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The first evidence of terrestrial vertebrates from the Lower Mississippian Albert Formation of New Brunswick: Implications for the invasion of continental lacustrine ecosystems and biodiversity during Romer's Gap in Atlantic Canada.

Authors :
STIMSON, MATTHEW R.
KING, OLIVIA A.
ALLEN, LUKE F.
HINDS, STEVEN J.
PARK, ADRIAN F.
MACRAE, R. ANDREW
CALDER, JOHN H.
LUCAS, SPENCER G.
MILLER, RANDALL F.
Source :
Atlantic Geoscience. 2023, Vol. 59, p66-67. 2p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Early Mississippian (known as 'Romer's Gap') marks the beginning of a critical point in tetrapod history as they transitioned from dominantly aquatic to more terrestrial ecosystems. This paleoecological expansion set the stage for the radiation of all terrestrial tetrapod crown groups. The exact timing for the transition into freshwater continental environments is poorly understood. However, new discoveries in Scotland, England, and Nova Scotia, represent rare exceptions; offering a glimpse into coastal terrestrial ecologies during 'Romer's Gap'. These sites have evidence for a marine-water connection suggesting a coastal paleogeographic position. In contrast, Early Mississippian sedimentary deposits of the Moncton Subbasin in southern New Brunswick (NB) are interpreted as freshwater intra-continental conditions (lacustrine, wetland, fluvial, alluvial settings). A single stratigraphic horizon in the Albert Formation (Hiram Brook Member), exposed near Norton, NB, has yielded abundant tetrapod footprints. Preliminary assessments suggest at least four trackway ichnogenera: cf. Characichnos, cf.Matthewichnus, cf.Hylopus, and cf.Batrachichnus and a fifth trackway that may represent a new ichnogenus. Footprints range in size from 1 to 3 cm, suggesting that tetrapods were smaller than those documented from near time-equivalent sites in Nova Scotia, but are comparable in size to skeletal fossils described from younger strata in Scotland. These footprints are interpreted to be preserved in interfluvial crevasse splays associated with wetland forests dominated by Lepidodendropsis lycopods and Aneimites ferns preserved in their ecological context. The relatively large sample size of footprints suggests that a community of tetrapods were present and part of a diverse ecosystem, adapted to terrestrial and semi-aquatic continental environments in the earliest Mississippian. Additional trackways from slightly younger redbed playa lake deposits in the Sussex Group suggest tetrapods were also venturing into semi-arid continental environments. The ichnofossil assemblage from NB demonstrates considerable variation in ichnotaxa morphology and paleoenvironmental context from sites of approximately equivalent age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25642987
Volume :
59
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atlantic Geoscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176018149
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4138/atlgeo.2023.002