174 results on '"García-Bellido, Diego"'
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2. Pentaradial eukaryote suggests expansion of suspension feeding in White Sea-aged Ediacaran communities
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Cracknell, Kelsie, García-Bellido, Diego C., Gehling, James G., Ankor, Martin J., Darroch, Simon A. F., and Rahman, Imran A.
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- 2021
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3. The Emu Bay Shale: A unique early Cambrian Lagerstätte from a tectonically active basin.
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Gaines, Robert R., García-Bellido, Diego C., Jago, James B., Myrow, Paul M., and Paterson, John R.
- Abstract
The Emu Bay Shale (EBS) of South Australia is anomalous among Cambrian Lagerstätten because it captures anatomical information that is rare in Burgess Shale-type fossils, and because of its inferred nearshore setting, the nature of which has remained controversial. Intensive study, combining outcrop and borehole data with a compilation of >25,000 fossil specimens, reveals that the EBS biota inhabited a fan delta complex within a tectonically active basin. Preservation of soft-bodied organisms in this setting is unexpected and further underscores differences between the EBS and other Cambrian Lagerstätten. Environmental conditions, including oxygen fluctuations, slope instability, high suspended sediment concentrations, and episodic high-energy events, inhibited colonization of the lower prodelta by all but a few specialist species but favored downslope transportation and preservation of other largely endemic, shallow-water benthos. The EBS provides extraordinary insight into early Cambrian animal diversity from Gondwana. These results demonstrate how environmental factors determined community composition and provide a framework for understanding this unique Konservat-Lagerstätte. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Associations between trilobite intraspecific moulting variability and body proportions: Estaingia bilobata from the Cambrian Emu Bay Shale, Australia
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Drage, Harriet B., primary, Holmes, James D., additional, García‐Bellido, Diego C., additional, and Paterson, John R., additional
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- 2023
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5. Malformed individuals of the trilobite Estaingia bilobata from the Cambrian Emu Bay Shale and their palaeobiological implications
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Bicknell, Russell DC, Holmes, James D, García-Bellido, Diego C, Paterson, John R, Bicknell, Russell DC, Holmes, James D, García-Bellido, Diego C, and Paterson, John R
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- 2023
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6. Preliminary revision of the morphology of Phyllozoon hanseni from the Ediacaran of South Australia
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Turner, Ashten M., Delean, Steven, and García-Bellido, Diego C.
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Phyllozoon ,Ediacara Biota ,Asimetría longitudinal ,Flinders Ranges ,Simetría deslizada ,Longitudinal Asymmetry ,Biota de Ediacara ,Glide Symmetry ,Sierra de Flinders - Abstract
Resumen: En este trabajo se analiza la morfología de Phyllozoon hanseni Jenkins y Gehling, un organismo fósil con forma de fronde y de simetría deslizada del Ediacárico de la Sierra de Flinders, Australia del Sur. El estudio se centra en la medición de los parámetros básicos de estos fósiles con la intención de identificar tendencias que sean diagnósticas para P. hanseni, ayudar a definir su morfología funcional, y reconciliar esta información con el contexto paleobiológico. Los principales hallazgos han sido que el tamaño de los ejemplares presenta una distribución no-normal y de sesgo negativo, y que los extremos de P. hanseni son muy distintos. Uno lo denominamos ‘cuchara’, y es redondeado, con unidades anchas dispuestas en ángulo agudo respecto al eje sagital. Dicho ángulo es mayor hacia el ápice y le confiere a éste un aspecto de pimpollo de rosa. La primera unidad consistentemente está en el lado izquierdo del epirelieve positivo. El otro extremo, el ‘cuchillo’, tiene un característico descenso lineal de anchura y longitud de sus unidades, que se mantienen perpendicular al eje del organismo. El área central, entre estas dos secciones, presenta bordes subparalelos, y lo denominamos ‘tronco’. Se ha detectado una fuerte correlación positiva entre la Longitud Mínima del Ejemplar y el Número Mínimo de Unidades, así como una moderada correlación positiva entre anchura y longitud de las unidades en la región central. Adicionalmente, los resultados sugieren un patrón de crecimiento asimétrico entre el incremento de tamaño y el número total de unidades desde el ápice del ‘cuchillo’. La morfología observada en P. hanseni se interpreta como un indicio de hábito bentónico postrado. Abstract: We have investigated the morphology of Phyllozoon hanseni Jenkins and Gehling, a frond-like fossil organism with glide reflection symmetry from the Ediacaran of the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. The focus of this study was to measure some basic physical parameters of these fossils to identify some distinguishing trends, to help build a picture of the functional morphology of P. hanseni, and then to reconcile this information in a palaeobiological context. The main findings are that specimen length displayed a non-normal, negatively skewed distribution, and that P. hanseni possesses two distinct ends. One dubbed here the ‘spoon’, is rounded in profile, with steep-angled positioning of thicker units and a rosebud-like appearance at the terminus, found to always begin on the left bank of the positive hyporelief. The other end, the ‘knife’, displays instead a gradual decrease in both unit width and length with positioning of units perpendicular to the body axis. The area between these two sections, with sub-parallel edges, is referred to as the ‘trunk’. Specimen length was found to be positively associated with both unit number and specimen width. Additionally, the findings suggest a longitudinally asymmetrical growth pattern of increasing size and number of units, with serial addition of units at the knife terminus. The observed morphology of P. hanseni suggests a lifestyle as a benthic, prostrate organism.
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- 2022
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7. NEW ARTIOPODAN ARTHROPODS FROM THE EARLY CAMBRIAN EMU BAY SHALE KONSERVAT-LAGERSTÄTTE OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA
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PATERSON, JOHN R., GARCÍA-BELLIDO, DIEGO C., and EDGECOMBE, GREGORY D.
