animals diversified possibly by a predator-prey arms race peaking in two pulses interrupted by these dramatic fluctuations in seafloor anoxia. When O2levels again rose, it occurred in concert with predicted high rates of photosynthetic production, both of which may have fueled more energy to predators and their armored prey in the evolving marine ecosystem. Published version
- Published
- 2019
9. Middle Cambrian (Miaolingian Series, Wuliuan Stage) molluscs and mollusc-like microfossils from North Greenland (Laurentia).
- Author
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PEEL, JOHN S. and KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM
- Subjects
- *
FOSSIL microorganisms , *FOSSILS , *SILICA , *SPECIES , *TEXTURES ,LAURENTIA (Continent) - Abstract
Diverse assemblages of helcionelloid molluscs and mollusc-like microfossils are described from the upper Henson Gletscher Formation (Cambrian, Miaolingian Series, Wuliuan Stage) of Lauge Koch Land and western Peary Land, North Greenland (Laurentia). The fauna compares closely to an assemblage of similar age from the Coonigan Formation of Australia, although the latter is preserved as silica replicas while the North Greenland fossils are dominantly preserved as phosphatized internal moulds. These internal moulds often retain a detailed impression of the inner surface of the shell, with a fine pitted texture typically present. Prominent deep grooves on the sub-apical surface in the erect helcionellids Dorispira and Erugoconus, corresponding to ridges on the shell interior, seem to be associated with control of water flow through the mantle cavity. Well-developed shell pores, preserved as tubercles on the internal mould, are common in species of the laterally compressed Mellopegma. New taxa: Dorispira avannga sp. nov., Dorispira septentrionalis sp. nov., Dorispira tavsenensis sp. nov., Dorispira tippik sp. nov., Erugoconus acuminatus gen. et sp. nov., Scenella? siku sp. nov., Sermeqiconus gen. nov., Tavseniconus erectus gen. et sp. nov., Vendrascospira troelseni gen. et sp. nov., Vendrascospira frykmani gen. et sp. nov. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Atmosphere–ocean oxygen and productivity dynamics during early animal radiations
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Geosciences, Dahl, Tais W., Connelly, James N., Li, Da, Kouchinsky, Artem, Gill, Benjamin C., Porter, Susannah M., Maloof, Adam C., Bizzarro, Martin, Geosciences, Dahl, Tais W., Connelly, James N., Li, Da, Kouchinsky, Artem, Gill, Benjamin C., Porter, Susannah M., Maloof, Adam C., and Bizzarro, Martin
- Abstract
The proliferation of large, motile animals 540 to 520 Ma has been linked to both rising and declining O₂ levels on Earth. To explore this conundrum, we reconstruct the global extent of seafloor oxygenation at approximately submillion-year resolution based on uranium isotope compositions of 187 marine carbonates samples from China, Siberia, and Morocco, and simulate O₂ levels in the atmosphere and surface oceans using a mass balance model constrained by carbon, sulfur, and strontium isotopes in the same sedimentary successions. Our results point to a dynamically viable and highly variable state of atmosphere–ocean oxygenation with 2 massive expansions of seafloor anoxia in the aftermath of a prolonged interval of declining atmospheric pO₂ levels. Although animals began diversifying beforehand, there were relatively few new appearances during these dramatic fluctuations in seafloor oxygenation. When O₂ levels again rose, it occurred in concert with predicted high rates of photosynthetic production, both of which may have fueled more energy to predators and their armored prey in the evolving marine ecosystem.
