Publication: Cambrian stratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the Flinders Ranges and the north coast of Kangaroo Island, South Australia
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Date
2012
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Geological Society of India
Abstract
The lower Cambrian sediments of the Flinders Ranges, South Australia can be divided into three sequence sets. They rest unconformably on the Ediacaran succession. Sequence set ϵ1 comprises lower clastic units overlain by a carbonate dominated marine succession that shows marked lateral and vertical facies changes. Sequence sets ϵ2 and ϵ3 together comprise a largely clastic dominated succession of marginal marine to non-marine sediments with subordinate shallow marine carbonates. Sequence set ϵ1 is richly fossiliferous at some levels with biostratigraphy established for trilobites, archaeocyaths, brachiopods, small shelly fossils, acritarchs and molluscs. The Emu Bay Shale Lagerstätte (Cambrian Series 2) from the north coast of Kangaroo Island occurs within a clastic-rich shelf succession dominated by conglomerate and sandstone. The fossil content is dominated by trilobites in terms of relative abundance and currently over 50 taxa are known including, Anomalocaris, the bivalved arthropods 'Isoxys' and 'Tuzoia', the nektaspids 'Emucaris' and 'Kangacaris', the megacheiran 'Oestokerkus' amongst a variety of other arthropods. Other common taxa include palaeoscolecid worms, 'Myoscolex', sponges, hyoliths, brachiopods, a vetulicolian and several other enigmatic forms. The oldest known well preserved complex arthropod eyes occur in this biota.
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Episodes, 35(1), p. 247-255