Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T03:47:01.207Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New Permian fusulinids from Conglomerate Mesa, southeastern Inyo Mountains, east-central California

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Calvin H. Stevens
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA, 95192
Paul Stone
Affiliation:
U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA 94025

Abstract

In the Conglomerate Mesa area in the southeastern Inyo Mountains, east-central California, a series of distinctive fusulinid assemblages ranging in age from late Artinskian to Kungurian or Roadian was developed in units 7–10 of the sedimentary rocks of Santa Rosa Flat (part of the Owens Valley Group). The fauna of unit 7 shows some eastern Klamath Mountains affinity, but most of the species in unit 7 and the lower half of unit 8 are highly endemic and comprise three new genera with 12 new species, two unusual unassigned forms, and two other new species assigned to previously described genera. New taxa include: Crenulosepta new genus with five new species, C. inyoensis, C. delicata, C. fusiformis, C. rossi, and C. wahlmani; Nigribaccinus new genus with three new species, N. giganteus, N. elegans, and N.? nestelli; and the new genus Inyoschwagerina with four new species, I. magnifica, I. elayeri, I. elongata, and I.? linderae. Cuniculinella Skinner and Wilde, 1965, is represented by one new species, C. parva, and Skinnerella Coogan, 1960 by one new species, S.? mcallisteri. Faunas from the upper half of unit 8, unit 9, and unit 10 have a strong West Texas affinity. New species from these units are Skinnerella davydovi, S. hexagona, Parafusulina cerrogordoensis, P. complexa, P. halli, P. owensensis, and P. ubehebensis.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society

