Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-30T23:23:29.667Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The first stringocephalid brachiopods in the upper Givetian of Selennyakh Range (Northeast Asia) and their paleobiogeographical significance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Valeryi V. Baranov
Affiliation:
Institute of Diamond and Precious Metals Geology, Yakutsk Research Center, Siberian Division, Russian Academy of Sciences, pr. Lenina 39, Yakutsk, 677980, Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia,
Robert B. Blodgett
Affiliation:
Consulting Geologist, 2821 Kingfisher Drive, Anchorage, Alaska 99502,

Abstract

The following stringocephalid brachiopods are formally described from upper Givetian (late Middle Devonian) strata of the Selennyakh Range (Northeast Asia): Omolonia antiqua Alekseeva (in Alekseeva and Nuzhdina, 1967) (subfamily Omoloninae), Geranocephalus inopinus Crickmay, 1954 and Geranocephaloides krivensis n. gen. n. sp. (subfamily Geranocephalinae), Newberria gigantea n. sp., and Rensselandioidea talyndzhaensis n. sp. (subfamily Rensselandinae). Broad paleobiogeographical connections between the seas of Northeast Asia, northwest Alaska, western Canada (Manitoba), Nevada, and also between the seas of Northeast Asia and South China are clearly established in the Givetian. In addition, two new stringocephalid-bearing communities are established: 1) the Omolonia Community in early Givetian strata of the Baird Group, northwestern Brooks Range, Alaska; and 2) the Omolonia-Geranocephaloides-Newberria-Rensselandioidea Community in late Givetian strata of the Lower Prianikskay Subsuite in the Selennyakh Range, Northeast Asia, Russia. Both of these communities occur in shallow, quiet-water, lagoonal carbonate platform environments.

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

Alekseeva, R. E. and Nuzhdina, N. A. 1967. Nekotorye srednedevonskie terebratulidy Omolonskogo massiva (Severo-Vostok SSSR). Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 1:137143. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Alekseeva, R. E., Sidyachenko, A. I., Baranov, V. V., Afanas'eva, G. A., Grunt, T. A., Komarov, V. N., Lazarev, S. S., and Manankov, I. N. 1996. Atlas devonskikh brakhiopod Severo-Vostoka Rossii (vostok Yakutii i Magadaskoi oblasti). Izdatelstvo Nauka, Moskva, 224p. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Alkhovik, T. S. and Baranov, V. V. 1974. Devon khrebtov Tas-Khayakhtakh i Selennyakh, p. 7786InKrasnyi, L. N. and Popeko, L. I(eds.), Paleozoi Dalnego Vostoka. Dalnevostochnyi Nauchnyi Zentr SSSR. Khabarovsk. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Balinski, A. 1971. Stringocephalus burtini Defrance from the environs of Siewierz, Poland. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 16:461469.Google Scholar
Balinski, A. 1973. Morphology and Paleoecology of Givetian brachiopods from Jurkowice-Budy (Holy Cross Mountains, Poland). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 18:269303.Google Scholar
Balinski, A., Sun, Y. L., and Boucot, A. J. 2000. Heterochrony in Stringocephalus. Journal of Paleontology, 74:11811183.Google Scholar
Baranov, V. V. and Blodgett, R. B. 2011. Pervye nakhodki ranne- i srednedevonskikh terebratulid (Brachiopoda) v Selennyakhskom kryazhe (Severo-Vostok Azii) i ikh zhachenie dlya paleoklimaticheskikh i biogeograficheskikh rekonstruktsii. Geologiya, tektonika i metallogenniya Severo-Aziatskogo kratona. Materialy Vserossiiskoi nauchnoi konferentsii Yakutsk, 27–30 sentyabrya 2011 g. Tom 1, p. 148152. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Blodgett, R. B., Boucot, A. J., and Koch, W. F. II. 1988. New occurrences of color patterns in Devonian articulate brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology, 62:4651.Google Scholar
Blodgett, R. B. and Dutro, J. T. Jr. 1992. Stringocephalus (Brachiopoda) from Middle Devonian (Givetian) rocks of the Baird Group, Western Brooks Range, Alaska, p. 9199. InChaplin, J. R. and Barrick, J. E.(eds.), Special Papers in Paleontology and Stratigraphy: A Tribute to Thomas W. Amsden. Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin 145.Google Scholar
Blodgett, R. B., Rohr, D. M., and Boucot, A. J. 2002. Paleozoic links among some Alaskan accreted terranes and Siberia based on megafossils, p. 273290. InMiller, E. L., Grantz, A., and Klemperer, S. L.(eds.), Tectonic Evolution of the Bering Shelf-Chukchi Sea-Arctic Margin and Adjacent Landmasses. Geological Society of America Special Paper 360.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. 1975. Evolution and Extinction Rate Controls. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 427p.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. and Blodgett, R. B. 2001. Silurian–Devonian biogeography, p. 335344. InBrunton, C. H. C., Cocks, L. R. M., and Long, S. L.(eds.), Brachiopods Past and Present. The Systematics Association Special, Vol. 63. Taylor and Francis, London and New York.