Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T22:46:22.631Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Paleoecological significance of a turritelline gastropod-dominated assemblage in the Cretaceous of South Carolina

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Warren D. Allmon
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of South Florida, Tampa 33620-5200
James L. Knight
Affiliation:
South Carolina State Museum, Columbia 29202-3107

Abstract

Blocks of sandy limestone dredged from the bottom of a quarry in eastern Lee County, South Carolina, contain a turritelline gastropod-dominated macrofossil assemblage, including age-diagnostic Maastrichtian ammonites. Although turritelline-dominated assemblages are common in other areas and ages, this is the first report of such an assemblage of any age from South Carolina and the first Cretaceous turritelline-dominated assemblage from eastern North America. Whereas the matrix of the turritelline layer is calcareous, the carbonate is present only as cement and the fossil assemblage did not form in a typically carbonate-dominated environment. This fact agrees with the observed absence of “turritella limestones” in the Cretaceous. Such limestones are common in the Paleogene but absent in the Neogene. This pattern is consistent with the hypothesis that turritellines as a group have become less thermophilic since the Cretaceous.

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

Allmon, W. D. 1988. Ecology of Recent turritelline gastropods (Prosobranchia, Turritellidae): current knowledge and paleontological implications. Palaios, 3:259284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allmon, W. D. 1992. Role of temperature and nutrients in extinction of turritelline gastropods, Cenozoic of the northwestern Atlantic and northeastern Pacific. Palaeogeography, Palaeoecology, Palaeoclimatology, 92:4154.Google Scholar
Allmon, W. D., and Dockery, D. T. 1992. A turritella bed in the Byram Formation (Oligocene) of Mississippi. Mississippi Geology, 13(2):2935.Google Scholar
Barron, E. J. 1983. A warm, equable Cretaceous: the nature of the problem. Earth Science Reviews, 19:305338.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, R. G. 1984. Stratigraphy and depositional environments of the Brightseat and Aquia Formations, Maryland and Virginia, p. 78111. In Fredericksen, N. O. and Kraft, K. (eds.), Cretaceous and Tertiary Stratigraphy, Paleontology and Structure, Southwestern Maryland and Northeastern Virginia. American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists Field Trip Guidebook.Google Scholar
Bralower, T. J., and Thierstein, H. R. 1984. Low productivity and slow deep-water circulation in mid-Cretaceous oceans. Geology, 12:614618.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooley, S. A. 1985. Depositional environments of the Lower and Middle Temblor Formation of Reef Ridge, Fresno and Kings Counties, California, p. 3552. In Graham, S. A. (ed.), Geology of the Temblor Formation, Western San Joaquin Basin, California. Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Pacific Section, Guidebook, Volume 44.Google Scholar
DuBar, J. R. 1958. Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Late Neogene strata of the Caloosahatchee River area of southern Florida. Florida Geological Survey Bulletin 40, 267 p.Google Scholar
Fischer, A. G., and Arthur, M. 1977. Secular trends in the pelagic realm, p. 1950. In Cook, H. E. and Enos, P. (eds.), Deep Water Carbonate Environments. Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Special Publication 25.Google Scholar
Gardner, J. A. 1935. The Midway Group of Texas. University of Texas Bulletin 3301, 403 p.Google Scholar
Hobday, D. K., and Morton, R. A. 1984. Lower Cretaceous shelf storm deposits, northeast Texas, p. 205213. In Tilman, R. W. and Siemers, C. T. (eds.), Siliciclastic Shelf Sediments. Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Special Publication 34.Google Scholar
Jablonski, D. 1979. Paleoecology, paleobiogeography, and evolutionary patterns of Late Cretaceous Gulf and Atlantic coastal plain mollusks. Unpubl. Ph.D. thesis, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 604 p.Google Scholar
Jones, D. S., and Allmon, W. D. 1991. Paleobiology and paleoecology of modern and Neogene turritelline gastropods from stable isotope profiles of shell carbonate. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, 23(5):162.Google Scholar
Kauffman, E. G., and Johnson, C. C. 1988. The morphological and ecological evolution of Middle and Upper Cretaceous reef-building rudistids. Palaios, 3:194216.Google Scholar
LaMoreaux, P. E., and Toulmin, L. D. 1959. Geology and groundwater resources of Wilcox County, Alabama. Alabama Geological Survey County Report, 4:1280.Google Scholar
Lawrence, D. R., and Hall, J. P. 1987. The Upper Cretaceous Peedee–Black Creek Formational contact at Burches Ferry, Florence County, South Carolina. South Carolina Geology, 31:5966.Google Scholar
Lowe, E. N. 1933. The Eocene formations below Jackson. Mississippi Geological Survey Bulletin 25, 125 p.Google Scholar
Lowenstam, H. A., and Epstein, S. 1954. Paleotemperatures of the post-Aptian Cretaceous as determined by the oxygen isotope method. Journal of Geology, 62:207250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansfield, W. C. 1937. Mollusks of the Tampa and Suwannee Limestones of Florida. Florida Geological Survey Bulletin 15, 334 p.Google Scholar
Mansfield, W. C. 1940. Mollusks of the Chickasawhay Marl. Journal of Paleontology, 4:171226.Google Scholar
Marwick, J. 1957. Generic revision of the Turritellidae. Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London, 32:144166.Google Scholar