- Published
- 2019
11. Atmosphere-ocean oxygen and productivity dynamics during the Cambrian explosion
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Geosciences, Dahl, Tais W., Connelly, James N., Li, Da, Kouchinsky, Artem, Gill, Benjamin C., Porter, Susannah M., Maloof, Adam C., Bizzarro, Martin, Geosciences, Dahl, Tais W., Connelly, James N., Li, Da, Kouchinsky, Artem, Gill, Benjamin C., Porter, Susannah M., Maloof, Adam C., and Bizzarro, Martin
- Abstract
Large, motile animals proliferated during the Cambrian explosion,540–515 million years ago,and this period has been associated with both rising and declining O2levels on Earth [1–3]. To explore this conundrum, we reconstructed the global extent of seafloor oxygenation at ~sub-million year resolution based on U isotope compositions in 187 marine limestone samples from China, Siberia and Morocco,and coupled this record to simulations of atmospheric O2 levels using a mass balance model constrained by carbon, sulfur and strontium isotopes in the same rocks.The studied samples were investigated petrographically and geochemically to disentangle isotope fractionation processes occurring locally during diagenesis from secular changes in open seawater. We find that Sr/Ca, Mg/Ca and G18O help discriminate carbonate samples with a larger G238U offset from contemporaneous seawater, and decipher the signal that can be ascribed to global changes in the oceanic U pool. Our data demonstrate two significant expansions of seafloor anoxia in the aftermath of an interval with declining atmospheric pO2levels.The combination of atmospheric and oceanic O2records offers a self-consistent and highly dynamic picture of atmosphere-ocean oxygenation in which the evolving animal ecosystems might have both responded and contributed to global environmental change.Animals diversified possibly by a predator-prey arms race peaking in two pulses interrupted by these dramatic fluctuations in seafloor anoxia. When O2levels again rose, it occurred in concert with predicted high rates of photosynthetic production, both of which may have fueled more energy to predators and their armored prey in the evolving marine ecosystem.
- Published
- 2019
12. Terreneuvian stratigraphy and faunas from the Anabar Uplift, Siberia.
- Author
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Landing, Ed, Steiner, Michael, Vendrasco, Michael, Ziegler, Karen, Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Landing, Ed, Steiner, Michael, Vendrasco, Michael, and Ziegler, Karen
- Published
- 2017
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13. Terreneuvian stratigraphy and faunas from the Anabar Uplift, Siberia.
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary, Bengtson, Stefan, additional, Landing, Ed, additional, Steiner, Michael, additional, Vendrasco, Michael, additional, and Ziegler, Karen, additional
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- 2017
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14. Corrigendum
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary
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- 2017
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15. X-ray tomographic microscopy tightens affinity of the Lower Cambrian Oymurania to the brachiopod stem group
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary and Bengtson, Stefan, additional
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- 2017
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16. Undersökning av skalförändringar hos havsörn
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Helander, Björn, Kouchinsky, Artem, and Bignert, Anders
- Abstract
Abnorm uttorkning av äggen var ett problem av mycket stor omfattning hos havsörnar vid Östersjökusten under 1960 -70- och -80talet. Problemet har kopplats till påverkan från miljögifter och starkast samband har visats för DDE. Förekomsten av uttorkade ägg minskade under 1980-talet och försvann i stort sett under 1990-talet i beståndet. Detta har tolkats som ett resultat av att de gamla honor som uppvisade dessa problem med äggen successivt ersattes med yngre fåglar som inte hade utsatts för samma belastningsnivåer av miljögifter under sin levnad. Efter att ha varit helt borta under nära 20 års tid har kraftigt uttorkade ägg åter påträffats under den senaste femårsperioden (2009-2013) . Samtliga fall hittills kommer från Bottenhavskusten (Gävleborgs och Västernorrlands län). Onormal uttorkning av äggen kopplar till förändringar i skalstrukturen som medför en ökad permeabilitet genom skalet. Något samband med den skalförtunning - som sedan länge varit känd som en effekt av DDE hos flera (men inte alla) fågelgrupper - har inte visat sig finnas. Fenomenet med uttorkning av äggen har inte heller uppmärksammats tidigare hos vildlevande fåglar. Hos våra havsörnar vid Östersjökusten är uttorkning av äggen den parameter som visat starkast koppling till den starkt nedsatta fortplantningen under 40 års tid. De strukturella förändringar i skalen som gett upphov till detta har dock inte studerats tidigare i havsörnsäggen. Syftet med studien som redovisas i denna rapport är att belysa skillnader i skalstrukturer som kan förklara uttorkning hos vissa ägg jämfört med normala ägg.
