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A Vendian–Cambrian boundary succession from the northwestern margin of the Siberian Platform: stratigraphy, palaeontology, chemostratigraphy and correlation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 1998

JULIE K. BARTLEY
Affiliation:
Botanical Museum, Harvard University, 26 Oxford St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA Present address – Geology Department, State University of West Georgia, Carrollton, GA 30118, USA; jbartley@westga.edu
MICHAEL POPE
Affiliation:
Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
ANDREW H. KNOLL
Affiliation:
Botanical Museum, Harvard University, 26 Oxford St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
MIKHAIL A. SEMIKHATOV
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 109017, Russian Federation
PETER YU. PETROV
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 109017, Russian Federation

Abstract

Siberia contains several key reference sections for studies of biological and environmental evolution across the Proterozoic–Phanerozoic transition. The Platonovskaya Formation, exposed in the Turukhansk region of western Siberia, is an uppermost Proterozoic to Cambrian succession whose trace and body fossils place broad limits on the age of deposition, but do not permit detailed correlation with boundary successions elsewhere. In contrast, a striking negative carbon isotopic excursion in the lower part of the Platonovskaya Formation permits precise chemostratigraphic correlation with uppermost Yudomian successions in Siberia, and possibly worldwide. In addition to providing a tool for correlation, the isotopic excursion preserved in the Platonovskaya and contemporaneous successions documents a major biogeochemical event, likely involving the world ocean. The excursion coincides with the palaeontological breakpoint between Ediacaran- and Cambrian-style assemblages, suggesting a role for biogeochemical change in evolutionary events near the Proterozoic–Cambrian boundary.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

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