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Paleobiogeography of Lower-Middle Devonian Conulariids from southwest Gondwana.

Authors :
Rodrigues Ribeiro, Victor
Dowding, Elizabeth M.
Nascimento Sousa, Felipe
Augusto Carbonaro, Fábio
Pirani Ghilardi, Renato
Source :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences. Nov2023, Vol. 131, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The bioregionalization of the Devonian fauna in southwest Gondwana has been extensively studied, focusing on the occurrences of brachiopods and trilobites, however, little attention has been given to Conulariids. The main goal of this paper is to propose a bioregionalization for the Conulariids (Conularia albertensis , C. quichua , C. sp., Paraconularia africana , P. ulrichana , and Reticulaconularia baini) from the Lower-Middle Devonian in southwest Gondwana. After a clustering analysis and diversity tests we have identified two distinct bioregions for Conulariids: the Amazon and southwest Gondwana, in the Amazon region the diversity is low, and can be attributed to scarcity of palaeontological data on the area. On the other hand, in the southwest Gondwana bioregion, diversity ranges from moderate to relatively high, which helps define a second-order bioregion, the Andeo-South Africa and Interior Gondwana. The first includes areas where diversity has higher values bordering southwest Gondwana (Bolivian Chaco-Peru, Zorritas-NOA-South Bolivia, South Africa and Malvinas areas). Further, in the Interior Gondwana bioregion are the Parnaíba (Parnaíba Basin), Alto Garças (north and northwest of Paraná Basin), Paraná (south of Paraná Basin, Uruguay and Paraguay) areas, where the diversity is slightly lower when compared to the Andeo-South Africa bioregion. • Paleobiogeography of Devonian Conulariids from southwest Gondwana. • During the Devonian, the inland seas of Gondwana hosted similar fauna of Conulariids. • The seas bordering Gondwana had a high diversity of Conulariids during the Devonian. • Cluster analyzes show different bioregions in Gondwana during the Devonian. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08959811
Volume :
131
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173234794
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2023.104618