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- 2012
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8. Nuevo trilobites asáfido con conservación de apéndices en la Biota de Fezouata (Ordovícico Inferior de Marruecos)
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Gutiérrez Marco, Juan Carlos, Rábano, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Poblador, Juan A., García Bellido, Diego, Gutiérrez Marco, Juan Carlos, Rábano, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Poblador, Juan A., and García Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
Se presenta el tercer ejemplar del trilobites asáfido Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) cf. hammondi con conservación excepcional de apéndices, procedente del Fossil-Lagerstätte ordovícico de tipo Burgess Shale más importante del mundo, localizado en Marruecos. Los trilobites con apéndices o partes blandas se detectan en niveles del Tremadociense superior dentro de la Formación de Fezouata, pero son fósiles muy raros. El ejemplar estudiado conserva la antena derecha y nueve apéndices situados bajo el exoesqueleto, localizados en la parte derecha del cuerpo. Se trata principalmente de endópodos, pero al menos en dos apéndices se reconocen partes de los exópodos porque conservan sus largas lamelas. El primer endópodo parece corresponder al extremo distal del tercer apéndice cefálico, y el resto son apéndices torácicos. Las antenas observadas en ejemplares comerciales de la misma especie suelen estar manipuladas por los preparadores y son poco fiables. Además del asáfido estudiado, la conservación de partes blandas y apéndices se conoce en otras cuatro especies coetáneas, totalizando medio centenar de ejemplares publicados. Pero es muy posible que existan muchos más casos en los que los apéndices de aquellos ejemplares que conserven las antenas permanezcan en realidad ocultos bajo el caparazón dorsal., A third specimen of Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) cf. hammondi is described from the most important Ordovician Burgess Shale-type Fossil-Lagerstätte in Morocco. The trilobite specimens with soft-part preservation are located in late Tremadocian levels within the Fezouata Formation, but are very rare. The studied specimen preserves the right antenna, and nine appendages under the right side of the exoskeleton, only evident when a break in the rock released part of the exoskeleton and revealed the underlying biramous appendages. These mostly consist of endopods, but also at least a couple of exopods, recognizable by their long lamellae. The first endopod seems to correspond to the distal tip of the third cephalic appendage, while the rest are thoracic appendages. The features of the preserved antenna indicate that most such appendages in other specimens from the same area are created or enhanced during preparation. Besides the studied asaphid, soft-part preservation of digestive tract and appendages are known from four coeval species, totalling about fifty published specimens. But it is quite possible that, like in the present specimen, biramous appendages may be preserved under the carapace of other specimens with antennae., Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, PICG (IUGS-UNESCO), Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, Depto. de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Fac. de Ciencias Geológicas, TRUE, pub
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- 2022
9. Nuevo trilobites asáfido con conservación de apéndices en la Biota de Fezouata (Ordovícico Inferior de Marruecos)
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), International Union of Geological Sciences, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal), Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel [0000-0002-0540-2733], Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Poblador, Juan A., García-Bellido, Diego, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), International Union of Geological Sciences, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal), Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel [0000-0002-0540-2733], Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Poblador, Juan A., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
[EN] A third specimen of Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) cf. hammondi is described from the most important Ordovician Burgess Shale-type Fossil-Lagerstätte in Morocco. The trilobite specimens with soft-part preservation are located in late Tremadocian levels within the Fezouata Formation, but are very rare. The studied specimen preserves the right antenna, and nine appendages under the right side of the exoskeleton, only evident when a break in the rock released part of the exoskeleton and revealed the underlying biramous appendages. These mostly consist of endopods, but also at least a couple of exopods, recognizable by their long lamellae. The first endopod seems to correspond to the distal tip of the third cephalic appendage, while the rest are thoracic appendages. The features of the preserved antenna indicate that most such appendages in other specimens from the same area are created or enhanced during preparation. Besides the studied asaphid, soft-part preservation of digestive tract and appendages are known from four coeval species, totalling about fifty published specimens. But it is quite possible that, like in the present specimen, biramous appendages may be preserved under the carapace of other specimens with antennae., [ES] Se presenta el tercer ejemplar del trilobites asáfido Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) cf. hammondi con Conservación excepcional de apéndices, procedente del Fossil-Lagerstätte ordovícico de tipo Burgess Shale más importante del mundo, localizado en Marruecos. Los trilobites con apéndices o partes blandas se detectan en niveles del Tremadociense superior dentro de la Formación de Fezouata, pero son fósiles muy raros. El ejemplar estudiado conserva la antena derecha y nueve apéndices situados bajo el exoesqueleto, localizados en la parte derecha del cuerpo. Se trata principalmente de endópodos, pero al menos en dos apéndices se reconocen partes de los exópodos porque conservan sus largas lamelas. El primer endópodo parece corresponder al extremo distal del tercer apéndice cefálico, y el resto son apéndices torácicos. Las antenas observadas en ejemplares comerciales de la misma especie suelen estar manipuladas por los preparadores y son poco fiables. Además del asáfido estudiado, la conservación de partes blandas y apéndices se conoce en otras cuatro especies coetáneas, totalizando medio centenar de ejemplares publicados. Pero es muy posible que existan muchos más casos en los que los apéndices de aquellos ejemplares que conserven las antenas permanezcan en realidad ocultos bajo el caparazón dorsal.
- Published
- 2022
10. Ejemplares de la Phyllopod Bed-Burgess Shale (Cámbrico Medio) en el Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales-CSIC (Madrid, Espana)
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Montero, Ángel, primary, Diéguez, Carmen, additional, and García-Bellido, Diego, additional
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- 2022
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11. Acute vision in the giant Cambrian predator Anomalocaris and the origin of compound eyes
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Paterson, John R., García-Bellido, Diego C., Lee, Michael S. Y., Brock, Glenn A., Jago, James B., and Edgecombe, Gregory D.
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Eye -- Natural history -- Physiological aspects ,Animals, Fossil -- Natural history -- Physiological aspects ,Arthropoda -- Natural history -- Physiological aspects ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
New fossils from Australia reveal that the Cambrian apex predator Anomalocaris possessed compound eyes more powerful than those of most living arthropods. A sharp-eyed Cambrian predator The metre-long swimming invertebrate Anomalocaris was the top predator in the Cambrian ocean more than 500 million years ago. Recent discoveries of fly-like compound eyes attributable to this creature confirm suggestions that it is related to the arthropods -- jointed-limbed creatures such as insects, crustaceans and trilobites -- and show that compound eyes evolved before hardened exoskeletons. The superbly preserved fossils from South Australia show that Anomalocaris had exceptional vision. Its compound eyes are among the largest and most acute to have ever existed; each eye is up to 3 centimetres long and contains more than 16,000 lenses. The existence of highly visual hunters during the Cambrian would have accelerated the pace of the predator-prey 'arms race' then under way. Until recently.sup.1, intricate details of the optical design of non-biomineralized arthropod eyes remained elusive in Cambrian Burgess-Shale-type deposits, despite exceptional preservation of soft-part anatomy in such Konservat-Lagerstätten.sup.2,3. The structure and development of ommatidia in arthropod compound eyes support a single origin some time before the latest common ancestor of crown-group arthropods.sup.4, but the appearance of compound eyes in the arthropod stem group has been poorly constrained in the absence of adequate fossils. Here we report 2-3-cm paired eyes from the early Cambrian (approximately 515 million years old) Emu Bay Shale of South Australia, assigned to the Cambrian apex predator Anomalocaris. Their preserved visual surfaces are composed of at least 16,000 hexagonally packed ommatidial lenses (in a single eye), rivalling the most acute compound eyes in modern arthropods. The specimens show two distinct taphonomic modes, preserved as iron oxide (after pyrite) and calcium phosphate, demonstrating that disparate styles of early diagenetic mineralization can replicate the same type of extracellular tissue (that is, cuticle) within a single Burgess-Shale-type deposit. These fossils also provide compelling evidence for the arthropod affinities of anomalocaridids, push the origin of compound eyes deeper down the arthropod stem lineage, and indicate that the compound eye evolved before such features as a hardened exoskeleton. The inferred acuity of the anomalocaridid eye is consistent with other evidence that these animals were highly mobile visual predators in the water column.sup.5,6. The existence of large, macrophagous nektonic predators possessing sharp vision--such as Anomalocaris--within the early Cambrian ecosystem probably helped to accelerate the escalatory 'arms race' that began over half a billion years ago.sup.7,8., Author(s): John R. Paterson [sup.1] , Diego C. García-Bellido [sup.2] , Michael S. Y. Lee [sup.3] [sup.4] , Glenn A. Brock [sup.5] , James B. Jago [sup.3] [sup.6] , Gregory [...]
