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Anconichnus horizontalis: A Pervasive Ichnofabric-Forming Trace Fossil in Post-Paleozoic Offshore Siliciclastic Facies
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1991
Year
Sedimentary RecordFacies AnalysisEngineeringSedimentary GeologyBiostratigraphyEarth ScienceMesozoic TectonicsGeochronologyMarine GeologyGeologyAnconichnus HorizontalisSedimentary PetrologySedimentologySediment TransportTectonicsUpper OffshoreStructural GeologySediment ProcessNorth Sea BasinSedimentation Conditions
The fabric of often intensely mottled, upper offshore to lower shoreface siliciclastic sediments of post-Paleozoic age is analyzed and the principal trace described from material collected from outcrop (U.K.) and the North Sea Basin (core). The characteristic trace of these mottled zones is Anconichnus horizontalis, which is a narrow, discontinuous, twisting, muddy fecal string within a poorly defined burrow fill depleted in mud and inertinite. This trace formed endogenically, principally in association with small-scale cross-stratification and thin (cm) event beds. Seven taphonomic-sediment associations (ichnofabrics) are recognized: (1) in siltstone to very fine-grained sandstone in thin (cm) event beds, often as only one trace; (2) in association with small-scale cross-stratification; (3) in dense concentrations in fine-grained sediment where the primary structures have been obscured; (4) similar to (3) but with a patchy distribution of the trace; (5) siltstone to very fine-grained sandstone, often associated with heterolithic stratification, with a higher ichnodiversity, including Phoebichnus, Palaeophycus, Thalassinoides, Rhizocorallium, Cylindrichnus and Diplocraterion; (6) as (3) but with muddy patches and sand-filled Chondrites sp.; (7) mud dominated, with silty horizons and associated with Terebellina. Associations 1 to 4 were produced by opportunistic shallow tier burrowers penecontemporaneous with deposition of mud-depleted event beds in an offshoremore » environment. Association 5, with diverse, later mid-tier burrowers, suggests a more equilibrium endobenthic community in aggrading sedimentation conditions, under fair weather, in the offshore transition zone to lower shoreface, while associations 6 and 7 indicated muddier offshore situations.« less