15 research outputs found
Phylogeny of Middle-Late Ordovician lituitid cephalopods based on cladistic analysis
Phylogenetic studies are rare in early Palaeozoic cephalopods. Here, we present the first cladistic analysis of the order Lituitida based on published, as well as some new, material. Three clades are recovered within the ingroup of lituitids, Sinoceras, Ancistroceras and Lituites; the former two groups correspond to the family Sinoceratidae, and the latter one to the Lituitidae. The topology shows that the Sinoceratidae represents the basal branch, while the Lituitidae represents a monophyletic, derived clade. Furthermore, we describe new material of four species (three of which are newly defined) in four genera of the order Lituitida from the well-exposed, Middle to Upper Ordovician of Hubei (South China). The described species include Lituites evolutus Fang, Chen & Zhang, Sinoceras complexum Fang sp. nov., Tyrioceras longicameratum Fang sp. nov. and Rhynchorthoceras yizanense Fang sp. nov. Tyrioceras longicameratum from South China is the first reported occurrence of Tyrioceras in China, which has significant palaeogeographical implications.Peer reviewe
Ordovician conodonts from the Ban Tha Kradan area, Western Thailand
During the Ordovician period, Western Thailand was part of the Sibumasu Block. Most studies on Ordovician conodonts in this region have focused on the Thong Pha Phum area, where the Triangulodus larapintinensis Range Zone of Floian and Aurilobodus leptosomatus Range Zone of Darriwilian have been documented.
In this study, conodont samples were collected from two sections in the Ban Tha Kradan area of Western Thailand: from the Wat Mong Krathae (WMK) and Nautiloid Site Geosite (NSG) sections. In total 24 conodont samples were collected from the WMK section, all from the Tha Manao Formation characterized here by laminated and cross-bedded thin- to medium-bedded limestones. From the NSG section only three conodont samples were processed, one of them from the Tha Manao Formation and two from the revised Pa Kae Formation, which consists of thin- to medium-bedded laminated limestones and stylolitic limestones.
Eleven Ordovician conodont species representing nine genera are documented and illustrated from the Ban Tha Kradan area for the first time. The species identified are Baltoniodus cf. alobatus (Bergström), Cornuodus longibasis (Lindström), Drepanoistodus pitjanti (Cooper), Drepanoistodus cf. pitjanti sensu (Zhen et al. 2021), Erraticodon patu (Cooper), Protopanderodus nogamii (Lee), Plectodina sp., Scabbardella altipes (Henningsmoen), Scolopodus striatus (Pander), Triangulodus larapintinensis (Crespin), and Triangulodus sp. In the WMK section, the Scolopodus striatus Assemblage Zone can be recognized in the Tha Manao Formation. Roughly, it corresponds to the eponymous assemblage zone in the northwestern peninsular Malaysia.
Furthermore, the upper part of the Tha Manao Formation in the NSG section as identified earlier has been revised and assigned to the Pa Kae Formation, based on the lithostratigraphic features. Considering the occurrences of cephalopod Sinoceras chinense (Foord) and conodont Baltoniodus cf. alobatus, as well as on the recognition of the Guttenberg Carbon Isotope Excursion (GICE) in the lowermost part of the formation, the revised Pa Kae Formation in Western Thailand has a similar temporal range as that of the Pa Kae Formation in the southern peninsular Thailand. Thus, the Tha Manao Formation in Western Thailand is assigned to the upper Floian to Darriwilian, and the conformably overlying Pa Kae Formation to the Sandbianâlower Katian
The evidence of Palaeotropics and the Gondwana-derived terrane: an alternative scenario of the Palaeotethys divide in SE Asia
Along the Northern part of the West Thailand Region (NWTR), a long-lasting belt of radiolarian cherts, separates Pennsylvanian to Permian palaeotropical limestones of the Inthanon Zone to the east from Permian limestones in the west containing a temperate marine fauna in the Roadian and a biogeographically distinctive fusulinid fauna in the Wordian. Highly abundant but low diversity of Kungurian radiolarians in silicified shales as well as temperate faunas in limestones from the south and the west of Thailand, respectively support constrains in the temperate environment during the period of deglaciation in peri-Gondawana. The well-known underlying diamictite and overlying temperate sediments with the succeeding fully tropical limestone sequences support a gradational palaeoclimate transition. Devonian faunas found in condensed sequences of the NWTR were deposited in a deep platform or ramp environment. A lack of basalts in the NWTR does not suggest oceanic environments for any Palaeozoic sequence within the NWTR and a