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- 2014
17. Taxonomy, morphology, shell structure and early ontogeny of Pelmanotreta nom. nov. from the lower Cambrian of Siberia
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Skovsted, Christian B., Ushatinskaya, Galina, Holmer, Lars E., Popov, Leonid E., Kouchinsky, Artem, Skovsted, Christian B., Ushatinskaya, Galina, Holmer, Lars E., Popov, Leonid E., and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Abstract
The new generic name Pelmanotreta is proposed under the provisions of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) to replace Cryptotreta Pelman, 1977 (Brachiopoda), a junior homonym of Cryptotreta Blanc & Foote, 1961 (Arthropoda). This poorly known brachiopod genus and its type and only species, Pelmanotreta neguertchenensis (Pelman, 1977), from the early Cambrian of Siberia is redescribed. The family-level taxonomy of Pelmanotreta and other “cryptotretid” brachiopods is uncertain. In Pelmanotreta, dorsal valves vastly outnumber ventral valves in all collections but new specimens of the poorly known ventral valve reveal a possibly septate and poorly mineralized apical region. A prismatic hexagonal shell structure comparable to that of Salanygolina is described. P. neguertchenensis preserves the earliest known record of a larval shell in brachiopods.
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- 2015
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18. The new stem-group brachiopod Oymurania from the lower Cambrian of Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Holmer, Lars E., Steiner, Michael, Ushatinskaya, Galina T., Kouchinsky, Artem, Holmer, Lars E., Steiner, Michael, and Ushatinskaya, Galina T.
- Abstract
A stem-group brachiopod, Oymurania gravestocki Ushatinskaya gen. et sp. nov. is described herein from the middle Atdabanian-lower Botoman Stages (similar to Cambrian Stage 3) of the Siberian Platform. The fossils were extracted from limestone beds of the Emyaksin, Perekhod, and Pestrotsvet formations as assemblages of disarticulated orthoconic to cyrtoconic porous shells in apatite preservation. The originally organophosphatic shells of Oymurania are externally similar to mitral sclerites (ventral valves) of the stem-group brachiopod Micrina, although no sellate-like sclerites, nor differentiated subapical area with apophyses were recognised in our material. The range of Oymurania shells with subcentral to posteromarginal apex is similar to that of ventral valves of Mickwitzia. Oymurania is also characterised by the system of radial and orthogonal canals open in pairs or triplets in small depressions or indentations of growth lamellae in the outer shell surface. The orthogonal (Micrina-Setatella type) and radial (horizontal setigerous tubes) canals are widespread among the early Cambrian stem-group brachiopods, such as Micrina, Mickwitzia, and Setatella. In addition to these canals, Oymurania exhibits a well-developed acrotretoid columnar microstructure, also known from Setatella. A broad subapical platform in cyrtoconic shells (presumably ventral valves) of Oymurania is interpreted homologous to the deltoid area in mitrals of Micrina and pseudointerarea/interarea in ventral valves of Setatella/paterinid brachiopods. Except with probable cell imprints and openings of orthogonal canals, no morphological differentiation was, however, reflected by the shell interior of Oymurania gravestocki. Being closely related to tannuolinids and mickwitziids, Oymurania complements the picture of diversification of the early Cambrian stem-group brachiopods that occurred in parallel with radiation of paterinids and other crow-group brachiopods on the Siberian Platform and worldwide.
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- 2015
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19. An early Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia.
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien, Vendrasco, Michael J., Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien, and Vendrasco, Michael J.
- Abstract
An assemblage of mineralised skeletal fossils containing molluscs, hyoliths, halkieriids, chancelloriids, tommotiids, lobopodians, paleoscolecids, bradoriids, echinoderms, anabaritids, hyolithelminths, hexactinnelid, and heteractinid sponges is described from the early Cambrian Emyaksin Formation exposed along the Malaya Kuonamka and Bol’shaya Kuonamka rivers, eastern flanks of the Anabar Uplift, northern Siberian Platform. The sampled succession is attributed to the Tommotian–Botoman Stages of Siberia and correlated with Stage 2 of Series 1–Stage 4 of Series 2 of the IUGS chronostratigraphical scheme for the Cambrian. Carbon isotope chemostratigraphy is applied herein for regional correlation. The fauna contains the earliest Siberian and probably global first appearances of lobopodians, paleoscolecids, and echinoderms, and includes elements in common with coeval faunas from Gondwana, Laurentia, and Baltica. For the first time from Siberia, the latest occurrence of anabaritids is documented herein from the Atdabanian Stage. Problematic calcium phosphatic sclerites of Fengzuella zhejiangensis have not been previously known from outside China. The sellate sclerites, Camenella garbowskae and mitral sclerites, C. kozlowskii are unified within one species, C. garbowskae. In addition to more common slender sclerites, Rhombocorniculum insolutum include broad calcium phosphatic sclerites. A number of fossils described herein demonstrate excellent preservation of fine details of skeletal microstructures. Based on new microstructural data, sclerites of Rhombocorniculum are interpreted as chaetae of the type occurring in annelids. A new mollusc Enigmaconus? pyramidalis Kouchinsky and Vendrasco sp. nov. and a hyolith Triplicatella papilio Kouchinsky sp. nov. are described.