McCartan, L., Blackwelder, B. W., and Lemon, E. M. Jr. 1985. Stratigraphic section through the St. Mary's Formation, Miocene, at Little Cove Point, Maryland. Southeastern Geology, 25:123139.Google Scholar
Merriam, C. W. 1941. Fossil turritellas from the Pacific Coast region of North America. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences Bulletin, 26:1214.Google Scholar
Nemec, W. 1988. The shape of the rose. Sedimentary Geology, 59:149152.Google Scholar
Owens, J. P., Sohl, N. F., and Minard, J. P. 1977. A field guide to Cretaceous and lower Tertiary beds of the Raritan and Salisbury Embayments, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland. Annual AAPG/SEPM Convention, Washington, D.C., 113 p.Google Scholar
Rossbach, T. J., and Carter, J. G. 1991. Molluscan biostratigraphy of the lower River Bend Formation at the Martin Marietta Quarry, New Bern, North Carolina. Journal of Paleontology, 65:80118.Google Scholar
Saul, L. R. 1983. Turritella zonation across the Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary, California. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, 125, 165 p.Google Scholar
Savin, S. M. 1977. The history of the earth's surface temperature during the past 100 million years. Annual Reviews of Earth and Planetary Science, 5:319355.Google Scholar
Say, T. 1820. Observations on some species of zoophytes, shells, etc., principally fossil. American Journal of Science, Series 1, 2:3445.Google Scholar
Scott, R. W. 1970. Paleoecology and paleontology of the Lower Cretaceous Kiowa Formation, Kansas. University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions, Article 52, 94 p.Google Scholar
Scott, R. W. 1974. Bay and shoreface benthic communities in the Lower Cretaceous. Lethaia, 7:315330.Google Scholar
Shimer, H. W., and Shrock, R. R. 1944. Index Fossils of North America. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 837 p.Google Scholar
Smith, E. A., Johnson, L. C., and Langdon, D. W. Jr. 1894. Report on the geology of the coastal plain of Alabama. Geological Survey of Alabama, Montgomery, 759 p.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F. 1960. Archeogastropoda, Mesogastropoda and stratigraphy of the Ripley, Owl Creek, and Prairie Bluff Formations. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 331-A, 151 p.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F. 1967. Upper Cretaceous gastropod assemblages of the Western Interior of the United States, p. 137. In Kauffman, E. G. and Kent, H. C. (eds.), A Symposium on Paleoenvironments of the Cretaceous Seaway in the Western Interior. Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F. 1977. Utility of gastropods in biostratigraphy, p. 519539. In Kauffman, E. G. and Hazel, J. E. (eds.), Concepts and Methods of Biostratigraphy. Dowden, Hutchinson and Ross, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F., and Koch, C. F. 1983. Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Mollusca from the Haustator bilira zone in the east Gulf Coastal Plain. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 83-451, 239 p.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F., and Koch, C. F. 1984. Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Mollusca from the Haustator bilira zone in the Atlantic Coastal Plain, with further data for the East Gulf. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 87-194, 172 p.Google Scholar
Sohl, N. F., and Owens, J. P. 1991. Cretaceous stratigraphy of the Carolina coastal plain, p. 191220. In Horton, J. W. Jr., and Zullo, V. A. (eds.), The Geology of the Carolinas. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Spizuco, M. P., and Allmon, W. D. 1992. Taphonomy and paleoenvironment of turritelline gastropod-dominated beds, Pliocene of Florida. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, 24(2):67.Google Scholar
Stephenson, L. W. 1914. Cretaceous deposits of the eastern Gulf region and species of Exogyra from the eastern Gulf region and the Carolinas. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 81, 77 p.Google Scholar
Stephenson, L. W. 1923. Cretaceous formations of North Carolina. North Carolina Geologic and Economic Survey, Volume 5, 604 p.Google Scholar
Stephenson, L. W. 1941. The larger invertebrate fossils of the Navarro Group of Texas. University of Texas Bulletin 4101, 641 p.Google Scholar
Swift, D. J. P., and Heron, S. D. Jr. 1969. Stratigraphy of the Carolina Cretaceous. Southeastern Geology, 10:201246.Google Scholar
Thorson, G. 1957. Bottom communities, p. 461534. In Hedgpeth, J. W. (ed.), Treatise on Marine Ecology and Paleoecology, Volume 1, Ecology. Geological Society of America, Memoir 67.Google Scholar
Toulmin, L. D. 1977. Stratigraphic distribution of Paleocene and Eocene fossils in the eastern Gulf Coast region. Alabama Geological Survey, Monograph 13, 602 p.Google Scholar
Tuomey, M. 1854. Description of some new fossils from the Cretaceous rocks of the southern states. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 7:167172.Google Scholar
Van Nieuwenhuise, D. S., and Kanes, W. H. 1976. Lithology and ostracode assemblages of the Peedee Formation at Burches Ferry, South Carolina. South Carolina Geologic Notes, 20:7487.Google Scholar
Wilson, J. L. 1975. Carbonate Facies in Geologic History. Springer-Verlag, New York, 471 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woollen, I. D. 1978. Structural framework, lithostratigraphy, and depositional environments of Upper Cretaceous sediments of eastern South Carolina. Unpubl. Ph.D. thesis, University of South Carolina, Columbia, 276 p.Google Scholar