Search results for "RHAETIAN"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Biotic recovery after the end-Triassic extinction event: Evidence from marine bivalves of the Neuquén Basin, Argentina

2017

We analyze the Late Triassic extinction and Early Jurassic recovery of bivalve faunas within marine environments in the Atuel River area of the Neuquén Basin, Argentina. Data were collected from a hundred samples with invertebrates in a well-exposed uppermost Triassic to lower Jurassic section in the Neuquén Basin (southern Mendoza Province, Argentina) and allow a high-resolution reconstruction of the local diversity dynamics. The nearly continuous presence of marine stenohaline major taxa such as cnidarians, rhynchonelliform brachiopods, echinoderms and cephalopods indicates normal salinity throughout. All bivalve species were identified, and each occurrence was recorded in meters above th…

RhaetianCnidariaTriassic/Jurassic crisis010506 paleontologyTRIASSIC/JURASSIC CRISISStructural basin010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesCiencias de la Tierra y relacionadas con el Medio AmbienteMol·luscosSINEMURIANSOUTH AMERICACiencias NaturalesHETTANGIANSinemuriandiversity dynamicsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMARINE BENTHONIC DIVERSITY0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesInvertebrateHettangianExtinction eventExtinctionbiologyVida (Biologia)EcologyPaleontologySouth AmericaBivalviabiology.organism_classificationDIVERSITY DYNAMICSFauna marinaRHAETIANmarine benthonic diversityMeteorología y Ciencias AtmosféricasGeologyCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS
researchProduct

Hypercalcified sponges from the Upper Triassic (Norian-Rhaetian) reefs of Sicily

2015

The sponge-dominated Upper Triassic (Norian-Rhaetian) reefs of Sicily yielded the most abundant hypercalcified sponge taxa compared with other time equivalent reefs in the world. Chambered sponges (“Sphinctozoa”) are the most abundant group among the hypercalcified sponges. All together almost 150 species of hypercalcified sponges (including sphinctozoans, inozoans, chaetetids, disjectoporids and spongiomorphids) were recognized in the Norian-Rhaetian reefs occurring in different localities in Sicily. 93 species (30 new, 28 as sp. indet.) of sphinctozoans, belonging to 18 families (2 new: Polytubithalamiidae, Globucatenulaiidae) and 35 genera (4 new: Globucatenula, Polytubithalamia, Rostros…

Sponges Sphinctozoa Inozoa Chaetetids Disjectoporids Spongiomorphids Triassic Norian-Rhaetian Cozzo di Lupo Palermo Mountains Madonie Mountains Sicily.Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologia
researchProduct