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Brasier et al. 1996
Brasier, M.D., Shields, G., Kuleshov, V.N. and Zhegallo, E.A. (1996). Integrated chemo- and biostratigraphic calibration of early animal evolution: Neoproterozoic early Cambrian of southwest Mongolia. Geological Magazine 133(4): 445-485.
Five overlapping sections from the thick Neoproterozoic to early Cambrian sediments of western Mongolia were analysed to yield a remarkable carbon-isotope, strontium-isotope and small shelly fossil (SSF) record. Chemostratigraphy suggests that barren limestones of sequences 3 and 4, which lie above the two Maikhan Uul diamictites, are post-Sturtian but pre-Varangerian in age. Limestones and dolomites of sequence 5, with Boxonia grumulosa, have geochemical signatures consistent with a post-Varangerian (Ediacarian) age. A major negative delta(13)C anomaly (feature 'W') in sequence 6 lies a short distance above an Anabarites trisulcatus Zone SSF asemblage with hexactinellid sponges, of probable late Ediacarian age. Anomaly 'W' provides an anchor point for cross-correlation charts of carbon isotopes and small shelly fossils. Trace fossil assemblages with a distinctly Cambrian character first appear in sequence 8 (Purella Zone), at the level of carbon isotopic feature 'B', provisionally correlated with the upper part of cycle Z in Siberia. A paradox is found from sequence 10 to 12 in Mongolia: Tommotian-type SSFs continue to appear, accompanied by Nemakit-Daldynian/Tommotian-type Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios but by increasingly heavy delta(13)C values that cannot be matched in the Tommotian of eastern Siberia. The steady rate of generic diversification in Mongolia also contrasts markedly with the Tommotian 'diversity explosion' in eastern Siberia, which occurs just above a major karstic emergence surface. One explanation is that sequences 10 to 12 in Mongolia preserve a pre-Trommotian portion of the fossil record that was missing or removed in eastern Siberia. The Mongolian sections certainly deserve an important place in tracing the true course and timing of the 'Cambrian radiation'.
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Keywords
upper proterozoic successions, carbon isotope stratigraphy, siberian platform, faunal radiation, eastern siberia, boundary, record, sr, chemostratigraphy, diagenesis
Journal
Geological Magazine
http://www.journals.cup.org/bin/bladerunner?30REQEVENT=&REQAUTH=0&116000REQSUB==&REQSTR1=GEO
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
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