Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T22:19:27.925Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ediacaran fossils from the southwestern Great Basin, United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

James W. Hagadorn
Affiliation:
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125,
Ben Waggoner
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, University of Central Arkansas, Conway, Arkansas 72035-0001,

Abstract

Ediacaran fossils from the southwestern Great Basin may help constrain regional Vendian-Cambrian biostratigraphy and provide biogeographic links between facies in this region and elsewhere. Locally, trace fossils suggest the Vendian-Cambrian boundary occurs within or below the upper third of the lower member of the Wood Canyon Formation. Ediacaran soft-bodied and tubular fossils, including the frondlike fossil Swartpuntia and tubular, mineralized or agglutinated fossils similar to Archaeichnium Cloudina Corumbella, and Onuphionella occur in the lowermost Wood Canyon Formation. Discoidal forms referred to Nimbia occur in both the lowermost Wood Canyon Formation and the underlying strata of the Stirling Quartzite. These fossils occur directly below Lower Cambrian trace fossils, including Treptichnus pedum, and confirm the persistence of the Ediacaran biota to near the base of the Cambrian. These faunas may also help strengthen previously proposed correlation schemes between the two main facies belts of the southwestern Great Basin (the Death Valley and White-Inyo facies), because a nearly identical Vendian-lowest Cambrian succession of faunas occurs in both regions. Lastly, lack of cosmopolitan Ediacaran faunas in these strata suggests a paleobiogeographic link between the southwestern U.S. and southern Africa in Vendian time.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alpert, S. P. 1974. Trace fossils of the Precambrian-Cambrian succession, White-Inyo Mountains, California. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles, 162 p.Google Scholar
Burchfiel, B. C., Hamill, G. S. IV, and Wilhelms, D. E. 1982. Stratigraphy of the Montgomery Mountains and the northern half of the Nopah and Resting Spring Ranges, Nevada and California. Map and Chart Series MC-44. Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Christie-Blick, N. and Levy, M. 1989. Stratigraphic and tectonic framework of upper Proterozoic and Cambrian rocks in the western United States, p. 721. In Christie-Blick, N. and Levy, M. (eds.), Late Proterozoic and Cambrian Tectonics, Sedimentation, and Record of Metazoan Radiation in the Western United States. Field Trip Guidebook T331. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E. 1960. Gas as a sedimentary and diagenetic agent. American Journal of Science, 258-A:3545.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E. 1968. Pre-metazoan evolution and the origins of the metazoa, p. 172. In Drake, E. T. (ed.), Evolution and Environment. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E., and Nelson, C. A. 1966. Phanerozoic-Cryptozoic and related transitions—New evidence. Science, 154:766770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corsetti, F. A. 1993. Recognition of potential stratigraphic breaks in poorly-fossiliferous sections using carbon-isotope stratigraphy, Neoproterozoic units, eastern California-western Nevada. PaleoBios, 4:23.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E. 1998. Regional correlation, age constraints, and geologic history of the Neoproterozoic-Cambrian strata, southern Great Basin, USA: integrated carbon isotope stratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and lithostratigraphy. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara, 249 p.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E., and Kaufman, A. J. 1994. Chemostratigraphy of Neoproterozoic-Cambrian units, White-Inyo Region, eastern California and western Nevada: implications for global correlation and faunal distribution. Palaios, 9:211219.Google Scholar
Dalziel, I. W. D. 1997. Neoproterozoic-Paleozoic geography and tectonics: review, hypothesis, environmental speculation. GSA Bulletin, 109:1642.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diehl, P. E. 1979. The stratigraphy, depositional environments, and quantitative petrography of the Precambrian-Cambrian Wood Canyon Formation, Death Valley. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 430 p.Google Scholar
Fedo, C. M. and Cooper, J. D. 1990. Braided fluvial to marine transition: the basal Lower Cambrian Wood Canyon Formation, southern Marble Mountains, Mojave Desert, California. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, 60:220234.Google Scholar
Fedo, C. M., and Prave, A. R. 1991. Extensive Cambrian braidplain sedimentation: Insights from the southwestern U.S.A. Cordillera, p. 227235. In Cooper, J. D. and Stevens, C. H. (eds.), Paleozoic Paleogeography of the Western United States, II. Pacific Section, SEPM.Google Scholar