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- 2011
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12. Disparate compound eyes of Cambrian radiodonts reveal their developmental growth mode and diverse visual ecology
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Paterson, John R, Edgecombe, GD, García-Bellido, Diego C, Paterson, John R, Edgecombe, GD, and García-Bellido, Diego C
- Abstract
Radiodonts are nektonic stem-group euarthropods that played various trophic roles in Paleozoic marine ecosystems, but information on their vision is limited. Optical details exist only in one species from the Cambrian Emu Bay Shale of Australia, here assigned to Anomalocaris aff. canadensis. We identify another type of radiodont compound eye from this deposit, belonging to ‘Anomalocaris’ briggsi. This ≤4-cm sessile eye has >13,000 lenses and a dorsally oriented acute zone. In both taxa, lenses were added marginally and increased in size and number throughout development, as in many crown-group euarthropods. Both species’ eyes conform to their inferred lifestyles: The macrophagous predator A. aff. canadensis has acute stalked eyes (>24,000 lenses each) adapted for hunting in well-lit waters, whereas the suspension-feeding ‘A.’ briggsi could detect plankton in dim down-welling light. Radiodont eyes further demonstrate the group’s anatomical and ecological diversity and reinforce the crucial role of vision in early animal ecosystems., Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited., NHM Repository
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- 2021
13. Modern optics in exceptionally preserved eyes of Early Cambrian arthropods from Australia
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Lee, Michael S. Y., Jago, James B., García-Bellido, Diego C., Edgecombe, Gregory D., Gehling, James G., and Paterson, John R.
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- 2011
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14. Disparate compound eyes of Cambrian radiodonts reveal their developmental growth mode and diverse visual ecology
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Paterson, John R., primary, Edgecombe, Gregory D., additional, and García-Bellido, Diego C., additional
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- 2020
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15. A correlation of the Ordovician of the Anti-Atlas (Morocco) with reference to the global and regional chronostratigraphic scales
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Álvaro, J.J., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés, Colmenar, Jorge, Pereira, S., and García-Bellido, Diego
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- 2019
16. A new study of Marrella splendens (Arthropoda, Marrellomorpha) from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale, British Columbia, Canada
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García-Bellido, Diego C and Collins, Desmond H
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- 2006
17. Moulting arthropod caught in the act
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García-Bellido, Diego C. and Collins, Desmond H.
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- 2004
18. The trilobite Redlichia from the lower Cambrian Emu Bay Shale Konservat-Lagerstätte of South Australia: systematics, ontogeny and soft-part anatomy
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Holmes, James D., Paterson, John R., and García-Bellido, Diego C.
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The trilobite Redlichia Cossmann, 1902 is an abundant element of the lower Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 4) Emu Bay Shale (EBS) Konservat-Lagerstätte on Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Well-preserved, fully articulated specimens from this deposit are known to reach lengths of up to 25 cm, representing one of the largest known Cambrian trilobites. Until now, all Redlichia specimens from the EBS have been referred to Redlichia takooensis Lu, 1950, a species originally described from South China. Previous work recognized considerable differences in exoskeletal morphology among specimens of varying sizes, which was attributed to ontogeny. However, close examination of a large collection of recently acquired specimens shows that this variation actually represents two distinct morphs, interpreted here as separate species: R. takooensis, and a large, new species, Redlichia rex sp. nov. An analysis of morphological variation in holaspides (‘adults’) of the more common R. takooensis reveals considerable ontogenetic change occurred even during this later phase of growth. Some specimens of both Redlichia species from the EBS also exhibit exceptionally preserved soft-part anatomy, particularly the antennae and biramous appendages. Here, appendages (antenniform and biramous) and digestive structures are described, and biramous appendage reconstructions of R. rex sp. nov. are presented, which show a striking resemblance to some early Cambrian trilobites from South China. In particular, R. rex has a tripartite exopodite, as well as a dorsoventrally deep protopodite with gnathobasic spines used to shred or crush food items. Based on recent phylogenetic analyses, it is possible that an exopodite with tripartite subdivisions represents the plesiomorphic condition for Artiopoda (trilobites and kin). The digestive system of R. takooensis exhibits a series of paired digestive glands in the cephalon and anterior thorax, similar to those described for a number of other Cambrian and Ordovician trilobites. http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:507BEAFC-4AFA-43F4-A5C4-49E4B58C658E
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- 2019
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19. Nuevos restos de organismos de cuerpo blando en la Formación San José (Ordovícico) de la Cordillera Oriental peruana
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Cárdenas, J., and Chacaltana, César A.
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Trabajo presentado en el II Simposio Internacional de Paleontología del Perú, celebrado en Lima (Perú), del 27 al 30 de noviembre de 2018
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- 2018
20. Preliminary revision of the morphology of Phyllozoon hanseni from the Ediacaran of South Australia.
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TURNER, Ashten M., DELEAN, Steven, and GARCÍA-BELLIDO, Diego C.
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- 2021
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21. Poríferos y Cnidarios
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Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Paleontologia, Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Fernández Martínez, Esperanza, García Bellido, Diego, Méndez Bedia, Isabel, Moreno Eiris, Elena, Perejón, Antonio, Rodríguez, Sergio, Soto, Francisco, Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Paleontologia, Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Fernández Martínez, Esperanza, García Bellido, Diego, Méndez Bedia, Isabel, Moreno Eiris, Elena, Perejón, Antonio, Rodríguez, Sergio, and Soto, Francisco
- Abstract
En este capítulo se tratan una serie de grupos que son típicamente bioconstructores o formadores de arrecifes. Aunque otros grupos de organismos de diversa afinidad biológica, tales como procariotas (bacterias, cianobacterias), algas, braquiópodos, bivalvos, etc., pueden construir o participar en la construcción de arrecifes, a lo largo de la historia geológica de la Tierra y en la actualidad, poríferos, cnidarios y afines han sido y son los más importantes componentes de los depósitos arrecifales.
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- 2019
22. Poríferos y Cnidarios
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Paleontologia, Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Fernández Martínez, Esperanza, García Bellido, Diego, Méndez Bedia, Isabel, Moreno Eiris, Elena, Perejón, Antonio, Rodríguez, Sergio, Soto, Francisco, Paleontologia, Braga, Juan C. (coord.), Fernández Martínez, Esperanza, García Bellido, Diego, Méndez Bedia, Isabel, Moreno Eiris, Elena, Perejón, Antonio, Rodríguez, Sergio, and Soto, Francisco
- Abstract
En este capítulo se tratan una serie de grupos que son típicamente bioconstructores o formadores de arrecifes. Aunque otros grupos de organismos de diversa afinidad biológica, tales como procariotas (bacterias, cianobacterias), algas, braquiópodos, bivalvos, etc., pueden construir o participar en la construcción de arrecifes, a lo largo de la historia geológica de la Tierra y en la actualidad, poríferos, cnidarios y afines han sido y son los más importantes componentes de los depósitos arrecifales.