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. and Blodgett, R. B. 2003. Oldest, smallest Newberria (Brachiopoda) from the Eifelian (early Middle Devonian) of west-central Alaska. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie, Paläontologie, Monatshefte, 2:91100.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J., Johnson, J. G., and Struve, W. 1966. Stringocephalus, ontogeny and distribution. Journal of Paleontology, 40:13491364.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J., Poole, F. G., Amaya-Martínez, R., Harris, A. G., Sandberg, C. A., and Page, W. R. 2008. Devonian brachiopods of southwestern Laurentia: biogeographic affinities and tectonic affinities, p. 7797. InBlodgett, R. B. and Stanley, G. D. Jr. (eds.), The Terrane Puzzle: New Perspectives on Paleontology and Stratigraphy from the North American Cordillera. Geological Society of America Special Paper 442.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E. Jr., 1942. Terebratuloid Brachiopoda of the Silurian and Devonian. Geological Soceity of America Special Paper 38, 182p.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A. and Phelan, T. F. 1966. Stringocephalus in the Devonian of Indiana. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 151, 1, 20p.Google Scholar
Crickmay, C. H. 1954. Paleontological correlation of Elk Point and equivalents, p. 143158. InClark, L. M.(ed.), Western Canada Sedimentary Basin: A Symposium sponsored by the Alberta Society of Petroleum Geologists and Saskatchewan Society Petroleum Geologists, Ralph Leslie Rutherford Memorial Volume. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, Oklahoma.Google Scholar
Crickmay, C. H. 1960. Studies of the Western Canada Stringocephalinae. Journal of Paleontology, 34:874890.Google Scholar
Crickmay, C. H. 1967. Stringocephalus, its problems and its value, Abstract 19. Abstracts of Papers—Geological Association of Canada; Mineralogical Association of Canada, International Meeting.Google Scholar
Crickmay, C. H. 1968. Discoveries in the Devonian of Western Canada. Published by the Author, Calgary, 12p.Google Scholar
Defrance, J. M. L. 1825 –1827. (Stringocephalus), p. 511. Inde Blainville, H. M. D.(ed.), Manuel de Malacologie et de Conchyliologie. Levrault, Paris-Strasbourg, 647 p.Google Scholar
Ficner, F. and Havlíček, V. 1975. Two thick shelled brachiopods from the Middle Devonian of Moravia. Vestnik Ustredni ustavu Geologickeho, 50:363363.Google Scholar
Frost, S. H. and Langenheim, R. L. Jr. 1966. Paleontology of the Stringocephalus Biostrome, Piute Formation (Middle Devonian), Arrow Canyon Range, Clark County, Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 40:911930.Google Scholar
Gobbett, D. 1966. The brachiopod genus Stringocephalus from Malaya. Journal of Paleontology, 40:13451348.Google Scholar
Halamski, A. T. and Segit, T. 2006. A transistional stringocephalid from the Holy Cross Mountains, Poland, and its evolutionary and stratigraphic significance. Acta Geologica Polonica, 56:171176.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1891. Preliminary notice of Newberria, a new genus of brachiopods, with remarks on its relations to Rensselaeria and Amphigenia. New York State Geologist, Annual Report, 10:9198.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 1969. Some North American rensselandiid brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology, 43:829837.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 1973. Some North American rensselandiid brachiopods, Pt. 2. Journal of Paleontology, 47:11021107.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 1974. Middle Devonian Givetian brachiopods from the Leiorhynchus castanea Zone of Nevada. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 8:4996.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 1975. Asian stringocephaloid brachiopod genera Omolonia and Paracrothyris in the Middle Devonian of western North America. Journal of Paleontology, 49:979983.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Boucot, A. J., and Gronberg, E. C. 1968. A new genus of stringocephaloid brachiopod from the Middle Devonian of Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 42:406414.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Klapper, G., and Trojan, W. R. 1980a. Brachiopod and conodont successions in the Devonian of the northern Antelope Range, central Nevada. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 14:77116.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Klapper, G., and Trojan, W. R. 1980b. Upper range of Stringocephalus (Devonian Brachiopoda). Newsletter on Stratigraphy, 8:232235.Google Scholar
Khodalevich, A. N. 1975. Novyi rod Kumbella (Brachiopoda) iz zhivetskikh otlozhenii Urala. Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 1975:137141. (In Russian)Google Scholar