Fedonkin, M. A. 1980. Novye predstaviteli dokembrijskikh kishechnopolostnykh na severe Russkoj platformy. Paleontologicheskij Zhurnal, 1980(2):715. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Fedonkin, M. A. 1985. Sistematicheskoe opisanie vendskikh metazoa, p. 70106. In Sokolov, B. S. and Iwanowski, A. B. (eds.), Vendskaja sistema tom 1. Nauka, Moscow. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Gehling, J. G. 1999. Microbial mats in terminal Proterozoic siliciclastics: Ediacaran death masks. Palaios, 14:4057.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Germs, G. J. B. 1972. New shelly fossils from the Nama Group, South West Africa. American Journal of Science, 272:752761.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaessner, M. F. 1963. Zur Kenntnis der Nama-Fossilien Südwest-Afrikas. Annalen Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, 66:133–120.Google Scholar
Glaessner, M. F. 1978. Re-examination of Archaeichnium, a fossil from the Nama Group. Annals of the South-African Museum, 74:335342.Google Scholar
Grant, S. W. F. 1990. Shell structure and distribution of Cloudina, a potential index fossil for the terminal Proterozoic. American Journal of Science, 290-A:261294.Google Scholar
Grotzinger, J. P., Bowring, S. A., Saylor, B. Z., and Kaufman, A. K. 1995. Biostratigraphic and geochronologic constraints on early animal evolution. Science, 270:598604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagadorn, J. W., and Waggoner, B. M. 1998. Vendian-Lower Cambrian faunas from the southwestern U.S. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 30(7):A233.Google Scholar
Hahn, G., and Pflug, H.-D. 1985. Die Cloudinidae n. fam., Kalk-Röhren aus dem Vendium und Unter-Kambrium. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 65:413431.Google Scholar
Hahn, G., Hahn, R., Leonardos, O. H., Pflug, H.-D., and Walde, D. H. G. 1982. Körperlich erhaltene Scyphozoen-Reste aus dem Jungpräkambrium Brasiliens. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 16:118.Google Scholar
Hofmann, H. J. and Patel, I. M. 1989. Trace fossils from the type “Etcheminian Series” (Lower Cambrian Ratcliffe Brook Formation), St. John area, New Brunswick, Canada. Geological Magazine, 126:139157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horodyski, R. 1991. Late Proterozoic megafossils from southern Nevada. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 23(6):A163.Google Scholar
Horodyski, R., Gehling, J. G., Jensen, S., and Runnegar, B. 1994. Ediacara fauna and earliest Cambrian trace fossils in a single parasequence set, southern Nevada. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 26(3):60.Google Scholar
Hunt, D. L. 1990. Trilobite faunas and biostratigraphy of the Lower Cambrian Wood Canyon Formation, Death Valley region, California. Unpublished M.S. thesis, University of California, Davis, 140 p.Google Scholar
Jensen, S. 1997. Trace fossils from the Lower Cambrian Mickwitzia sandstone, south-central Sweden. Fossils & Strata, 42:1111.Google Scholar
Jensen, S., Gehling, J. G., and Droser, M. L. 1998. Ediacara-type fossils in Cambrian sediments. Nature, 393:567569.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirjanov, V. V. 1968. Paleontologichesnie ostatni i stratigrafiia otlozhenii baltitsnoi serii Volyno-Podolii. Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 24 p. (In Ukrainian)Google Scholar
Langille, G. B. 1974a. Problematic calcareous fossils from the Stirling Quartzite, Funeral Mountains, Inyo County, California. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 6(3):204205.Google Scholar
Langille, G. B. 1974b. Earliest Cambrian-latest Proterozoic ichnofossils and problematic fossils from Inyo County, California. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York, Binghamton, 228 p.Google Scholar
Lipps, J. H., and Fedonkin, M. A. 1988. Trace fossils and the Precambrian/Cambrian boundary. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs 20(7):256.Google Scholar
McMenamin, M. A. S. 1985. Basal Cambrian small shelly fossils from the La Ciénega Formation, northwestern Sonora, Mexico. Journal of Paleontology, 59:14141425.Google Scholar
McMenamin, M. A. S. 1998. Garden of Ediacara. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
McMenamin, M. A. S., Awramik, S. M., and Stewart, J. H. 1983. Precambrian-Cambrian transition problem in western North America. Part II: Early Cambrian skeletonized fauna and associated fossils from Sonora, Mexico. Geology, 11:227230.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mount, J. G., Hunt, D. L., Greene, L. R., and Dienger, J. 1991. Depositional systems, biostratigraphy and sequence stratigraphy of Lower Cambrian Grand Cycles, southwestern Great Basin, p. 209226. In Cooper, J. D. and Stevens, C. H. (eds.), Paleozoic Paleogeography of the Western United States, II. Pacific Section, SEPM.Google Scholar
Narbonne, G. M. 1998. The Ediacara biota: A terminal Neoproterozoic experiment in the evolution of life. GSA Today, 8:16.Google Scholar
