THE TROPHIC STRUCTURE OF THE BIOTA OF THE PETERBOROUGH MEMBER, OXFORD CLAY FORMATION (JURASSIC), UK

被引:81
作者
MARTILL, DM
TAYLOR, MA
DUFF, KL
RIDING, JB
BOWN, PR
机构
[1] NATL MUSEUMS SCOTLAND, DEPT GEOL, EDINBURGH EH1 1JF, MIDLOTHIAN, SCOTLAND
[2] ENGLISH NAT, PETERBOROUGH PE1 1UA, CAMBS, ENGLAND
[3] BRITISH GEOL SURVEY, NOTTINGHAM NG12 5GG, ENGLAND
[4] UCL, DEPT GEOL SCI, LONDON WC1E 6BT, ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1144/gsjgs.151.1.0173
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Peterborough Member of the Oxford Clay Formation is organic-rich and contains an abundance of well-preserved vertebrate and invertebrate fossils. A high nutrient input supported a diverse biota. Phytoplankton was exceptionally abundant in the surface water, and formed the basis for an intricate food web in both surface and bottom waters. Top predators include some of the largest known Mesozoic marine reptiles. A giant teleost fish was analogous to modern filter feeding whales and sharks. Benthic faunas depended on organic matter sinking from surface waters, and two parallel food webs may have existed. Trophic partitioning allowed the higher level predators to become diverse, especially the plesiosaurs. Productivity was high in the surface waters, probably high in the mid-water column, and high on the sea floor at times, although benthic diversity may have been reduced due to substrate consistency and/or dysoxia. Bacterial activity within the sediment was also intense. The contribution of organic material to the sea floor was high, but heterotrophic reworking probably reduced the abundance considerably during early diagenesis. A decrease in organic carbon content in the Upper Callovian and Lower Oxfordian parts of the Oxford Clay Formation parallels a decreasing abundance of vertebrate fossils.
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 194
页数:22
相关论文
共 123 条
[1]  
ADAMSTRESMAN SM, 1987, PALAEONTOLOGY, V30, P179
[2]  
ADAMSTRESMAN SM, 1987, PALAEONTOLOGY, V30, P195
[3]  
ALEXANDER RM, 1989, J GEOL SOC LONDON, V146, P41, DOI 10.1144/gsjgs.146.1.0041
[4]   PHOSPHATIZED SOFT-BODIED SQUIDS FROM THE JURASSIC OXFORD CLAY [J].
ALLISON, PA .
LETHAIA, 1988, 21 (04) :403-410
[5]   THE STABLE ISOTOPIC RECORDS OF FOSSILS FROM THE PETERBOROUGH MEMBER, OXFORD CLAY FORMATION (JURASSIC), UK - PALEOENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS [J].
ANDERSON, TF ;
POPP, BN ;
WILLIAMS, AC ;
HO, LZ ;
HUDSON, JD .
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1994, 151 :125-138
[6]  
Andrews CW, 1913, DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGU, V2
[7]  
ANDREWS CW, 1910, DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGU, V1
[8]  
Balazs G.H., 1991, BRIT HERPETOLOGICAL, V37, P33
[9]  
BARNARD T, 1974, Eclogae Geologicae Helvetiae, V67, P563
[10]   PETROGRAPHIC ANALYSES OF ORGANO-MINERAL RELATIONSHIPS - DEPOSITIONAL CONDITIONS OF THE OXFORD CLAY FORMATION (JURASSIC), UK [J].
BELIN, S ;
KENIG, F .
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1994, 151 :153-160