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Colonization of Brackish-Water Systems through Time: Evidence from the Trace-Fossil Record
319
Citations
107
References
2005
Year
Sedimentary RecordEngineeringPaleoceanographyMarine SystemsOceanographyBiostratigraphyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionEcosystemsGeochronologyPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionBenthic EcologyBrackish-water SystemsOceanic SystemsMarine GeologyColonization HistoryLandward ExpansionTransitional WaterGeologic TimeMarine BiologyPaleoecologyTrace-fossil Record
Abstract Trace fossils in estuarine deposits of different ages have been compared to evaluate colonization history of brackish-water ecosystems and to calibrate trace-fossil, brackish-water models with respect to geologic time. This comparative analysis reveals that, although the colonization of marginal-marine, brackish-water environments was a long-term process that spanned most of the Phanerozoic, this process of invasion of fully marine organisms into restricted, marginal-marine habitats did not occur at a constant rate. Five major colonization phases can be distinguished. The first phase (Ediacaran–Ordovician) represents a prelude to the major invasion that occurred during the rest of the Paleozoic. While Ediacaran–Cambrian ichnofaunas seem to be restricted to the outermost zones of marginal-marine depositional systems, Ordovician assemblages show some degree of landward expansion within brackish-water ecosystems. Intensity of bioturbation and ichnodiversity levels were relatively low during this pha...
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