Invertebrate trace fossils and agglutinated foraminifera as indicators of marine influence within the classic Carboniferous section at Joggins, Nova Scotia, Canada

被引:50
作者
Archer, AW
Calder, JH
Gibling, MR
Naylor, RD
Reid, DR
Wightman, WG
机构
[1] NOVA SCOTIA DEPT NAT RESOURCES, HALIFAX, NS B3J 2T9, CANADA
[2] DALHOUSIE UNIV, DEPT EARTH SCI, HALIFAX, NS B3H 3J5, CANADA
[3] JOGGINS FOSSIL CTR, JOGGINS, NS B0L 1A0, CANADA
[4] DALHOUSIE UNIV, CTR MARINE GEOL, HALIFAX, NS B3H 3J5, CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1139/e95-156
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The sea cliffs at Joggins, Nova Scotia, are the most extensive and continuous Carboniferous section in eastern North America. Although the section has been considered to have formed within a nonmarine depositional basin, paleobiological information indicates that parts of the section were deposited in brackish water. The occurrence of a trace-fossil assemblage, which includes Cochlichnus, Kouphichnium, and Treptichnus, is part of an assemblage of biogenic structures that apparently reflects paleodeposition within fluvial systems that may have experienced distal marine influences. Presence of agglutinated foraminifera characteristic of brackish-water environments supports this interpretation. This information provides new evidence of brackish-water conditions at Joggins such as those now being widely recognized in other Carboniferous coal-bearing sections.
引用
收藏
页码:2027 / 2039
页数:13
相关论文
共 68 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1844, TACONIC SYSTEM BASED
[2]   COMPARISON OF DRIER-INTERVAL TO WETTER-INTERVAL ESTUARINE ROOF FACIES IN THE EASTERN AND WESTERN INTERIOR COAL BASINS, USA [J].
ARCHER, AW ;
FELDMAN, HR ;
KVALE, EP ;
LANIER, WP .
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 1994, 106 (1-4) :171-185
[3]  
ARCHER AW, 1984, J PALEONTOL, V58, P448
[4]  
ARCHER AW, 1993, MODERN ANCIENT COAL, P181
[5]  
BAJARD J, 1966, REV GEOGR PHYS GEOL, V8, P39
[6]  
BELL WA, 1944, GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CA, V238
[9]  
BRIGGS D E G, 1979, Palaeontology (Oxford), V22, P273
[10]  
Buatois Luis Alberto, 1993, Ichnos, V2, P217