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

Beede, J. W. and Kniker, H. T. 1924. Species of the genus Schwagerina and their stratigraphic significance. University of Texas, Bureau of Economic Geology and Technology Bulletin, 2433:196.Google Scholar
Behnken, F. H. 1975. Leonardian and Guadalupian (Permian) conodont biostratigraphy in western and southwestern United States. Journal of Paleontology, 49:562597.Google Scholar
Belasky, P. and Stevens, C. H. 2006. Permian faunas of westernmost North America: Paleobiobeographic constraints on the Permian positions of Cordilleran terranes, p. 7180. In Haggart, J. W., Enkins, R. J., and Monger, J. W. H., eds. Paleogeography of western North America: Constraints on latitudinal displacements. Geological Association of Canada Special Paper 46.Google Scholar
Bensh, F. R. 1987. Systematic revision of fusulinids of the genus Pseudofusulina Dunbar and Skinner and related genera. Voprosy Mikropaleontologii, 29:2053. (in Russian)Google Scholar
Bensh, F. R. 1996. In Rauser-Chernousova, D. M., Bensh, F. R., Vdovenko, M. V., et al. Reference Book on the Systematics of Paleozoic Foraminifera (Endothyroida, Fusulinoida). M.: Nauka, 207 p. (in Russian)Google Scholar
Coogan, A. H. 1960. Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Permian Nosoni and Dekkas Formations (Bollibokka Group). University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, 36(5):243315.Google Scholar
Davydov, V. I. and Arefifard, S. 2007. Permian fusulinid fauna of Peri-Gondwanan affinity from Kalmard region, east-central Iran and its significance for tectonics and paleogeography. Palaeontologia Electronica. Article 10.2. 10A.Google Scholar
Dunbar, C. O. 1939. Permian fusulines from Sonora. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 50(11): 17451760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbar, C. O. and Skinner, J. W. 1931. New fusulinids from the Permian of west Texas. America Journal of Science, 22:252268.Google Scholar
Dunbar, C. O. and Skinner, J. W. 1937. Permian Fusulinidae of Texas: The Geology of Texas, Pt. 2, University of Texas. Bureau of Economic Geology and Technology Bulletin, 3701(3):517825.Google Scholar
Dutkevich, G. A. 1934. Onekotorykh novykh vidakh fuzulinid iz verkhnego i srednego karbona Verkhne-Chusovskikh Gorodknov na reke Chusovoy (zapadnyi sklon Srednego Urala): Trudy Neftyanogo Geologo-razvedochnogo Instituta, Seriya A, 36:398. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Elayer, R. W. 1974. Stratigraphy and structure of the southern Inyo Mountains, Inyo County, California. San Jose, CA, San Jose State University, M.S. thesis, 121 p.Google Scholar
Hall, W. E. and Mackevett, E. M. Jr. 1962. Geology and ore deposits of the Darwin quadrangle, Inyo County, California. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 368, 87 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, R. L. 1956. Permian fusulines from Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 30(4):773792.Google Scholar
Leven, E. Y. 1993. Early Permian fusulinids from the central Pamir. Revista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia, 104(3):342.Google Scholar
Leven, E. Y. 2004. Carboniferous-Permian stratigraphy and fusulinids of eastern Iran. The Permian in the Bag-e-Vang section (Shirgesht area). Revista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia, 110(2):441465.Google Scholar
Magginetti, R. T., Stevens, C. H., and Stone, P. 1988. Early Permian fusulinids from the Owens Valley Group, east-central California. Geological Society of America Special Paper 217, 61 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mcallister, J. F., 1956. Geology of the Ubehebe Peak quadrangle, California. U.S. Geological Survey Map GQ-95, scale 1:62,500.Google Scholar
Merriam, C. W. 1963. Geology of the Cerro Gordo mining district, Inyo County, California. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 408, 83 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miklukho-Maklai, A. D. 1953. K sistematike semeistva Fusulinidae Moeller. Uchenyye Zapiski LGU (Leningradskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta), Seriya Geologicheskaya, 3:159:1224. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Perez-Ramos, O. and Nestell, M. 2002. Permian fusulinids from Cobachi, central Sonora, Mexico. Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geologicas, 19(1): 2537.Google Scholar
Rhodes, F. H. T. 1963. Conodonts from the topmost Tensleep Sandstone of the eastern Big Horn Mountains, Wyoming. Journal of Paleontology, 37: 401408.Google Scholar
Rigby, J. K., Linder, G. A., and Stevens, C. H. 2004. A new occurrence of the “Hydrozoan” Radiotrabeculopora reticulata Fan, Rigby, and Zhang, 1991 in the Permian of California. Journal of Paleontology, 78(2):410413.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, G. B. Jr. 1961. Stratigraphy and Leonardian fusulinid paleontology in central Pequop Mountains, Elko County, Nevada. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 8:93145.Google Scholar
Ross, C. A. 1960. Fusulinids from the Hess Member of the Leonard Formation, Leonard Series (Permian), Glass Mountains, Texas. Contributions from the Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, 11(4):117133.Google Scholar
Ross, C. A. 1962. Fusulinids from the Leonard Formation (Permian), western Glass Mountains, Texas: Contributions from the Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, 13(1): 122.Google Scholar
Ross, C. A. 1963a. Fusulinids from the Word Formation (Permian), Glass Mountains, Texas. Contributions from the Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, 14(1): 1731.Google Scholar
Ross, C. A. 1963b. Standard Wolfcampian Series (Permian), Glass Mountains, Texas. Geological Society of America Memoir 88, 205 p.Google Scholar
Ross, C. A. and Sabins, F. F. Jr. 1966. Permian fusulinids from El Paso Mountains, California. Journal of Paleontology, 40(1): 155161.Google Scholar
Sabins, F. F. Jr. and Ross, C. A. 1963. Late Pennsylvanian–Early Permian fusulinids from southeast Arizona: Journal of Paleontology, 37(2):323365.Google Scholar
Skinner, J. W. and Wilde, G. L. 1965. Permian biostratigraphy and fusulinid faunas of the Shasta Lake area, northern California. University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions, Protozoa, Article 6, 98 p.Google Scholar
Slade, M. L. 1961. Pennsylvanian and Permian fusulinids of the Ferguson Mountain area, Elko County, Nevada. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 8:5592.Google Scholar
Snow, J. K. 1992. Large-magnitude Permian shortening and continental-margin tectonics in the southern Cordillera. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 104:80105.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solovieva, M. N. 1985. In Epshteyn, O. G., Terekhova, T. P., and Solovieva, M. N. Paleozoi Koryakskogo Nagorya (fauna foraminifer, biostratigrafiya). Voprosy Mikropaleontologii, 27:4777. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Stevens, C. H. 1995. A Permian fusulinid from east-central Alaska with comparisons of all giant fusulinids in western North America. Journal of Paleontology, 69(5):805812.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. H. and Stone, P. 1988. Early Permian thrust faults in east-central California. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 100:552562.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. H. and Stone, P. 2005. Interpretation of the Last Chance thrust, Death Valley region, California, as an Early Permian décollement in a previously undeformed shale basin. Earth-Science Reviews, 73(2005):79101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. H. and Stone, P. 2007. The Pennsylvanian–Early Permian Bird Spring Carbonate Shelf, southeastern California: Fusulinid biostratigraphy, paleogeographic evolution, and tectonic implications. Geological Society of America Special Paper 429, 82 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C. H., Stone, P., and Miller, S. M. 2005. A new reconstruction of the Paleozoic continental margin of southwestern North America: Implications for the nature and timing of continental truncation and the possible role of the Mojave-Sonora megashear, p. 597618. In Anderson, T. H., Nourse, J. A., McKee, J. W., and Steiner, M. B., eds., The Mojave-Sonora megashear hypothesis: Development, assessment, and alternatives. Geological Society of America Special Paper 393.Google Scholar
Stevens, C. H., Stone, P., and Ritter, S. M. 2001. Conodont and fusulinid biostratigraphy and history of the Pennsylvanian to Lower Permian Keeler basin, east-central California. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 46:99142.Google Scholar
Stevens, C. H., Wagner, D. B., and Sumsion, R. C. 1979. Permian fusulinid biostratigraphy, central Cordilleran Miogeosyncline. Journal of Paleontology, 53:2936.Google Scholar
Stone, P. 1984. Stratigraphy, depositional history, and paleogeographic significance of Pennsylvanian and Permian rocks in the Owens Valley–Death Valley region, California. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University, 399 p.Google Scholar
Stone, P., Dunne, G. C., Conrad, J. E., Swanson, B. J., Stevens, C. H., and Valin, Z. C. 2004. Geologic map of the Cerro Gordo Peak 7.5' quadrangle, Inyo County, California. U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 2851, scale 1:24,000 16 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, P., Dunne, G. C., Stevens, C. H., and Gulliver, R. M. 1989. Geologic map of Paleozoic and Mesozoic rocks in parts of the Darwin and adjacent quadrangles, Inyo County, California. U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series, Map I-1932, scale 1:31,250.Google Scholar
Swanson, B. J. 1997. Structural geology and deformational history of the southern Inyo Mountains east of Keeler, Inyo County, California. Unpublished M.S. thesis, California State University (Northridge), 125 p., scale 1:12,000.Google Scholar
Thompson, M. L. 1954. American Wolfcampian Fusulinids. University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions, Protozoa, Article 5, 225 p.Google Scholar
Thompson, M. L. and Hazzard, J. C. 1946. Permian fusulinids of southern California, p. 3777. In Thompson, M. L., Wheeler, H. E., and Hazzard, J. C. (eds.), Permian Fusulinids of California. Geological Society of America Memoir 17.Google Scholar
Thompson, M. L. and Miller, A. K. 1949. Permian fusulinids and cephalopods from the vicinity of the Maracaibo Basin in northern South America. Journal of Paleontology, 23(1):124.Google Scholar
Thompson, M. L. and Wheeler, H. E. 1946. Permian fusulinids of northern California, p. 2136. In Thompson, M. L., Wheeler, H. E., and Hazzard, J.C. (eds.), Permian Fusulinids of California. Geological Society of America Memoir 17.Google Scholar
Williams, T. E. 1963. Fusulinidae of the Hueco Group (Lower Permian), Hueco Mountains, Texas. Yale University, Peabody Museum of Natural History, Bulletin 18, 152 p.Google Scholar
Yang, Z. and Yancey, T. E. 2000. Fusulinid biostratigraphy and paleontology of the Middle Permian (Guadalupian) strata of the Glass Mountains and Del Norte Mountains west Texas, p. 185259. In Wardlaw, B. R., Grant, R. E., and Rohr, D. M. (eds.), The Guadalupian Symposium. Smithsonian Contributions to the Earth Sciences 32.Google Scholar