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Taxa, turnover and taphofacies: a preliminary analysis of facies-assemblage relationships in the Ediacara Member (Flinders Ranges, South Australia)

Authors :
James D. Holmes
Diego C. García-Bellido
Lily M. Reid
Justin L. Payne
James B. Jago
Reid, LM
Holmes, JD
Payne, JL
Garcaa-Bellido, DC
Jago, JB.
Source :
Australian Journal of Earth Sciences. 67:905-914
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2018.

Abstract

The Ediacara Member of the Flinders Ranges (South Australia) preserves body and trace fossils of the Ediacara biota. Fossils span five lithofacies representative of a range of shallow-marine environments and are preserved as in situ and transported material. Previous work has demonstrated a relationship between paleo environment and taxa at the Nilpena fossil site. We expand the analysis to include facies-taxa data from a further nine localities across the Flinders Ranges to assess if the taxa–paleo environment relationship is site specific or valid at a regional scale. The new analysis demonstrates that the distribution of taxa within the lithofacies, as a proxy for paleo environment, is non-random. This preliminary analysis presents a beta diversity-like spatial turnover across the range of shallow marine Ediacaran environments, and demonstrates taxonomic assemblages are specific to given paleo environmental zones. These assemblages are consistent over a broad spatial extent and also a presumed temporal distribution. This specificity indicates that a marked sensitivity to environmental parameters was present in these communities, as demonstrated by the non-random distribution of taxa and spatial turnover of biotic assemblage throughout the gradational environments of the Ediacara Member. This study highlights the variability and heterogeneity that is a characteristic of shallow marine settings, and offers a novel approach to the future investigation of the relationship between Ediacaran environments and taxa assemblages. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

ISSN :
14400952 and 08120099
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ebf40c3ab15a1724cf280926cb76cb36
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/08120099.2018.1488767