King, W. 1850. A monograph of the Permian fossils of England. Palaeontological Society Monograph 3, 258p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirk, E. 1927. New American occurrences of Stringocephalus. American Journal of Science, Series 5, 13:219222.Google Scholar
Lee, D. E. 2006. Stringocephaloidea, p. 19942018. InKaesler, R. L.(ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Vol. 5, Pt. H, Brachiopoda Revised: Rhynchonelliformea (part). Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Boulder, Colorado, and Lawrence, Kansas.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, W. S., Pedder, A. E. H., and Uyeno, T. T. 1975. A Middle Devonian sandstone unit, Grandview Hills area, District of Mackenzie. Geological Survey of Canada Paper 75-1, Pt. A, p. 547552.Google Scholar
Ni, S. and Yang, D. L. 1977. Brachiopoda, p. 303470. InPaleontological Atlas of Central-South China, Pt. 2, Late Paleozoic Part. Geologic Press, Beijing. (In Chinese)Google Scholar
Nikolaev, A. A. and Rzhonsnitskaya, M. A. 1968. Devonian of Northeastern USSR, p. 483502. InOswald, D. H.(ed.), International Symposium on the Devonian system, Calgary, 1967, Vol. 1. Alberta Society of Petrolium Geologists, Calgary.Google Scholar
Perry, D. G., Klapper, G., and Lenz, A. C. 1974. Age of the Ogilvie Formation (Devonian), northern Yukon: based primarily on the occurrences of brachiopods and conodonts. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 11:10551097.Google Scholar
Racki, G. 1993. Brachiopod assemblages in the Devonian Kowala Formation of the Holy Cross Mountains. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 37:297357.Google Scholar
Schemm-Gregory, M. and Jansen, U. 2008. First report of the Middle Devonian stringocephalid genus Paracrothyris (Brachiopoda) from North Africa. Bulletin of Geosciences, 83:169173.Google Scholar
Schemm-Gregory, M. and Jansen, U. 2009. New implications on the upper Givetian “Stringocephalus Bed” in central Nevada (Brachiopoda, Middle Devonian), p. 157165. InOver, D. J.(ed.), Studies in Devonian Stratigraphy: Proceedings of the 2007 International Meeting of the Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy and IGCP 499. Palaeontographica Americana, 63.Google Scholar
Smirnov, A. H. 1985. Novye zhivetskie stringotsefalidy (brakhiopody) yuzhnogo Tian'-Shanya. Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 1985 (4):3034. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Struve, W. 1965. Über Geranocephalus (Stringomimus) n. sg. und Verwandte. Senckenbergiana Lethaia, 46:459472.Google Scholar
Struve, W. 1982. Schaltier-Faunen aus dem Devon des Schwarzbach-Tales bei Ratingen, Rheinland. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 63:183283.Google Scholar
Struve, W. 1992. Neues zur Stratigraphie und Fauna des rhenotypen Mittel-Devon. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 71:503624.Google Scholar
Sun, Y. L. and Bai, S. L. 1995. Lower range of Stringocephalus. Newsletter on Stratigraphy, 32:7377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sun, Y. L. and Boucot, A. J. 1999. Ontogeny of Stringocephalus gubiensis and the origin of Stringocephalus. Journal of Paleontology, 73:860871.Google Scholar
Thanh, T. D. and Khuc, V. 2006. Stratigraphic units of Vietnam, (edited). Vietnam National University Publishing House, Hanoi, 526p.Google Scholar
Tyazheva, A. 1962. Brakhiopody srednedevonskikh otlozhenii zapadnykh i tzentralnykh raionov zapadnogo sklona Yuzhnogo Urala, p. 5165. InTyazheva, A. P., Rozhdestvenskaya, A. A., and Chibrikova, E.V.(eds.)Brakhiopody, ostrakody i spory srednego i verkhnego devona Bashkirii. Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk, Moskva. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Waagen, W. H. 1883. Salt Range Fossils, Pt. I, Productus-Limestone Fossils, p. 391496. Geological Survey India, Memoirs, Palaeontologia Indica, Series 13, 4 (2).Google Scholar
Wang, Y., Boucot, A. J., Rong, J. Y., and Yang, X. C. 1987. Community Paleoecology as a Geologic Tool: The Chinese Ashgillian-Eifelian (latest Ordovician through early Middle Devonian) as an example. Geological Society of America Special Paper 211, 100p.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., Yu, C. M., and Wu, Q. 1974. Advances in the Devonian biostratigraphy of South China. Memoirs of Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Academia Sinica 6, 71p. (In Chinese)Google Scholar
Xian, S. Y. 1998. The silicified brachiopod fossils from the base of the Mintang Formation (Middle Devonian) in Liujing, Guangxi. Yanxiang Gudili (=Sedimentary Facies and Palaeogeography), 18 (5):2856. (In Chinese)Google Scholar
Xian, S. Y. and Jiang, Z. L. 1978. Brachiopoda, p. 251337. InPaleontological Atlas of Southwestern China, Guizhou (Kweichow) Province (Cambrian-Devonian), Vol. 1. Geological Publishing House. Beijing. (In Chinese)Google Scholar
Yang, D. L. 1983. Late Middle Devonian terebratulids of Xiangzhou, Guangxi. Bulletin of the Yichang Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, 7:2740. (In Chinese)Google Scholar