Narbonne, G. M., Myrow, P. M., Landing, E., and Anderson, M. A. 1987. A candidate stratotype for the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary, Fortune Head, Burin Peninsula, southeastern Newfoundland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 24:12771293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Narbonne, G. M., Saylor, B. Z., and Grotzinger, J. P. 1997. The youngest Ediacaran fossils from southern Africa. Journal of Paleontology, 71:953957.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Prave, A. R., Fedo, C. M., and Cooper, J. D. 1991. Lower Cambrian depositional and sequence stratigraphic framework of the Death Valley and eastern Mojave Desert regions, p. 147170. In Walawender, M. J. and Hannan, B. B. (eds.), Geologic Excursions in California and Mexico: Guidebook for 1991 Geological Society of America Meeting. Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Rogers, J. J. W. 1996. A history of continents in the past three billion years. Journal of Geology, 104:91107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Runnegar, B. 1998. Precambrian-Cambrian boundary in the southern Great Basin, California and Nevada and the base of the Sauk sequence. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 30(3):63.Google Scholar
Runnegar, B., Gehling, J. G., Horodyski, R. J., Jensen, S., and Knauth, P. L. 1995. Base of the Sauk Sequence is a global eustatic event that lies just above the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 27(6):330.Google Scholar
Salak, M. and Lescinsky, H. L. 1999. Spygoria zappania new genus and species, a Cloudina-like biohermal metazoan from the Lower Cambrian of central Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 73:571576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seilacher, A., and Pflüger, F. 1994. From biomats to benthic agriculture: A biohistoric revolution, p. 97105. In Krumbein, W. E., Paterson, D. M. and Stal, L. J., (eds.), Biostabilization of Sediments. Bibliotheks und Informationssystem der Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg (BIS), Oldenburg, Germany.Google Scholar
Signor, P. W., and McMenamin, M. A. S. 1988. The Early Cambrian worm tube Onuphionella from California and Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 62:233240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Signor, P. W., Gevirtzman, D. A., and Mount, J. F. 1983. Two new pre-trilobite faunas from western North America. Nature, 303:415418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Signor, P. W., Mount, J. F., and Onken, B. R. 1987. A pre-trilobite shelly fauna from the White-Inyo region of eastern California and western Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 61:425438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, J. H. 1970. Upper Precambrian and Lower Cambrian strata in the southern Great Basin, California and Nevada. USGS Professional Paper, 620:1206.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. H. 1982. Regional relations of Proterozoic Z and Lower Cambrian rocks in the western United States and northern Mexico, p. 171186. In Cooper, J. D., Wright, L. A., and Troxel, B. W. (eds.), Geology of Selected Areas in the San Bernardino Mountains, Western Mojave Desert, and Southern Great Basin, California. Death Valley Publishing, Shoshone, California.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. H., McMenamin, M. A. S., and Morales-Ramirez, J. M. 1984. Upper Proterozoic and Cambrian rocks in the Caborca region, Sonora, Mexico—Physical stratigraphy, biostratigraphy, paleocurrent studies, and regional relations. USGS Professional Paper, 1309:136.Google Scholar
Taylor, M. E. 1966. Precambrian mollusc-like fossils from Inyo County, California. Science, 153:198201.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Iten, H., Fitzke, J. A., and Cox, R. S. 1996. Problematic fossil cnidarians from the Upper Ordovician of the north-central USA. Palaeontology, 39:10371064.Google Scholar
Veevers, J. J., Walter, M. R., and Scheibner, E. 1997. Neoproterozoic tectonics of Australia-Antarctica and Laurentia and the 560 Ma birth of the Pacific Ocean reflect the 400 m.y. Pangaean Supercycle. Journal of Geology, 105:225242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waggoner, B. M. 1999. Biogeographic analyses of the Ediacara biota: a conflict with paleotectonic reconstructions. Paleobiology, 25:440458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waggoner, B. M., and Hagadorn, J. W. 1997. Ediacaran fossils from western North America: Stratigraphic and biogeographic implications. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 29(6):A30.Google Scholar
Wertz, W. E. 1982. Stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Stirling Quartzite, Death Valley area, California and Nevada, p. 165170. In Cooper, J. D., Wright, L. A., and Troxel, B. W. (eds.), Geology of Selected Areas in the San Bernardino Mountains, Western Mojave Desert, and Southern Great Basin, California. Death Valley Publishing, Shoshone, California.Google Scholar
Wiggett, G. 1978. An agglutinated, grain-selective polychaete (?) tube from the earliest Cambrian of eastern California. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 10(3):154.Google Scholar
Young, G. M. 1995. Are Neoproterozoic glacial deposits preserved on the margins of Laurentia related to the fragmentation of two supercontinents? Geology, 23:153156.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar