Paleomagnetic reexamination of the Lower Ordovician Wabana and Bell Island Groups of the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland

1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 1055-1069 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Buchan ◽  
J. P. Hodych

The Wabana and Bell Island Groups of the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland contain oolitic hematite beds of Early Ordovician age, dipping ~11° north-northwest. Twenty-one oolitic hematite samples from nine sites were thermally demagnetized in 10 or 11 steps to 660 or 680 °C. At 450 °C, 15 samples from six sites define a stable magnetization direction (D = 21.2°, I = −12.5°, k = 137, α95 = 5.7°) with respect to bedding. The remaining six samples failed to attain the stable end-point, five of them because of growth of much "magnetite," which probably resulted from breakdown of siderite during thermal demagnetization.The paleopole for the Wabana – Bell Island Groups lies at 33°N 102°E (dm = 5.8°, dp = 3.0°). It is compared with other early Paleozoic paleopoles from cratonic North America and the Avalon zone, and its significance for the Iapetus Ocean is discussed.

1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 2046-2057 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Henry Williams ◽  
W. Douglas Boyce ◽  
Stephen P. Colman-Sadd

A newly discovered fossiliferous horizon within sediments belonging to the Coy Pond Complex of the Exploits Subzone in central Newfoundland yields the graptolite Undulograptus austrodentatus s.l. and cyclopygid trilobite Cyclopyge grandis brevirhachis. This late Arenig faunule constrains the upper age limit of the ophiolite complex and is the first record of an Early Ordovician cyclopygid trilobite in North America. This is consistent with a paleogeographic affinity for south-central Newfoundland with the northern oceanic margin of Avalonia in a peri-Gondwanan position during the Early Ordovician and contrasts with coeval shelly and graptolitic faunas from the Notre Dame Subzone of central Newfoundland, which show marked Laurentian affinities. The Exploits Subzone is generally considered equivalent to the region of Scotland lying south of the Southern Upland Fault. The Newfoundland discovery, which is supported by faunal data from elsewhere in Newfoundland and in Ireland, suggests that the region around the Southern Upland Fault, rather than the Solway Firth, represents the location of the "Iapetus suture" in Britain in Lower Ordovician rocks.


1994 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 324-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Sprinkle ◽  
Gregory P. Wahlman

Four specimens of blastozoan and crinozoan echinoderms are described from the Lower Ordovician El Paso Group in the southern Franklin Mountains just north of El Paso, west Texas.Cuniculocystis flowerin. gen. and sp., based on two partial specimens, appears to be a typical rhombiferan in most of its morphologic features except that it lacks pectinirhombs and instead has covered epispires (otherwise known only from Middle Ordovician eocrinoids) opening on most of the thecal plate sutures. The covered epispires inCuniculocystisindicate that some early rhombiferans had alternate respiratory structures and had not yet standardized on pectinirhombs, a feature previously used as diagnostic for the class Rhombifera.Bockia?elpasoensisn. sp. is a new eocrinoid based on one poorly preserved specimen that has a small ellipsoidal theca and unbranched brachioles attached to a flat-topped spoutlike summit. It is the earliest known questionable representative of this genus and the only one that has been described from North America.Elpasocrinus radiatusn. gen. and sp. is an early cladid inadunate crinoid based on a single well-preserved calyx. It fits into a lineage of early cladids leading to the dendrocrinids and toCarabocrinus.Several additional separate plates, stem segments, and a holdfast of these and other echinoderms are also described.


1986 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 845-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. T. Harper

The small, distinctive, glyptorthinine brachiopod Ptychopleurella Schuchert and Cooper is widely distributed in rocks of early Ordovician to late Silurian age. Several species are known from the Barr and Ardmillan successions (middle-upper Ordovician) of the Girvan district, S.W. Scotland, one of which, ‘Orthis Lapworthi’ Davidson, has not been described in modern terms as there has been some confusion concerning its true identity. Recognition of this species of Ptychopleurella permits comparison with congeners elsewhere, strengthens the correlation of this part of the Girvan Succession with the middle Ordovician of North America, and provides a more complete record of this genus in the slope sedimentary facies of the northwestern margin of the Iapetus Ocean.


1987 ◽  
Vol 124 (5) ◽  
pp. 405-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald H. W. Hutton

AbstractEvidence is presented that many of the major strike faults in the British and Irish Caledonides were active as sinistral strike-slip zones in the end-Silurian to pre-mid-Devonian period. Some, such as the Highland Boundary Fault, moved in this way at an earlier stage in the Ordovician. These data allow the Caledonian rocks lying between the Laurentian miogeocline (whose basement is represented by the Lewisian, Moine and possibly the Dalradian) and the Gondwanaland miogeocline (Midland Platform and Welsh Basin) to be re-analysed as a group of disorganized terranes which originated to the southwest in North America and southwest Europe/Africa prior to the Silurian. The Highland Border Terrane and Northern Belt Terrane are interpreted as duplicated pieces of a mid-Ordovician sequence which was a back are to northwest subduction. The Midland Valley Terrane is interpreted as a slice of Laurentian foreland onto which ophiolites were obducted in the lower Ordovician but which became the basement of a continental margin arc to northwest subduction in the mid-Ordovician. The Cockburnland Terrane is inferred to be part of the same arc repeated and then broken up and dispersed by continuing strike slip. The Connemara Terrane is regarded as an allochthonous piece of the Dalradian miogeocline and the South Mayo Terrane as a remnant of an early Ordovician arc and fore arc which in mid-Ordovician times became a back arc/marginal basin to northwest subduction. The Lake District-Wexford Terrane is part of an arc to southeast subduction under Gondwanaland whose activity climaxed in the mid-Ordovician. The Central Terrane is interpreted as a Silurian overstep assemblage which blankets the junction between Laurentian- and Gondwanaland-derived oceanic terranes, and therefore Iapetus is regarded as an Ordovician ocean which closed prior to the Silurian. The model suggests that at the end of the Silurian, a clockwise-rotating Gondwanaland, having carried Laurentia into collision with Baltica, broke free and created a major sinistral strike-slip zone which disrupted the Ordovician palaeogeography in the British Isles/North American sector of Iapetus.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 646-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Kusky ◽  
J. S. Chow ◽  
S. A. Bowring

The Boil Mountain ophiolite complex of west-central Maine is widely interpreted to mark the Lower Ordovician Penobscottian suture between the Dunnage, Chain Lakes, and Gander terranes. The ophiolite consists of two distinct volcanic groups, including a lower island-arc tholeiite sequence and an upper mid-ocean-ridge basalt sequence. A new Middle Ordovician 477 ± 1 Ma U–Pb age on a tonalite sill that intrudes the lower volcanic–gabbroic sequence is younger than other ca. 500 Ma age constraints for the ophiolite and represents a maximum age for the ophiolite prior to final emplacement over gneissic rocks of the Chain Lakes massif. A comparison of ages and paleogeography of the Boil Mountain ophiolite with ophiolitic sequences in Quebec and Newfoundland indicates that the Taconian and Penobscottian orogenies and ophiolite obduction occurred simultaneously, although on different margins of the Iapetus Ocean. The Taconian ophiolite sequences were obducted onto the Appalachian margin of Laurentia during its collision with the Notre Dame – Bronson Hill belt in the Middle Ordovician, whereas the Boil Mountain ophiolite was obducted onto the Gander margin of Gondwana during its collision with the Exploits subzone – Penobscot arc of the Dunnage terrane in the Lower – Middle Ordovician. We suggest that the lower volcanic–gabbroic sequence of the Boil Mountain ophiolite represents the fore-arc ophiolitic basement to the Penobscot arc. Middle Ordovician rifting of the Penobscottian orogenic collage on the Gander margin formed a new volcanic sequence (Popelogan arc) in front of a growing back-arc basin, and erupted the upper tholeiitic sequence of the Boil Mountain ophiolite in a back-arc-basin setting. The tonalité sill formed during this event by partial melting of the lower volcanic–gabbroic sequence. Spreading in this back-arc basin (Tetagouche basin) brought a fragment of the Gander margin (Chain Lakes massif), along with an allochthonous ophiolitic cover (Boil Mountain complex) across Iapetus, where it collided with the Taconic modified margin of North America in the Late Ordovician and was then intruded by the Ashgillian Attean pluton.


1989 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Fortey ◽  
R. M. Owens ◽  
A. W. A. Rushton

AbstractThe early Ordovician was a time of maximum continental separation and hence a time when faunal evidence can be used to assess palaeogeography in a critical way. We summarize the known trilobite occurrences (18 genera) from the Arenig–Llanvirn of the Lake District, and record some genera for the first time. Maps of the distribution of some of these forms are given. All genera except Cyclopyge were confined to the Gondwana continent at the time, and some are known from many localities; and two species are widespread in England, Wales, France, Iberia and Bohemia. The fauna is entirely distinct from those of Scandinavia and North America. All the palaeontological evidence points to the Lake District being adjacent to Ordovician Gondwana. In the earlier Ordovician it is not reasonable to suggest that the Iapetus Ocean lay to the south of the Lake District as did Allen (1987).


2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 259-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey C. Pollock ◽  
James P. Hibbard ◽  
Cees R. van Staal

The eastern edge of the Appalachian orogen is composed of a collection of Neoproterozoic – early Paleozoic domains, Avalonia, Carolinia, Ganderia, Meguma, and Suwannee, which are exotic to North America. Differences in the geological histories of these peri-Gondwanan domains indicate that each separated independently from Gondwana, opening the Rheic Ocean in their wake. Cambrian departure of Ganderia and Carolina was followed by the Ordovician separation of Avalonia and Silurian separation of Meguma. After separation in the early Paleozoic, these domains constituted the borderline between the expanding Rheic Ocean and contracting Iapetus Ocean. They were transferred to Laurentia by early Silurian closure of Iapetus and Devonian–Carboniferous closure of the Rheic Ocean during the assembly of Gondwana and Laurentia into Pangaea. The first domain to arrive at Laurentia was Carolinia, which accreted in the Middle Ordovician during the Cherokee orogeny. Salinic accretion of Ganderia occurred shortly thereafter and was followed by the Acadian accretion of Avalonia. The Acadian orogeny was immediately followed by Middle Devonian – Early Carboniferous accretion of Meguma and possibly Suwannee which led to the Fammenian orogeny. The episodicity of orogeny suggests that the present location of these domains parallels their order of accretion. However, each of these crustal blocks was translated along strike by large-scale Late Devonian – Carboniferous dextral strike–slip motion. The breakup of Pangaea occurred outboard of the Paleozoic collision zones that accreted Carolinia, Ganderia, Avalonia, Meguma, and Suwannee to Laurentia, leaving these terranes appended to North America during the Mesozoic opening of the Atlantic.


2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 982-1018
Author(s):  
Lucy M. E. McCobb ◽  
W. Douglas Boyce ◽  
Ian Knight ◽  
Svend Stouge

The Antiklinalbugt Formation of northeast Greenland comprises peritidal to subtidal carbonate sediments, deposited in shallow shelf settings during an early Tremadocian transgressive-regressive megacycle. The succession of shales and microbial, muddy and grainy limestone, with minor dolostone at the base and top, terminates at the cryptic Fimbulfjeld disconformity. The formation has yielded trilobites collected on Ella Ø, Albert Heim Bjerge, and Kap Weber by C. Poulsen (1920s and 1930s), J. W. Cowie and P. J. Adams (1950s), and during recent field studies in 2000 and 2001. The fauna includes dimeropygidsTulepyge cowieiandT. tesellan. spp., hystricuridsMillardicurusandHystricurus, and several species ofSymphysurina. Micragnostus chiushuensis(Kobayashi, 1931) is rare, as areChasbellussp.,Clelandiasp., andLunacrania?. The presence of severalSymphysurinaspecies places the Antiklinalbugt Formation within theSymphysurinaZone.Chasbellusindicates the upper (lower Ordovician) part of theSymphysurinaZone for the lower upper Antiklinalbugt Formation. Conodonts place the middle lower formation in theCordylodus intermediusconodont Biozone, the lower upper part in theCordylodus angulatusconodont Biozone and the uppermost part in theRossodus manitouensisconodont Biozone. This combined fauna is characteristic of the upper Skullrockian Stage of the Ibexian Series, with the lower part of the Antiklinalbugt Formation lying within the uppermost Cambrian of North America, and the upper part within the lower Ordovician. The entire formation lies within the global Tremadocian Stage of the early Ordovician.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 300-300
Author(s):  
Peter J. Wagner

The Archaeogastropoda are one of the most abundant orders of the Paleozoic, but they have received surprizingly little systematic analysis. I have conducted a cladistic analysis of archaeogastropod species appearing during the initial radiation of the clade during the latest Cambrian through the Ordovician. The analysis included over 100 species. Most specimens were from North America, but some European and Asian material was included. The hypothesized phylogeny also includes an additional 40 Ordovician species from a previous cladistic work on a single family (the Lophospiridae), and only the stem members of this clade were included here.The analysis used 54 meristic and 12 morphometric traits encompassing 154 character states. This seemingly large number of character states for a group considered character-poor can be attributed to: 1) the breadth of morphologic diversity produced during the initial phases of the clade's radiation, resulting in nearly all conceivable morphologies being included here; and 2) the high number of character states for “types” of selenizones and sinuses, morphologies absent on most extant gastropods.The results of the analysis suggest the following:1. There were two large clades present by the Early Ordovician that most closely correspond to present definitions of the Murchisonoidea and Euomphaloidea. The clades shared an anisostrophically coiled common ancestor and thus were not derived separately from bellerophonts. However, the Macluritidae appear to have been derived separately from bellerophonts, corroborating a widely held hypothesis.2. Early Paleozoic species presently considered “pleurotomaroids” comprise a polyphyletic assemblage, with the major families independently derived from either the murchisonoid clade (the Eotomaridae, Lophospiridae and Phanerotrematidae) or from the euomphaloid clade (the Liospiridae, Luciellidae and post-Middle Ordovician members of the Raphistomatidae). It had been assumed previously that pleurotomaroids represent the least-derived anisostrophically coiled gastropods, as well-developed selenizones and sinuses were considered primitive traits. However, those features actually represent derived conditions of the Ordovician that appear to have been secondarily lost in later lineages; thus seemingly “modern” appearing early Paleozoic species often simply retained non-derived conditions. As the Mesozoic Pleurotomaria can not be linked with any Early Paleozoic clades, there is no basis for classifying early Paleozoic gastropods in the Pleurotomaroidea.3. The Subulitoidea and Loxonematoidea (which may be ancestral to the Caenogastropoda) evolved separately from murchisonoids. The origins of the Trochoidea are not clear. If the Holopeidae represent the stem members of the Trochoidea, then trochoids evolved from euomphaloids. However, the Platyceratidae also have been linked with trochoids. The earliest known members of that group possess many unique homologies and no obvious synapomorphies with any other archaeogastropods. The taxon can not be linked reliably with holopeids or any other taxon included in this study, and I do not discount the possibility that platyceratids were evolved separately from bellerophonts.4. Gross shell convergences abound, as turritelliform and planispiral-to-hyperstrophic shells both evolved at least four times. However, the combinations of character states used to achieve these gross morphologies differ among clades, allowing “homoplasies” of character complexes to be recognized.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Adrian W. A. Rushton ◽  
Mansoureh Ghobadi Pour ◽  
Leonid E. Popov ◽  
Hadi Jahangir ◽  
Arash Amini

Abstract Graptolites have been collected from sections through Lower Ordovician strata in northern Iran. At the Saluk Mountains, in the Kopet–Dagh region, mudrocks yielded fragmentary tubaria of Rhabdinopora sp. cf. R. flabelliformis, indicating the presence of lower Tremadocian strata there; stratigraphically, they lie between two limestone beds with the euconodont Cordylodus lindstromi. At Simeh–Kuh in the eastern Alborz Mountains (Semnan Province), upper Tremadocian – lower Floian strata include laminated dark mudstones that contain restricted graptolite faunas, mainly of small declined didymograptids; these are thought to represent incursions of plankton during periods of marine highstands. The lower major flooding surface in Simeh–Kuh coincides with an invasion of the graptolite biofacies and an incursion of Hunnegraptus? sp.; the second major flooding surface is associated with an incursion of Baltograptus geometricus. They were most probably synchronous with those in the lower part of the Hunnegraptus copiosus Biozone and at the base of the Cymatograptus protobalticus Biozone in the of the Tøyen Shale Formation succession of Västergötland, Scandinavia, suggesting that observed characters of sedimentation were eustatically controlled.


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