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- 2015
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20. The problematic early Cambrian fossil Tumulduria incomperta represents the detached ventral interarea of a paterinid brachiopod
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Skovsted, Christian B., Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Holmer, Lars E., Skovsted, Christian B., Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, and Holmer, Lars E.
- Abstract
The organophosphatic early Cambrian (Terreneuvian, Cambrian Stage 2) fossil Tumulduria incomperta has been problematic ever since its original description in 1969. Comparison of abundant specimens from the Lower Cambrian of Siberia with co-occurring brachiopod valves show that T. incomperta represents the central portion of the ventral interarea of a paterinid brachiopod similar to Cryptotreta neguertchenensis, and that the domed central portion of typical Tumulduria specimens represents the ridge-like pseudodeltidium of the interarea.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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21. Chronology of early Cambrian biomineralization.
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Runnegar, Bruce, Skovsted, Christian, Steiner, Michael, Vendrasco, Michael, Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Runnegar, Bruce, Skovsted, Christian, Steiner, Michael, and Vendrasco, Michael
- Abstract
Data on the first appearances of major animal groups with mineralized skeletons on the Siberian Platform and worldwide are revised and summarized herein with references to an improved carbon isotope stratigraphy and radiometric dating in order to reconstruct the Cambrian radiation (popularly known as the ‘Cambrian explosion’) with a higher precision and provide a basis for the definition of Cambrian Stages 2 to 4. The Lophotrochozoa and, probably, Chaetognatha were first among protostomians to achieve biomineralization during the Terreneuvian Epoch, mainly the Fortunian Age. Fast evolutionary radiation within the Lophotrochozoa was followed by radiation of the sclerotized and biomineralized Ecdysozoa during Stage 3. The first mineralized skeletons of the Deuterostomia, represented by echinoderms, appeared in the middle of Cambrian Stage 3. The fossil record of sponges and cnidarians suggests that they acquired biomineralized skeletons in the late Neoproterozoic, but diversification of both definite sponges and cnidarians was in parallel to that of bilaterians. The distribution of calcium carbonate skeletal mineralogies from the upper Ediacaran to lower Cambrian reflects fluctuations in the global ocean chemistry and shows that the Cambrian radiation occurred mainly during a time of aragonite and high-magnesium calcite seas.
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- 2012
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22. A middle Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Kuonamka Formation, northern Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sebastien, Gubanov, Alexander, Malinky, John M., Peel, John S., Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sebastien, Gubanov, Alexander, Malinky, John M., and Peel, John S.
- Abstract
An assemblage of mineralized skeletal fossils containing molluscs, hyoliths, chancelloriids, protoconodonts, lobopods, paleoscolecids, bradoriids, echinoderms and hexactinellid sponges is described from the middle Cambrian part of the Kuonamka Formation, exposed along the Malaya Kuonamka and Bol'shaya Kuonamka rivers, northern Siberian Platform. The sampled succession is attributed to the Kuonamkites and lower Tomagnostus fissus-Paradoxides sacheri biozones of the Amgan Stage of Siberia, correlated with Series 3, Stage 5lower Drumian Stage of the IUGS chronostratigraphical scheme for the Cambrian. This work complements descriptions of molluscs from the same samples published by Gubanov et al. (2004) with additional material. It contains forms in common with coeval faunas from Australia, China, Western Gondwana, Avalonia, Laurentia and Baltica, increasing potential for global biostratigraphic correlation and understanding of palaeogeographic connections.