- Published
- 2019
23. Fossilized appendages and guts in three phacopid trilobites from the Tremadocian lower Fezouata Konservat-lagerstätte (Lower Ordovician, Morocco)
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Lefebvre, Bertrand, Lerosey-Aubril, Rudy, Martin, Emmanuel L. O., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Saleh, Farid, Vidal, Muriel, Van Roy, Peter, Lefebvre, Bertrand, Lerosey-Aubril, Rudy, Martin, Emmanuel L. O., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Saleh, Farid, Vidal, Muriel, and Van Roy, Peter
- Abstract
The Fezouata Shale has yielded remarkably diverse assemblages of non-biomineralizing and biomineralizing organisms of Early Ordovician age. Overall, some 160 genera have been documented, about a quarter of which are essentially soft-bodied. Exceptional preservation in the Fezouata Shale occurs in two main separated intervals, of late Tremadocian and mid-Floian age respectively. These intervals are best regarded as distinct Konservat-lagerstätten, since they contain different faunas and are separated in time by c. 9 Ma. Both assemblages are dominated by arthropods, including a diverse trilobite fauna (c. 25 genera). Here we report the discovery of fossilized appendages and guts in 31 trilobite specimens from the lower Fezouata Konservat-lagerstätte belonging to the genera Anacheirurus, Bavarilla, and Prionocheilus (Order Phacopida). The preservation of appendages is generally poor, especially for their proximal parts covered by the dorsal exoskeleton. However, when appendages project from below the dorsal carapace, they exhibit delicate structures, such as annuli boundaries and lateral spines of antennae, or podomere boundaries, clustered endites and terminal claws of endopods. Lamellate exopods are rarely preserved, and when they are, their morphologies are largely obscured by the dorsal carapace. Appendages are typically preserved as thin, yellowish films of iron oxides, interpreted as oxidized pyrite. Among preserved gut structures, Anacheirurus displays a parallel-sided, sediment-filled digestive tract, running under the entire trunk axis while the tract of Bavarilla (wide and sediment-filled) is associated with 10 pairs of digestive glands, which are atypically preserved as a sediment infill. The new examples of fossilized ‘soft’-parts of trilobites from the lower Fezouata Lagerstätte complement previous observations in Megistaspis and Symphysurus, two taxa also belonging to the pilekiid-bavarillid biofacies typical of lower shoreface settings. Despite notable d
- Published
- 2018
24. Selenopeltis longispina (Trilobita, Odontopleuridae) from the Ordovician of Morocco: a reappraisal based on new skeletal and soft-bodied features
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, García-Bellido, Diego, and Sá, Artur A.
- Subjects
anatomía esqueleto ,Marruecos ,Trilobita ,Ordovícico - Abstract
International Conference on Trilobites and Their Relatives (6ª. 2017. Tallinn, Estonia), The goal of the conference is to present and discuss recent progress in studies on all aspects of trilobites and their relatives (e.g. morphology, evolution, phylogeny, ecology, geography). The pre- and post-conference field trips will examine trilobite-bearing rocks from the lower Cambrian to upper Silurian., Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, España
- Published
- 2017
25. The nileid trilobite Symphysurus from upper Tremadocian strata of the Moroccan Anti-Atlas: taxonomic reappraisal and palaeoenvironmental implications
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and García-Bellido, Diego
- Subjects
Marruecos ,paleoambiente ,fauna trilobites ,taxonomía - Abstract
International Conference on Trilobites and Their Relatives (6ª. 2017. Tallinn, Estonia), The claimed report of the Scandinavian trilobite Symphysurus angustatus (Sars & Boeck in Boeck) in the Fezouata Shale (Lower Ordovician) of the Moroccan central Anti‐Atlas is reviewed here, and two distinctive Gondwanan species are recognized instead. The older one occurs in upper Tremadocian mudstones belonging to the Fezouata Fossil‐Lagerstätte. It is here described as Symphysurus ebbestadi n. sp., commonly occurring in monospecific groups of tens to hundreds of individuals and rarely preserving soft‐bodied features. A second species is from slightly higher beds and corresponds to Symphysurus sicardi (Bergeron). It is found isolated in nodules of slightly uncertain stratigraphical position, but near the Tremadocian–Floian boundary. Additionally, a third species left in open nomenclature (Symphysurus? n. sp.) comes from an unknown locality also in the Zagora area. The new Moroccan records of Symphysurus occur in a pilekiid‐bavarillid assemblage that has been attributed to a proximal biofacies of lower shoreface affinities, but typical shallower water trilobites as Taihungshania are lacking. The record of associated genera such as Platypeltoides also suggests relatively deeper environments, as in the Euloma Association of Bohemia, somewhat comparable with the nileid biofacies. The abundance of mesopelagic graptolites on the same beds, in some cases covering complete carapaces of Symphysurus, also indicates a deeper placement, well below storm wave base., Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, España, Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, España, University of Adelaide, Australia
- Published
- 2017
26. Ploughing, tunnelling and biting in the Middle Ordovician of northern Portugal
- Author
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Sá, Artur A., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), International Union of Geological Sciences, and United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
- Subjects
Central Iberian Zone ,Portugal ,Bierosion ,Ordovician ,Trace fossils - Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el 4th International Congress on Ichnology - ICHNIA 2016: Ichnology for the 21st century: (Palaeo) Biological Traces towards Sustainable Development, celebrado en Idanha-a-Nova (Portugal), del 6 al 9 de mayo de 2016, Middle Ordovician shales from the Valongo and Moncorvo formations recorded temporary dysoxic environments, inhabited by opportunistic faunas that also include highly specialized deposit feeders. Resulting ichnofossils include Phycodes noa Mikuláš, a horizontally-ramified burrow complex, so far only known from older beds in the Prague Basin, as well as a large spiral grazing trace close to Rotundusichnium zumayensis Gómez de Llarena, which is widely distributed in Alpine flysch deposits. Phycodes noa from the Valongo Formation occurs as quite large, horizontally flabellate structure with up to 10 diverging passages. Specimens from the Canelas quarry (Arouca) are commonly infilled by pellets (Tomaculum), and are preserved flattened and tectonically expanded. Giant Rotundusichnium-like forms are exclusive from the Canelas quarry and consist of ?concentric to tightly spiral traces with a large elliptical outline (major axis up to 130 cm long), showing endichnial ribbons inclined to the centre of the structure. These are associated with imploded fragmocones of nautiloids preserved under them, and the trace maker harvested the microbial proliferation around them in tight centrifugal coils. The third remarkable trace corresponds to bite marks preserved in large trilobite carapaces. They have a consistent acute V-shaped outline and represent marginal breakage, usually placed in the right pygidial pleural border of asaphids, in diverse margins of calymenaceans or in semi-infaunal molluscs. These triangular bite marks are attributed to large nautiloid predators or scavengers, sometimes attacking freshly-molted giant trilobites., This research is a contribution to the projects CGL2012-39471 of the Spanish MINECO and IGCP-591 (IUGS-UNESCO).
