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Spore assemblages from the Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from Qujing, Yunnan, China

Spore assemblages from the Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from Qujing, Yunnan, China
Spore assemblages from the Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from Qujing, Yunnan, China
he Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from the vicinity of Qujing City, Yunnan, China is interpreted as a terrestrial-fluviatile-lacustrine sequence. It contains important nonmarine biotas including plants, fish and invertebrates. The plants are particularly interesting as they include many endemic taxa. Dispersed spore assemblages have been recovered from the upper part of this formation. The spores are well preserved and of moderate thermal maturity. They are systematically described and four new species erected: Aneurospora xujiachongensis sp. nov., Chelinospora ouyangii sp. nov., Camptozonotriletes? luii sp. nov. and Leiozonospora xichongensis sp. nov. One new combination is proposed: Aneurospora conica (Ouyang and Lu) comb. nov. This is a rare report of a Lower Devonian dispersed spore assemblage from the South China Plate. Indeed, few dispersed spore assemblages of this age are known outside of Euramerica and Northern Gondwana. It is suggested that the Xujiachong Formation spore assemblages can all be equated to the polygonalis-emsiensis Spore Assemblages Biozone (PE SAB) of Richardson and McGregor (1986) indicating an early (but not earliest) Pragian to ?earliest Emsian age. However, caution is urged, because biostratigraphical interpretation is difficult owing to distinct differences between dispersed spore assemblages from South China and Euramerica/Northern Gondwana. This almost certainly reflects palaeophytogeographical variation and regional endemism among early land plant floras on widely separated land masses. Palynofacies analysis supports a nonmarine origin for the deposits of the Xujiachong Formation, with the very rare marine palynomorphs that were encountered interpreted as reworked.
Lower Devonian, Pragian, Emsian, spores, early land plants, Yunnan, China
0031-0239
583-611
Wellman, Charles H.
508e1b0c-bb06-4723-bd7c-bd889fa83791
Zhu, Huai-Cheng
1f4da0b4-0f3c-4d24-803b-048009f06b4d
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06
Wang, Yi
aa6a67f8-e22e-484d-8077-638d6c9b2f1a
Berry, Christopher M.
5d08651a-8782-47da-8d5c-010806586ef9
Xu, Honghe
5888db5b-3d33-4810-a573-9d2f140d8a90
Wellman, Charles H.
508e1b0c-bb06-4723-bd7c-bd889fa83791
Zhu, Huai-Cheng
1f4da0b4-0f3c-4d24-803b-048009f06b4d
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06
Wang, Yi
aa6a67f8-e22e-484d-8077-638d6c9b2f1a
Berry, Christopher M.
5d08651a-8782-47da-8d5c-010806586ef9
Xu, Honghe
5888db5b-3d33-4810-a573-9d2f140d8a90

Wellman, Charles H., Zhu, Huai-Cheng, Marshall, John E.A., Wang, Yi, Berry, Christopher M. and Xu, Honghe (2012) Spore assemblages from the Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from Qujing, Yunnan, China. Palaeontology, 55 (3), 583-611. (doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2012.01143.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

he Lower Devonian Xujiachong Formation from the vicinity of Qujing City, Yunnan, China is interpreted as a terrestrial-fluviatile-lacustrine sequence. It contains important nonmarine biotas including plants, fish and invertebrates. The plants are particularly interesting as they include many endemic taxa. Dispersed spore assemblages have been recovered from the upper part of this formation. The spores are well preserved and of moderate thermal maturity. They are systematically described and four new species erected: Aneurospora xujiachongensis sp. nov., Chelinospora ouyangii sp. nov., Camptozonotriletes? luii sp. nov. and Leiozonospora xichongensis sp. nov. One new combination is proposed: Aneurospora conica (Ouyang and Lu) comb. nov. This is a rare report of a Lower Devonian dispersed spore assemblage from the South China Plate. Indeed, few dispersed spore assemblages of this age are known outside of Euramerica and Northern Gondwana. It is suggested that the Xujiachong Formation spore assemblages can all be equated to the polygonalis-emsiensis Spore Assemblages Biozone (PE SAB) of Richardson and McGregor (1986) indicating an early (but not earliest) Pragian to ?earliest Emsian age. However, caution is urged, because biostratigraphical interpretation is difficult owing to distinct differences between dispersed spore assemblages from South China and Euramerica/Northern Gondwana. This almost certainly reflects palaeophytogeographical variation and regional endemism among early land plant floras on widely separated land masses. Palynofacies analysis supports a nonmarine origin for the deposits of the Xujiachong Formation, with the very rare marine palynomorphs that were encountered interpreted as reworked.

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More information

Published date: 2012
Keywords: Lower Devonian, Pragian, Emsian, spores, early land plants, Yunnan, China
Organisations: Paleooceanography & Palaeoclimate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 339088
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/339088
ISSN: 0031-0239
PURE UUID: 21993a8e-9329-4f7c-a5d6-011d9f14b873
ORCID for John E.A. Marshall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9242-3646

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 May 2012 15:29
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:35

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Contributors

Author: Charles H. Wellman
Author: Huai-Cheng Zhu
Author: Yi Wang
Author: Christopher M. Berry
Author: Honghe Xu

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