EVALUATING THE ICHNOFOSSIL TEREDOLITES AS AN INDICATOR OF SALINITY AND PALEOENVIRONMENT
Issue Date
2020-12-31Author
Buntin, Rogers Clark Caldwell
Publisher
University of Kansas
Format
151 pages
Type
Thesis
Degree Level
M.S.
Discipline
Geology
Rights
Copyright held by the author.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The ichnogenus Teredolites and Teredolites Ichnofacies is an accepted proxy for marine influence in paralic to open marine depositional environments (EOD). Actualistic approaches and the process-ichnologic framework allow independent analysis of both quantitative and semiquantitative data to interpret the physicochemical conditions of a given EOD when Teredolites are present. Measurements collected in modern EOD and Jurassic–Eocene successions produce a spatially and temporally robust dataset of 14,137 borings from 17 tracemaking genera. Life history strategies of extant tracemakers are reflected in Mesozoic borings, which allow reconstruction of paleosalinity. Trends extrapolated indicate four ecotones in modern paralic to nearshore EOD, which can be identified into the Late Cretaceous. These zones display variation in boring metrics, densities, and relative composition of Teredolites ichnospecies. Zone 1 represents upper estuarine to tidally modified fluvial successions with salinities from 0.5–10 ppt (oligohaline to alpha-mesohaline). Zone 2 represents upper to central estuarine successions with salinities from 10–19 ppt (beta-mesohaline to lower polyhaline). Zone 3 represents central to lower estuarine succession with salinities from 15–30 ppt (beta-mesohaline to euhaline). Zone 4 represents backshore to open marine successions with salinities from 20–30+ ppt (polyhaline to euhaline). Boring metrics compared against identified fossil genera suggest high species richness in the Western Interior Seaway coincided with physical adaptations to compensate for interspecific competition––differences in reproduction style and media preferences at time of settlement––by the Late Cretaceous.
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