- Published
- 2016
27. Recent Geoethical Issues in Moroccan and Peruvian Paleontology
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, primary, Sá, Artur, additional, García-Bellido, Diego C., additional, and Chacaltana, César A., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Exceptional preservation of the southern Gondwanan trilobite Selenopeltis from the Tafilalt Biota (Upper Ordovician of Morocco)
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
- Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el IGCP 591 Closing Meeting: A combined data-model approach to understand the Early to Middle Palaeozoic Revolution, celebrado en Ghent (Bélgica), del 6 al 9 de julio de 2016
- Published
- 2016
29. Cronoestratigrafía del Ordovícico ibérico
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Villas, Enrique, Bernárdez, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Sarmiento, Graciela N., García-Bellido, Diego, and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
- Subjects
Portugal ,Escala bohemo-ibérica ,Spain ,España ,chronostratigraphy ,Ordovician ,Bohemo-Iberian scale ,Cronoestratigrafía ,Ordovícico - Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el IX Congreso Geológico de España, celebrado en Huelva (España), del 12 al 14 de septiembre de 2016, [ES] La nuevas divisiones de la escala global del Sistema Ordovícico, con excepción de los pisos Tremadociense e Hirnantiense, son difíciles de aplicar en la Península Ibérica, pues sus estratotipos de límite radican en facies y faunas de aguas profundas, desconocidas en las plataformas someras y de paleolatitud elevada del ámbito peri-gondwánico. Antes de ello, la escala regional británico-avalónica fue utilizada en Iberia durante todo el siglo XX, pero presenta serios inconvenientes de correlación vinculados con la propia evolución, conceptual y de criterio, registrada en las áreas tipo británicas durante los últimos 40 años. Sin embargo, la escala regional bohemo-ibérica es la que actualmente aporta una mayor precisión a las correlaciones, pues se basa en elementos bioestratigráficos y biocronológicos de distribución común a todo el margen peri-gondwánico europeo y norteafricano, y la que mantiene vínculos episódicos con otras escalas regionales, que permitirán resolver progresivamente las equivalencias con la escala global, [EN] The new divisions from the global scale for the Ordovician System, except for the Tremadocian and Hirnantian stages, are difficult to correlate in the Iberian Ordovician, because their GSSPs involve deep-water facies and faunas not recorded in the shallow, high-paleolatitudinal settings of the peri-Gondwanan area. Previously to the Global scale, the British-Avalonian regional scale had been widely adopted in the Iberian Ordovician during all the 20th Century, but there are serious correlation problems due to the former’s conceptual evolution and variable criteria used for the British type areas during the last 40 years. However, the use of the Bohemo-Iberian scale instead, provides better precision to Iberian correlations, because it is based in some local biostratigraphical and biochronological markers, widely recorded over an extensive area of the European and North African peri-Gondwanan margin. The Bohemo-Iberian scale shows episodic links with other regional scales, which will provide indirect correlations also with the global Ordovician scale., Este trabajo es una contribución al proyecto IBEROR (CGL2012-39471) del MINECO.
- Published
- 2016
30. Biostratigraphic assessment of the uppermost Ordovician in the central Anti-Atlas (Morocco)
- Author
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Villas, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Pereira, Sofia, Álvaro-Blasco, José Javier, García-Bellido, Diego, and Lorenzo, Saturnino
- Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el 60th Annual Meeting of the Palaeontological Association, celebrado en Lyon (Francia), del 14 al 17 de diciembre de 2016, We have revisited the stratotype area of the Lower Formation of the Second Bani Group, west of Tagounite in the Moroccan Anti-Atlas, and sampled brachiopods and trilobites from its uppermost quartzitic horizons. In addition to those brachiopods listed in previous papers on the region, we have found Plectothyrella sp. and Kinnella sp. Both genera are exclusive of the pandemic Hirnantia fauna, which allows confirmation of a Hirnantian age for the upper member of the Lower Second Bani Formation. By contrast, the lower member of the same unit has yielded Katian brachiopods and trilobites, such as Eostropheodonta intermedia, Destombesium sp., Hirnantia sp. (species other than H. sagittifera), Actinopeltis aff. insocialis, Mucronaspis termieri and Cekovia aff. perplexa. According to the lithostratigraphic framework, the Katian/Hirnantian boundary lies within the Lower Formation of the Second Bani Group and lithostratigraphically correlative horizons, such as those reported in Bou Ingarf. The latter were mainly dated as a result of lithostratigraphic and sequential correlations and, based on correlation with the Tagounite area, are in need of revision. The age of the lower part of the chitinozoan Tanuchinita elongata Biozone should be re-evaluated, and the suggested delayed onset of the Hirnantian glaciation reconsidered.
- Published
- 2016
31. Dos casos de intrusismo científico en la paleontología peruana
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Subjects
Perú ,Intrusismo científico ,Unqualified scientific practice ,Palaeontology ,Peru ,Latin-America ,Geoética ,Latinoamérica ,Geoethics ,Paleontología - Abstract
Trabajo presentado en el IX Congreso Geológico de España, celebrado en Huelva (España), del 12 al 14 de septiembre de 2016, [ES] Se presenta el caso de los peruanos Klaus Hönninger Mitrani y Carlos A. Vildoso Morales, considerados como paleontólogos de prestigio en los medios de comunicación de su país. Ambos lideran empresas de apariencia institucional, el llamado “Museo Paleontológico Meyer-Hönninger” y el “Instituto Peruano de Estudios en Paleovertebrados”, respectivamente. Las actividades de “investigación científica” del primero han sido prácticamente desactivadas por las autoridades del Ministerio de Cultura, tras exigirle permisos de prospección, y también por la denuncia pública de fraude en el I Simposio Internacional Paleontología del Perú (Lima, 2013). Sin embargo, las operaciones del segundo, quien esgrime una falsa titulación en Paleontología por la Universidad de La Plata (Argentina), han experimentado un incremento sustantivo, con contratos sobre patrimonio paleontológico suscritos con la organización del rally Dakar 2014 y compañías mineras, hasta el punto de que C.A. Vildoso ostenta actualmente el cargo de presidente del comité organizador del IX Congreso Latinoamericano de Paleontología., [EN] The case of Klaus Hönninger Mitrani and Carlos A. Vildoso Morales from Peru, considered prestigious palaeontologists by the media in their country is discussed here. They both lead official-looking businesses, the “Meyer-Hönninger Palaeontological Museum” and the “Peruvian Institute of Palaeovertebrate Studies”, respectively. The “scientific research” activities of the former have been basically desactivated by authorities of the Ministry of Culture, after requiring it to obtain prospection permits, and after a public complaint for fraud in the First International Simposium of Palaeontology of Peru (Lima, 2013). However, the dealings of the latter, who claims to have a title on Palaeontology from the University of La Plata (Argentina), which is fake, has experienced a considerable increase, with palaeontological heritage contracts with the organization of the 2014 Dakar Rally and mining companies. The prominence of the position he has attained is such that he is the President of the Organising Committee of the IX Latinamerican Palaeontological Congress.
- Published
- 2016
32. Cronoestratigrafía del Ordovícico ibérico
- Author
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Gutiérrez Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, A.A., Villas, Enrique, Bernárdez Rodríguez, Enrique, Colmenar Lallena, Jorge, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel, Rábano, Isabel, Lorenzo Álvarez, Saturnino, Sarmiento, Graciela N., García Bellido, Diego, Piçarra, José Manuel, Pereira, Sofía, and Jiménez-Sánchez, Andrea
- Subjects
Geología estratigráfica - Abstract
La nuevas divisiones de la escala global del Sistema Ordovícico, con excepción de los pisos Tremadociense e Hirnantiense, son difíciles de aplicar en la Península Ibérica, pues sus estratotipos de límite radican en facies y faunas de aguas profundas, desconocidas en las plataformas someras y de paleolatitud elevada del ámbito peri-gondwánico. Antes de ello, la escala regional británico-avalónica fue utilizada en Iberia durante todo el siglo XX, pero presenta serios inconvenientes de correlación vinculados con la propia evolución, conceptual y de criterio, registrada en las áreas tipo británicas durante los últimos 40 años. Sin embargo, la escala regional bohemo-ibérica es la que actualmente aporta una mayor precisión a las correlaciones, pues se basa en elementos bioestratigráficos y biocronológicos de distribución común a todo el margen peri-gondwánico europeo y norteafricano, y la que mantiene vínculos episódicos con otras escalas regionales, que permitirán resolver progresivamente las equivalencias con la escala global.
- Published
- 2016
33. Tremadocian (Lower Ordovician) sedimentary record from the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) – A reappraisal with new data
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and Sarmiento, Graciela N.
