Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4465672 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A new ichnotaxon, Lepeichnus giberti, is described in the Miocene of Lepe (Spain).•It is a complex burrow combining dwelling, deposit feeding and farming strategies.•L. giberti shares architectural similarities with modern upogebiid burrows.•Its exceptional preservation allows proposing the new concept of ichnogeny.•Ichnogeny describes the origin and development of boring or burrowing traces.

A new ichnotaxon, Lepeichnus giberti igen. nov. isp. nov., is described from sandy silts and sands of the upper Miocene (Tortonian–Messinian) of the Guadalquivir Basin (Lepe, Huelva, SW Spain). It is a complex bioturbation structure consisting of two vertical shafts interconnected by a horizontal C-shaped gallery, which in turn exhibits a hook-shaped branch. L. giberti is interpreted as probably produced by a crustacean that could have combined dwelling, deposit feeding and farming strategies in a shallow-marine environment. Its architectural similarities with modern upogebiid burrows suggest the record of a new burrowing behavior, not yet known today, for this group of mud shrimps. The large number of studied specimens and their exceptional degree of preservation allow proposing the new concept of ‘ichnogeny’, as a tool to describe the origin and development of a modern or fossil boring or burrowing trace.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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