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- 2011
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23. The new stem-group brachiopod Oymurania from the lower Cambrian of Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary, Holmer, Lars, additional, Ushatinskaya, Galina, additional, and Steiner, Michael, additional
- Published
- 2014
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24. The SPICE carbon isotope excursion in Siberia: A combined study of the upper Middle Cambrianlowermost Ordovician Kulyumbe River section, northwestern Siberian Platform
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Kouchinsky, Artem and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Published
- 2008
25. Carbon isotope stratigraphy of the Precambrian-Cambrian Sukharikha River section, northwestern Siberian platform
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Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Pavlov, Vladimir, Runnegar, Bruce, Torssander, Peter, Young, Edward, Ziegler, Karen, Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Pavlov, Vladimir, Runnegar, Bruce, Torssander, Peter, Young, Edward, and Ziegler, Karen
- Abstract
A high-resolution carbon isotope profile through the uppermost Neoproterozoic-Lower Cambrian part of the Sukharikha section at the northwestern margin of the Siberian platform shows prominent secular oscillations of delta C-13 with peak-to-peak range of 6-10 parts per thousand. There are six minima, In-6n, and seven maxima 1p-7p, in the Sukharikha Formation and a rising trend of VC from the minimum In of - 8.6 parts per thousand to maximum 6p of + 6.4 parts per thousand. The trough In probably coincides with the isotopic minimum at the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary worldwide. Highly positive delta C-13 values of peaks 5p and 6p are typical of the upper portion of the Precambrian-Cambrian transitional beds just beneath the Tommotian Stage in Siberia. A second rising trend of VC is observed through the Kxasnoporog and lower Shumny formations. It consists of four excursions with four major maxima that can be correlated with Tommotian-Botomian peaks II, IV, V, and VII of the reference profile from the southeastern Siberian platform. According to the chemostratigraphic correlation, the first appearances of the index forms of archaeocyaths are earlier in the Sukharikha section than in the Lena-Aldan reuion., authorCount :7
- Published
- 2007
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26. X-ray tomographic microscopy tightens affinity of the early Cambrian Oymurania to the brachiopod stem group.
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KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM and BENGTSON, STEFAN
- Subjects
- *
TOMOGRAPHY in paleontology , *BRACHIOPODA , *BIOTIC communities , *HOMOLOGY (Biology) ,CAMBRIAN paleontology - Abstract
The geologically rapid biotic evolution in the early Cambrian is marked by the first appearance of major groups of animals in the fossil record (e.g., Budd and Jensen 2000; Kouchinsky et al. 2012). Along with the earliest crown-group representatives of the phylum Brachiopoda, more basal branches of the phylogenetic tree belonging to the stem-group Brachiopoda, such as tannuolinids and mikwitziids, diversified and became widespread during the early Cambrian (e.g., Williams and Holmer 2002; Balthasar et al. 2009; Skovsted et al. 2014). Synchrotron-radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy (SRXTM) of Oymurania gravestocki reveals the microstructure of its calcium-phosphatic shell differentiated into two layers and intersecting systems of canals. The outer layer shows the acrotretoid columnar microstructure and the inner layer consists of continuous prismatic columns. Phosphatized setae preserved within tangential canals, as well as perpendicular canals of Micrina-Setatella type demonstrate homology with the tannuolinid Micrina and the mickwitziid Setatella. A unique and novel combination of microstructural features in Oymurania confirms its evolutionary position within the brachiopod stem group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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27. A lower Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary
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- 2013
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28. Shell microstructure of the early bivalve Pojetaia and the independent origin of nacre within the mollusca
- Author
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VENDRASCO, MICHAEL J., primary, CHECA, ANTONIO G., additional, and KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM V., additional
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- 2011
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29. The anatomy, taphonomy, taxonomy and systematic affinity of Markuelia: Early Cambrian to Early Ordovician scalidophorans
- Author
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DONG, XI-PING, primary, BENGTSON, STEFAN, additional, GOSTLING, NEIL J., additional, CUNNINGHAM, JOHN A., additional, HARVEY, THOMAS H. P., additional, KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM, additional, VAL’KOV, ANATOLY K., additional, REPETSKI, JOHN E., additional, STAMPANONI, MARCO, additional, MARONE, FEDERICA, additional, and DONOGHUE, PHILIP C. J., additional