- Abstract
Comunicación presentada en STRATI 2015, 2 International Congress on Stratigraphy, 19. - 23. July 2015, Graz, Austria
- Published
- 2015
34. The Bohemo‐Iberian regional chronostratigraphical scale for the Ordovician System and palaeontological correlations within South Gondwana
- Author
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Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego C., and Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel
- Abstract
The Bohemo-Iberian regional scale for South Gondwana, involving the ‘Mediter-ranean Province’, comprises five regional stages (Arenigian, Oretanian, Dobrotivian,Berounian and Kralodvorian) plus the global Tremadocian and Hirnantian. Thepredominance of shallow-water taxa in those high-latitude faunas imposes serious dif-ficulties for correlating the regional succession with the formal global chronostratigra-phy because of the almost total absence of the key graptolites and conodonts definingthe base of the standard series, stages and stage slices. Instead, the abundant benthicfaunas (trilobites, brachiopods, molluscs, echinoderms) of South Gondwanan originlargely dominated in the area from the middle Darriwilian to the late Katian. Thepoleward faunal migration of originally Avalonian, Baltic, Laurentian and even Asiatictaxa during the Boda Event of global warming progressively ends with the endemicityin the region, where the ensuing benthic assemblages were severely affected by the Hir-nantian glaciation. The regional scale significantly improves the precision of correla-tions between Ordovician strata from SW and central Europe, North Africa and alarge part of the Middle East. An updated record of palaeontological data from areaswhere Mediterranean faunas remain practically unknown, or are still poorly investi-gated, is also included. Palaeobiogeographical relationships based on the distributionof faunas across South Gondwana are suggested as an improvement for positioningmany territories in modern palaeogeographical reconstructions and offer a construc-tive approach to problems related to the pre-Variscan and pre-Alpine orogenic puz-zles.
- Published
- 2017
35. Digestive and appendicular soft-parts, with behavioural implications, in a large Ordovician trilobite from the Fezouata Lagerstätte, Morocco
- Author
-
Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, García-Bellido, Diego C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, García-Bellido, Diego C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and Sá, Artur A.
- Abstract
Trilobites were one of the most successful groups of marine arthropods during the Palaeozoic era, yet their soft-part anatomy is only known from a few exceptionally-preserved specimens found in a handful of localities from the Cambrian to the Devonian. This is because, even if the sclerotized appendages were not destroyed during early taphonomic stages, they are often overprinted by the three-dimensional, mineralised exoskeleton. Inferences about the ventral anatomy and behavioural activities of trilobites can also be derived from the ichnological record, which suggests that most Cruziana and Rusophycus trace fossils were possibly produced by the actions of trilobites. Three specimens of the asaphid trilobite Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) hammondi, have been discovered in the Lower Ordovician Fezouata Konservat-Lagerstätte of southern Morocco, preserving appendages and digestive tract. The digestive structures include a crop with digestive caeca, while the appendages display exopodal setae and slight heteropody (cephalic endopods larger and more spinose than thoracic and pygidial ones). The combination of these digestive structures and the heteropody has never been described together among trilobites, and the latter could assist in the understanding of the production of certain comb-like traces of the Cruziana rugosa group, which are extraordinarily abundant on the shallow marine shelves around Gondwana.
- Published
- 2017
36. The Bohemo‐Iberian regional chronostratigraphical scale for the Ordovician System and palaeontological correlations within South Gondwana
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego, and Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel
- Abstract
The Bohemo‐Iberian regional scale for South Gondwana, involving the ‘Mediterranean Province’, comprises five regional stages (Arenigian, Oretanian, Dobrotivian, Berounian and Kralodvorian) plus the global Tremadocian and Hirnantian. The predominance of shallow‐water taxa in those high‐latitude faunas imposes serious difficulties for correlating the regional succession with the formal global chronostratigraphy because of the almost total absence of the key graptolites and conodonts defining the base of the standard series, stages and stage slices. Instead, the abundant benthic faunas (trilobites, brachiopods, molluscs, echinoderms) of South Gondwanan origin largely dominated in the area from the middle Darriwilian to the late Katian. The poleward faunal migration of originally Avalonian, Baltic, Laurentian and even Asiatic taxa during the Boda Event of global warming progressively ends with the endemicity in the region, where the ensuing benthic assemblages were severely affected by the Hirnantian glaciation. The regional scale significantly improves the precision of correlations between Ordovician strata from SW and central Europe, North Africa and a large part of the Middle East. An updated record of palaeontological data from areas where Mediterranean faunas remain practically unknown, or are still poorly investigated, is also included. Palaeobiogeographical relationships based on the distribution of faunas across South Gondwana are suggested as an improvement for positioning many territories in modern palaeogeographical reconstructions and offer a constructive approach to problems related to the pre‐Variscan and pre‐Alpine orogenic puzzles.
- Published
- 2017
37. Digestive and appendicular soft-parts, with behavioural implications, in a large Ordovician trilobite from the Fezouata Lagerstätte, Morocco
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and Sá, Artur A.
- Abstract
Trilobites were one of the most successful groups of marine arthropods during the Palaeozoic era, yet their soft-part anatomy is only known from a few exceptionally-preserved specimens found in a handful of localities from the Cambrian to the Devonian. This is because, even if the sclerotized appendages were not destroyed during early taphonomic stages, they are often overprinted by the three-dimensional, mineralised exoskeleton. Inferences about the ventral anatomy and behavioural activities of trilobites can also be derived from the ichnological record, which suggests that most Cruziana and Rusophycus trace fossils were possibly produced by the actions of trilobites. Three specimens of the asaphid trilobite Megistaspis (Ekeraspis) hammondi, have been discovered in the Lower Ordovician Fezouata Konservat-Lagerstätte of southern Morocco, preserving appendages and digestive tract. The digestive structures include a crop with digestive caeca, while the appendages display exopodal setae and slight heteropody (cephalic endopods larger and more spinose than thoracic and pygidial ones). The combination of these digestive structures and the heteropody has never been described together among trilobites, and the latter could assist in the understanding of the production of certain comb-like traces of the Cruziana rugosa group, which are extraordinarily abundant on the shallow marine shelves around Gondwana.
- Published
- 2017
38. Ordovician biostratigraphy and biochronology, and the convenience of the Bohemo-Iberian regional chronostratigraphic scale for correlating the south polar Gondwanan areas
- Author
-
Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
Comunicación presentada en STRATI 2015, 2 International Congress on Stratigraphy, 19. - 23. July 2015, Graz, Austria
- Published
- 2015
39. First Furongian (late Cambrian) trilobites from the Cantabrian zone (north-western Spain)
- Author
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Aceñolaza, Guillermo F., Albani, R., Bernárdez, Enrique, García-Bellido, Diego, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and Sá, Artur A.
- Subjects
Spain ,Late Cambrian ,Trilobites - Abstract
The first Furongian trilobites are described herein from the Cambrian of the Cantabrian Zone, NW Spain. They were collected during the construction of the >Túnel Ordovícico del Fabar> from the shales of >El Fabar Beds> in the La Matosa member of the Barrios Formation. The assemblage includes the aphelaspidine genus Maladioidella, with a specimen identified as M. cf. colcheni, a species previously known from Sierra de la Demanda (Spain), and possibly Sardinia and Oman. Fragments of an indeterminate olenid trilobite and phyllocarid crustaceans have also been recorded. Based on the acritarch assemblage, these beds are considered as late Jiangshanian or earliest Stage 10 of the Cambrian System. The ichnofossil Cruziana semiplicata has also been collected in the tunnel from the upper part of the Ligüeria Member (Tremadocian) of the Barrios Formation, clearly postdating the occurrence of Maladioidella colcheni, its supposed tracemarker according to some authors. The separate record of both taxa (a Furongian trilobite and a Cambro-Ordovic-ian trace fossil) does not support this statement, so their relationship would be refuted in this case.
