Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5786399 Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 2017 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
The study of marine biota of the North Sea from the perspective of its relevance to palaeontology (Aktuopaläontologie) has enabled modern patterns and processes to be identified that can also be recognised in ancient communities. A collection of Chalk cobbles from the coast of north Norfolk, eastern England, preserves a limited ichnofauna: Gastrochaenolites ornatus Kelly and Bromley; Gastrochaenolites isp.; and Caulostrepsis isp. All cobbles show evidence of physical modification (corrasion) since they were bored; no Gastrochaenolites is complete and no clast has Caulostrepsis on all sides, therefore clasts have been corraded subsequent to boring. Only one producing organism in Gastrochaenolites, probably Barnea sp., is preserved in situ. Gastrochaenolites borings were infested by a range of encrusting organisms after the demise (and removal of shells) of the boring bivalves: thread-like algae; agglutinated worm tubes; cheilostome bryozoan Cryptosula pallasiana (Moll); and serpulids Hydroides norvegica Gunnerus and Pomatoceras triqueter (Linnaeus). Such a suite of encrusting organisms would be impossible to see in a fossil boring filled with lithified sedimentary rock unless it was released by dissolution of the substrate. Such cobbles, corraded since they were infested by borers, leave only portions of traces for identification, commonly only to ichnogenus.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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