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- 2010
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30. A New Tannuolinid Problematic from the Lower Cambrian of the Sukharikha River in Northern Siberia
- Author
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Kouchinsky, Artem, primary, Bengtson, Stefan, additional, and Murdock, Duncan J.E., additional
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- 2010
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31. New data on molluscs and their shell microstructures from the Middle Cambrian Gowers Formation, Australia
- Author
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VENDRASCO, MICHAEL J., primary, PORTER, SUSANNAH M., additional, KOUCHINSKY, ARTEM, additional, LI, GUOXIANG, additional, and FERNANDEZ, CHRISTINE Z., additional
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- 2010
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32. Palaeobiology and Chemostratigraphy of the Precambrian - Cambrian Transitional Beds on the Siberian Platform
- Author
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Kouchinsky, Artem and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Abstract
Biological innovations during the Precambrian-Cambrian transition opened evolutionary gates towards the modem biosphere. Two interrelated aspects of this process are investigated. The first one is the ecological radiation and beginning of calcareous biomineralization in mollusc-like organisms (shelled molluscs, coeloscleritophorans, and hyoliths). The second one is the carbon isotopic record as a long-scale environmental archive and stratigraphical tool. The early Cambrian diversification of mollusc-like forms was a result of their adaptations to various habitats. This ecological radiation led to the appearance of major trophic groups: deposit-feeders, scrapers and grazers, suspension feeders, predators and scavengers. General size increase of molluscan shells during the Cambrian was related to the invasion of shallow-water high-energy environments and seems to have accompanied changes in life cycles and the appearance of planktonic veliger larva. Shells of the Early Cambrian mollusc-like organisms grew by marginal accretion of new growth lamellae or sclerites. The former type of shells had an outer layer of possibly mineralized prism-like units and an inner layer of lamellar units consisting of aragonitic fibres. Nacreous and crossed-lamellar aragonitic microstructures probably evolved in the Cambrian from such lamellar aragonitic microstructures in different groups of molluscs. Shells composed of sclerites belong to the coeloscleritophorans, a group confined to the Cambrian. The juvenile part of some composite shells was assembled from needle-like sclerites; these were substituted by hollow broader sclerites at later stages of development. Palaeozoic group of hyoliths has been regarded as a separate phylum close to molluscs and sipunculans or been ascribed to one of these. Their exoskeleton, penetrated by numerous pores, consisted of organic filaments mineralized by aragonite and assembled as bundles forming a characteristic orthogonal network. Their alleged cross
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- 2001
33. ECOLOGY AND PHYLOGENETIC AFFINITY OF THE EARLY CAMBRIAN TUBULAR MICROFOSSIL MEGATHRIX LONGUS.
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Shang, Xiaodong, Liu, Pengju, Yang, Ben, Chen, Shouming, Wang, Chuchu, and Kouchinsky, Artem
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ECOLOGY ,PHYLOGENY ,FOSSIL microorganisms ,CAMBRIAN Period ,TRICHOMES ,OSCILLATORIACEAE - Abstract
Abundant, exquisitely preserved specimens of the enigmatic tubular microfossil Megathrix longus are reported from the early Cambrian Yanjiahe Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area. Studies of their morphology and taphonomy reveal that the inner cross-wall of Megathrix longus is topographically flat, the trichome terminus is blunt and closed, and incomplete cross-walls are regularly intercalated between complete ones. The deformation of trichomes, as well as the corrugation of their cross-walls, are postmortem features caused by compaction, rather than biological features as previously interpreted. Statistical analysis indicates that chamber division is accomplished by the closure of incomplete cross-walls. This process, which contributed to trichome growth, is extremely similar to that of modern Oscillatoriaceae. Trichome fragmentation was also observed in a series of specimens, which closely resembles that of cyanobacteria, particularly the Oscillatoriaceae. The termini of Megathrix longus suggest that it was planktonic. In general, Megathrix longus bears a close affinity to the extant Oscillatoriaceae (Cyanophyta). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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34. The macro- and microfossil record of the Cambrian priapulid Ottoia.