- Published
- 2014
40. Digestive and appendicular soft-parts, with behavioural implications, in a large Ordovician trilobite from the Fezouata Lagerstätte, Morocco
- Author
-
Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan C., primary, García-Bellido, Diego C., additional, Rábano, Isabel, additional, and Sá, Artur A., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Hirnantia fauna and the stratigraphic assessment of the uppermost Ordovician in the central Anti-Atlas (Morocco)
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Villas, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Pereira, Sofía, Álvaro-Blasco, José Javier, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Villas, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Pereira, Sofía, and Álvaro-Blasco, José Javier
- Abstract
The pandemic brachiopod Hirnantia fauna characterizes the lower part of the Hirnantian (Hi1 Stage Slice of the uppermost Ordovician Global Stage). In the Moroccan Anti-Atlas, its occurrence in glacially-related successions allowed contrasting the onset of several Late Ordovician glacial events. In the Central Anti-Atlas, the Hirnantian is lithostratigraphically represented by the Second Bani Group, a sandstone-dominated succession. In the region immediately west of Tagounite (in the vicinity of Zagora), the group is subdivided into two formations, the basal Lower Second Bani Formation and the overlying Upper Second Bani Formation, separated by a major erosive (glaciogenic) unconformity. The Lower Second Bani Formation is composed of two members, the lower mostly made of clayey sandstones and the upper consisting of thick-bedded quartzitic sandstones (Fig. 1). Figure 1: Ait-Isioul section, west of Tagounite (Morocco). Upper Ordovician formations with the situation of the sampled levels in the Lower Second Bani Formation. We have revisited the stratotype of the Lower Formation of the Second Bani Group, west of Tagounite, and sampled brachiopods from its uppermost quartzitic horizons (from Destombes' horizon F upsection). In addition to those brachiopods listed by Destombes [1] from the region, we have found Plectothyrella sp. and Kinnella sp. Both genera are exclusive of the pandemic Hirnantia fauna, which allows confirmation of a Hirnantian age for the upper member of the Lower Second Bani Fm. By contrast, the lower member of the Lower Second Bani (concretely, Destombes' G bryozoan limestone horizon, rich in the echinoderms Maghrebocystis and Herpetocystis, and horizons slightly above it), has yielded Katian brachiopods and trilobites, such as Eostropheodonta intermedia, Destombesium sp., Hirnantia sp. (species different than H. sagittifera), Actinopeltis aff. insocialis, Mucronaspis termieri and Cekovia aff. loredensis. Thus, following the present-day lithostratigra
- Published
- 2016
42. Geoethic issues in North African and South American paleontology
- Author
-
Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., García-Bellido, Diego, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
At a smaller scale than in the case of the peripatetic fossils from the Himalaya, known as the "Gupta affaire" [1], North African and South American paleontology of the late 20th Century and today continue to provide examples of misconduct in paleontological science. Most of these remain unknown outside the limited circles of specialists but could introduce confusion in the future, when contaminated, poorly constructed or unusable data may be used for regional geology or taken into account in global paleontological databases employed in paleogeography, correlations or any other Geological Science applications. As in the Gupta affaire, the "suspected" fossils came from places of difficult access -such as deserts, jungles or high mountains- with a great deficiency in valuable data. Apart from some "misplaced" fossils, the problem mainly falls upon the opportunistic individuals that use obscure journals to avoid a minimal scientific control of their published contents. In North Africa, the best example of this type of fraudulent behavior was carried out by the Egyptian micropaleontologist Mostapha M. Iman, who published dozens of "misplaced" and "recycled" fossils (mostly taken from papers from other authors), supposedly coming from Cretaceous to Miocene formations of Libya and Egypt, who was finally exposed by a Spanish journal [2][3]. Another example of unethical behavior in North African paleontology is denounced here: the activities of Joan Corbacho, a Spanish fossil collector and trader that, without a minimal scientific knowledge, published ca. 20 papers with several dozen new trilobite taxa coming from different Cambrian to Devonian formations in the Moroccan Anti-Atlas. A fraction of the original specimens were inadequately prepared or reconstructed by local dealers, and his descriptions of new taxa are very poor and lack of confident data about localities and stratigraphic position. Despite of this, papers were published by an old private museum connected to t, in value", were later offered for sale in Internet, and often with a "certificate of authenticity" signed by the Museum'director. In South America, Peruvian paleontology is living a critical period dominated by impostors with high penetration in the national and social media, like the electronic engineer Klaus Hönninger or the journalist Carlos A. Vildoso. Both of them have acted as highly reputed paleontologists for more than a decade, but never published any true scientific result. They founded private businesses under the aspect of a museum and a research institute, respectively. Mr Vildoso is the chairman of the IX Latin-American Paleontological Congress, to be held in Lima (September 20-24, 2016), while excluding from the organizing committee the most acknowledged Peruvian paleontologists
- Published
- 2016
43. Cronoestratigrafía del Ordovícico ibérico
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Villas, Enrique, Bernárdez, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Sarmiento, Graciela N., García-Bellido, Diego, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Villas, Enrique, Bernárdez, Enrique, Colmenar, Jorge, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Sarmiento, Graciela N., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
[ES] La nuevas divisiones de la escala global del Sistema Ordovícico, con excepción de los pisos Tremadociense e Hirnantiense, son difíciles de aplicar en la Península Ibérica, pues sus estratotipos de límite radican en facies y faunas de aguas profundas, desconocidas en las plataformas someras y de paleolatitud elevada del ámbito peri-gondwánico. Antes de ello, la escala regional británico-avalónica fue utilizada en Iberia durante todo el siglo XX, pero presenta serios inconvenientes de correlación vinculados con la propia evolución, conceptual y de criterio, registrada en las áreas tipo británicas durante los últimos 40 años. Sin embargo, la escala regional bohemo-ibérica es la que actualmente aporta una mayor precisión a las correlaciones, pues se basa en elementos bioestratigráficos y biocronológicos de distribución común a todo el margen peri-gondwánico europeo y norteafricano, y la que mantiene vínculos episódicos con otras escalas regionales, que permitirán resolver progresivamente las equivalencias con la escala global, [EN] The new divisions from the global scale for the Ordovician System, except for the Tremadocian and Hirnantian stages, are difficult to correlate in the Iberian Ordovician, because their GSSPs involve deep-water facies and faunas not recorded in the shallow, high-paleolatitudinal settings of the peri-Gondwanan area. Previously to the Global scale, the British-Avalonian regional scale had been widely adopted in the Iberian Ordovician during all the 20th Century, but there are serious correlation problems due to the former’s conceptual evolution and variable criteria used for the British type areas during the last 40 years. However, the use of the Bohemo-Iberian scale instead, provides better precision to Iberian correlations, because it is based in some local biostratigraphical and biochronological markers, widely recorded over an extensive area of the European and North African peri-Gondwanan margin. The Bohemo-Iberian scale shows episodic links with other regional scales, which will provide indirect correlations also with the global Ordovician scale.
