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- Title
Radiolarians from the upper Guadalupian (Middle Permian) Reef Trail Member of the Bell Canyon Formation, West Texas and their biostratigraphic implications.
- Authors
Maldonado, Amy L.; Noble, Paula J.
- Abstract
Moderately well-preserved radiolarians are described from two measured sections of the Reef Trail Member of the Bell Canyon Formation (Middle Permian),exposed in the Patterson Hills, Guadalupe Mountains National Park, West Texas. The Reet Trail Member is the youngest member of a series of basinal marine carbonates deposited in the Delaware basin prior to the deposition of the Castile Formation evaporites, and represents the uppermost Guadalupian (upper Capitanian). The Guadalupian-Lopingian boundary is presumed to occur at or just above the top of the Reef Trail-Castile contact because of the presence of C. postbitteri hongsfuiensis ~ 2m below the top of the Reet Trail Member in sections in the Patterson Hills. A total of 30 genera containing 5 1 species were recovered from the Reef Trail Member, belonging to the orders Albaillellaria. Latentifistularia, Spumellaria, and Entactinaria. The following new taxa are described: Raphidociclicus scutum, Camptoalatas volaticus, Pseudoalbaillella delawarensis, Astroentactinia porosa, Stigmo-sphaerostylm favusa, Polyedroentactinia quadrats, Praedqflandrella firmata, P. protata, Copicyntra spinosa, Copicyntra irregidata, and Paracopicyntra punteta and Copicyntrcides natarovi The following taxa are emended: Raciditor scalae(Caridroii and DeWever 1986). and Klaengspongus Sashida 2000b. Near the top of the Reef Trail Member, there are marked fluctuations in the relative abundances of albaillellarian and latentifistularian species. Fluctuations are possibly controlled by paleoenvironmental changes associated with the onset of the end-Guadalupian extinction event. Biostratigraphically, the fauna most closely correlates with the widely recognized F. bipartitus - F. charveti Zone sensu Caridroit, which we now consider to be uppermost Guadalupian, not Lopingian, and to the Guadalupian F. charveti Zone of Sun and Xia 2006 from oceanic facies in China. Both older and younger Nustratigraphic markers also occur in the Reef Trail fauna, including Pseudoalbaillella longtanensis and A. yamakitai, requiring a reevaluation of the reliability of these albaillellarian taxa in biostratigraphy.
- Subjects
GUADALUPE Mountains National Park (Tex.); WEST Texas; TEXAS; MARINE protozoa; MICROPALEONTOLOGY; BIOSTRATIGRAPHY; NATIONAL parks &; reserves; GEOLOGICAL basins
- Publication
Micropaleontology, 2010, Vol 56, Issue 1/2, p69
- ISSN
0026-2803
- Publication type
Article