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Smith, Martin R., Harvey, Thomas H. P., Butterfield, Nicholas J., and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Subjects
FOSSIL microorganisms ,CAMBRIAN Period ,FOSSIL priapulida ,HIGH resolution electron microscopy ,BIOLOGICAL specimens - Abstract
The stem-group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911, is the most abundant worm in the mid-Cambrian Burgess Shale, but has not been unambiguously demonstrated elsewhere. High-resolution electron and optical microscopy of macroscopic Burgess Shale specimens reveals the detailed anatomy of its robust hooks, spines and pharyngeal teeth, establishing the presence of two species: Ottoia prolifica Walcott, 1911, and Ottoia tricuspida sp. nov. Direct comparison of these sclerotized elements with a suite of shale-hosted mid-to-late Cambrian microfossils extends the range of ottoiid priapulids throughout the middle to upper Cambrian strata of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. Ottoiid priapulids represented an important component of Cambrian ecosystems: they occur in a range of lithologies and thrived in shallow water as well as in the deep-water setting of the Burgess Shale. A wider survey of Burgess Shale macrofossils reveals specific characters that diagnose priapulid sclerites more generally, establishing the affinity of a wide range of Small Carbonaceous Fossils and demonstrating the prominent role of priapulids in Cambrian seas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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35. A crown-group demosponge from the early Cambrian Sirius Passet Biota, North Greenland.
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Botting, Joseph P., Cárdenas, Paco, Peel, John S., and Kouchinsky, Artem
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DEMOSPONGIAE ,PHYLOGENY ,FOSSILS ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,MOLECULAR clock ,PALEONTOLOGY - Abstract
Calibration of the divergence times of sponge lineages and understanding of their phylogenetic history are hampered by the difficulty in recognizing crown versus stem groups in the fossil record. A new specimen from the lower Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 3; approximately 515 Ma) Sirius Passet Biota of North Greenland has yielded a diagnostic spicule assemblage of the extant demosponge lineages Haploscleromorpha and/or Heteroscleromorpha. The specimen has disarticulated approximately in situ, but represents an individual sponge that possessed monaxon spicules combined with a range of slightly smaller sigma, toxa and unique spiral morphologies. The combination of spicule forms, together with their relatively large size, suggests that the sponge represents the stem lineage of Haploscleromorpha + Heteroscleromorpha. This is the first crown-group demosponge described from the early Cambrian and provides the most reliable calibration point currently available for phylogenetic studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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36. The tommotiid Kelanella and associated fauna from the early Cambrian of southern Montagne Noire ( France): implications for camenellan phylogeny.
- Author
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Devaere, Léa, Clausen, Sébastien, Monceret, Eric, Vizcaïno, Daniel, Vachard, Daniel, Genge, Marie C., and Kouchinsky, Artem
- Subjects
CAMBRIAN Period ,PHYLOGENY ,CARBONATES ,FOSSIL microorganisms ,BRACHIOPODA ,SCLEREIDS - Abstract
A carbonate bed of the Pardailhan Formation, early Cambrian, southern Montagne Noire (southern France), provided microfossils such as Hyolithellus sp., Torellella cf. mutila and Torellella sp. along with numerous disarticulated pieces of composite skeletons such as valves of the brachiopod Eoobolus priscus and of the bradoriid Monceretia erisylvia, and chancelloriid sclerites ( Chancelloria sp.). The assemblage also furnished a rich set of sclerites from the tommotiid Kelanella altaica. Five morphological variations of the latter have been identified. The presence of concentric ribs formed by distal inflation of selected shell laminae in Kelanella supports its assignment to the camenellans. More particularly, the presence of transverse structures within the internal cavity (septa) of Kelanella suggests a close relationship with the Lapworthellidae. However, the latter differ from Kelanella by the continuous morphological variation along their scleritome which is also composed of simple conical elements with uniform ornamentation. Several forms of Kelanella are similar to mitral and sellate sclerites of Camenella, whereas some other forms are comparable to Kennardia. The new material suggests that Kelanella occupies a transitional position between Lapworthellidae and the grouping of Tommotiidae and Kennardiidae. Such a phylogenetic position also implies that the number of sclerite morphotypes tends to decrease within the camenellan scleritome during evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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