- Published
- 2016
44. Ploughing, tunnelling and biting in the Middle Ordovician of northern Portugal
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), International Union of Geological Sciences, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Sá, Artur A., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), International Union of Geological Sciences, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Sá, Artur A., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Abstract
Middle Ordovician shales from the Valongo and Moncorvo formations recorded temporary dysoxic environments, inhabited by opportunistic faunas that also include highly specialized deposit feeders. Resulting ichnofossils include Phycodes noa Mikuláš, a horizontally-ramified burrow complex, so far only known from older beds in the Prague Basin, as well as a large spiral grazing trace close to Rotundusichnium zumayensis Gómez de Llarena, which is widely distributed in Alpine flysch deposits. Phycodes noa from the Valongo Formation occurs as quite large, horizontally flabellate structure with up to 10 diverging passages. Specimens from the Canelas quarry (Arouca) are commonly infilled by pellets (Tomaculum), and are preserved flattened and tectonically expanded. Giant Rotundusichnium-like forms are exclusive from the Canelas quarry and consist of ?concentric to tightly spiral traces with a large elliptical outline (major axis up to 130 cm long), showing endichnial ribbons inclined to the centre of the structure. These are associated with imploded fragmocones of nautiloids preserved under them, and the trace maker harvested the microbial proliferation around them in tight centrifugal coils. The third remarkable trace corresponds to bite marks preserved in large trilobite carapaces. They have a consistent acute V-shaped outline and represent marginal breakage, usually placed in the right pygidial pleural border of asaphids, in diverse margins of calymenaceans or in semi-infaunal molluscs. These triangular bite marks are attributed to large nautiloid predators or scavengers, sometimes attacking freshly-molted giant trilobites.
- Published
- 2016
45. Exceptional preservation of the southern Gondwanan trilobite Selenopeltis from the Tafilalt Biota (Upper Ordovician of Morocco)
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sá, Artur A., Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., García-Bellido, Diego, Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, and Sá, Artur A.
- Published
- 2016
46. An early C ambrian chelicerate from the E mu B ay S hale, S outh A ustralia
- Author
-
Jago, James B., primary, García‐Bellido, Diego C., additional, and Gehling, James G., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A remarkable illaenid trilobite from the Middle Ordovician of Morocco
- Author
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Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., and García-Bellido, Diego
- Subjects
Paleontología::Paleontología de Los Invertebrados [Categorías UNESCO] - Abstract
Illaenid trilobites were relatively scarce in south-polar peri-Gondwanan areas during the Ordovician, with all their African occurrences restricted to the Middle and Upper Ordovician of Morocco. At a specific level, only the Bohemian form Ectillaenus benignensis (Novák) has been positively identified from the Middle Ordovician of that region. In the present work we add the discovery of the new form Caudillaenus nicolasi gen. et sp. nov., occurring in a single bed of late Darriwilian 2 age within the Taddrist Formation of the Rahiat region (south of Alnif), in the central Moroccan Anti-Atlas. The new genus is characterized by a large and subtriangular pygidium, a cephalon with relatively large eyes, a broad rostral plate with a short upwardly and forwardly turned posterior flange, and a globose hypostome. It shows a spheroidal enrolment type previously unknown in illaenids, with the pygidium protruding beyond the cephalon, and the cephalic margin fitting into a shallow and wide coaptative furrow on the pygidial doublure.
- Published
- 2014
48. A revised correlation of Lower Ordovician sedimentary rocks in the Central Iberian Zone, Portugal and Spain
- Author
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Sá, Artur Abreu, Gutiérrez-Marco, Juan Carlos, Pinto de Meireles, Carlos Augusto, García-Bellido, Diego C., and Rábano, Isabel
- Subjects
Rochas sedimentares ,Zona Centro Ibérica (Portugal, Espanha) ,Correlação estratigráfica ,Ordovícico Inferior - Published
- 2013
49. Ordovician vs. 'Cambrian' ichnofossils in the Armorican Quartzite of Central Portugal
- Author
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Artur Sá, Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Piçarra, José Manuel, García-Bellido, Diego, Vaz, N., and Aceñolaza, Guillermo F.
- Subjects
Ordovician ,Armorican quartzite facies ,Cruziana stratigraphy ,Regional Geology ,Iberian Peninsula - Abstract
The Armorican Quartzite is one of the most characteristic units of the Paleozoic of SW Europe, being represented in the Lower Ordovician succession of Brittany and Normandy (western France), and also over most of the Hesperian and Iberian massifs of the Iberian Peninsula (in the clarified sense of San José, 2006), with the exception of the Ossa-Morena and South-Portuguese zones (Gutiérrez-Marco et al., 2002; Vera, 2004; Ribeiro, 2006). In Portugal and from north to south, the Armorican Quartzite facies is equivalent to the Marão Formation of Trás-os-Montes (Sá et al., 2005), the Santa Justa Formation of the Tabagón-Valongo-Tamames domain (Romano and Diggens, 1974), the Armorican Quartzite Formation of the Buçaco and Amêndoa-Mação areas (Young, 1988; Romão, 2000a) and the Serra do Brejo Formation in the Dornes area (Cooper, 1980). In spite of the generalized absence of biostratigraphical ties for correlation other than ichnofossils and a few chitinozoan or graptolite data, the latter generally coming from the overlying shales, the Armorican Quartzite in Portugal have been considered as involving a diachronism in sedimentation from Arenig to Llandeilo, becoming younger from west to east (Ribeiro, 1974) according to regional data from the Valongo to Trás-os-Montes areas. These data have been compiled in some syntheses (Hammann et al., 1982; Romano, 1982; Oliveira et al., 1992). However, the single paleontological argument in support of such diachronism, a Llandeilian trilobite found in the middle part of the Marão Formation at Moncorvo (Teixeira and Rebelo, 1976) was later reviewed by Gutiérrez- Marco et al. (1995), and Sá et al. (2003, 2009), who demonstrated that the supposed trilobite was in reality the trace fossil Rusophycus carleyi (James), also recorded in other Gondwanan areas within the Arenigian succession (Seilacher, 1970; Gibb et al., 2010). No other authors were able to demonstrate the claimed diachronism in the sedimentation of the Armorican Quartzite, whose deposit took place entirely in the Eremochitina brevis chitinozoan biozone (Paris, 1981, 1990; Paris et al., 1982, 2007), regarded as “early-mid Arenigian” or as late Floian according to the global scale (Paris et al., 2007; Videt et al., 2010). Romão et al. (2010) recently questioned the current age of the Armorican Quartzite in the southern Central Iberian Zone, and supported a local late Cambrian age for this formation in the Amêndoa- Carvoeiro synform based in a couple of ichnological data, a single U-Pb dating, and some highly speculative tectonostratigraphic inferences which in our opinion are far from being demonstrated. Also with reference to this area, Romão et al. (2010) envisaged the Armorican Quartzite as a highly diachronic late Cambrian to Early Ordovician unit for the Iberian Peninsula. This statement is refuted here with the presentation of new ichnologic evidence that supports the previous Early Ordovician dating of the Armorican Quartzite in the Amêndoa-Carvoeiro synform.
- Published
- 2011
50. Iberian Ordovician and its international correlation
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sarmiento, Graciela N., García-Bellido, Diego, Bernárdez, Enrique, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Villas, Enrique, Jiménez-Sánchez, A., Colmenar, Jorge, Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., Sá, Artur A., Rábano Gutiérrez del Arroyo, Isabel, Sarmiento, Graciela N., García-Bellido, Diego, Bernárdez, Enrique, Lorenzo, Saturnino, Villas, Enrique, Jiménez-Sánchez, A., Colmenar, Jorge, and Zamora Iranzo, Samuel Andrés
- Published
- 2015
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