paucity of basalts in the northwestern part of the Inthanon Zone also does not provide good evidence of an oceanic realm. Indeed, ‘continental margin’ Carboniferous sandstones appear to underlie the palaeotropical limestones and their plant fossils and their benthonic faunas do not suggest oceanic conditions in the northwestern Inthanon Zone. We, therefore, suggest that an autochthonous or para-autochthonous Inthanon Zone origin for these Carboniferous sandstones is more likely than deposition within a subducting Palaeotethyan Ocean. A strong contrast between the ‘temperate’ Permian limestones of the NWTR and the tropical limestones of the Inthanon Zone further emphasises the Mae Yuam/Mae Sariang Fault Zone (MYMS FZ) as a reactivated oceanic boundary between Gondwana and ‘Cathaysia’ and is supported by the oceanic lithosphere origin of the detrital Cr spinels in the Triassic foreland basin siliciclastics of the NWTR. The limestones of the Inthanon Zone range from Visean to Permian and possibly Triassic and were deposited in shallow, tropical seas for over 90 million years. This longevity is either not possible or highly unlikely for shallow marine carbonates on volcanic seamounts supported on subducting (and therefore cooling and sinking) ocean crust (Huppert et al., 2020) but is possible on isolated carbonate platforms on continental crust separated by narrow basins with limited volcanism. Carboniferous sandstones and Devonian-Permian radiolarian cherts from the Inthanon Zone are continental marginal and are neither pelagic nor oceanic and are interpreted as deposited in extensional, deeper basins between the isolated carbonate platforms. We suggest an alternative hypothesis to the overthrust/ allochthon model where the NWTR is the eastern platform margin of the Sibumasu Terrane from the Devonian through to the Triassic and separated from the Inthanon Terrane by an ocean in the position of the MYMS FZ. It is suggested that Inthanon rifted from Gondwana in the Early Devonian and the NWTR, as part of the Sibumasu Terrane, rifted off in the early Permian. As the Inthanon Terrane ribbon continent drifted northwards the continental crust thinned and extended and small rift basins allowed basalts to be extruded associated with deep-water, continental margin, hemipelagic, non-hydrothermal radiolarian oozes. Isolated carbonate platforms were established on Carboniferous sandstone bases and were separated by deep-water but non-pelagic extensional basins. Turbidites originating on the carbonate highs supplied carbonates clasts containing Devonian through Permian conodonts, to the adjacent basins (Udchachon et al., 2018). We provisionally suggest that the Sukhothai Terrane rifted with Inthanon with its older siliciclastic successions of the Siluro-Devonian (?) Khao Kieo Formation and the unconformably overlying Carboniferous (Dan Lan Hoi Group) (Bunopas, 1982; Ueno & Charoentitirat, 2011) supplying siliciclastic and volcaniclastic debris to the Inthanon Zone. This hypothesis is broadly in accord with Dew et al.’s (2018) ‘explanation A’ for the crustal geochemistry of the northern Thailand terranes. In the early Permian (Kungurian) Sibumasu was probably in cool to temperate seas but by the middle Permian, the NWTR had rifted from Gondwana and was in the southern hemisphere tropics (13° ±2° S, Zhao et al., 2020). Terrane collision occurred during the Triassic (Ishida et al., 2006; Mitchell et al., 2012; Cai et al., 2017; Hara et al., 2021) with the establishment of a thrust front along the Mae Sariang Thrust Zone and the deposition of the mainly siliciclastic Mae Sariang Group on the NWTR within a foreland basin
Phylogeny of Middle–Late Ordovician lituitid cephalopods based on cladistic analysis
Phylogenetic studies are rare in early Palaeozoic cephalopods. Here, we present the first cladistic analysis of the order Lituitida based on published, as well as some new, material. Three clades are recovered within the ingroup of lituitids, Sinoceras, Ancistroceras and Lituites; the former two groups correspond to the family Sinoceratidae, and the latter one to the Lituitidae. The topology shows that the Sinoceratidae represents the basal branch, while the Lituitidae represents a monophyletic, derived clade. Furthermore, we describe new material of four species (three of which are newly defined) in four genera of the order Lituitida from the well-exposed, Middle to Upper Ordovician of Hubei (South China). The described species include Lituites evolutus Fang, Chen & Zhang, Sinoceras complexum Fang sp. nov., Tyrioceras longicameratum Fang sp. nov. and Rhynchorthoceras yizanense Fang sp. nov. Tyrioceras longicameratum from South China is the first reported occurrence of Tyrioceras in China, which has significant palaeogeographical implications