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Biostratigraphic and paleogeographic significance of a palynological assemblage from the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, China

Biostratigraphic and paleogeographic significance of a palynological assemblage from the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, China
Biostratigraphic and paleogeographic significance of a palynological assemblage from the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, China
Abundant palynomorphs are here reported for the first time from tuffaceous siltstones of the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation at the Zhifang Section, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, Northwest China. Thirty-four miospore species assigned to 23 genera (four established species, two cf., 19 sp., and nine spp.), 19 acritarch species assigned to 19 genera (10 established species, three cf., five sp., and one spp.), and scolecodonts are identified. The biostratigraphic ranges of the acritarchs and miospores indicate a Mid Devonian age, corroborating the age assignment previously based on associated corals, brachiopods, and plant fossils. Paleogeographic reconstruction for the Middle Devonian indicates that the eastern Junggar Basin was part of the Kazakhstan Plate and situated in the low-mid latitudes of the Northern hemisphere between the Euramerican landmass to the west, and the North and South China, and Gondwana landmasses to the east and south. Although there is some miospore compositional similarity between the eastern Junggar Basin and the landmasses of Euramerica, South and North China, and Gondwana, it is not particularly high, and is mainly at the generic level. The acritarch assemblage, however, consists mostly of cosmopolitan species and provides new evidence for extending the marine linkage between North America, Baltica, the Junggar Basin of Kazakhstan, and Gondwana. Paleontologic and lithologic evidence indicates that the Ulusubasite Formation was deposited in a near-shore marine environment.
Middle Devonian, Junggar Basin, China, acritarch, miospore, biostratigraphy, paleogeography
0034-6667
141-157
Zhu, Huaicheng
5e9a8cf6-b7d0-47eb-b13f-ceb72fe88231
Wicander, Reed
b0deaf42-3328-47f4-b8a6-3affda2115a9
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06
Zhu, Huaicheng
5e9a8cf6-b7d0-47eb-b13f-ceb72fe88231
Wicander, Reed
b0deaf42-3328-47f4-b8a6-3affda2115a9
Marshall, John E.A.
cba178e3-91aa-49a2-b2ce-4b8d9d870b06

Zhu, Huaicheng, Wicander, Reed and Marshall, John E.A. (2008) Biostratigraphic and paleogeographic significance of a palynological assemblage from the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, China. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 152 (3-4), 141-157. (doi:10.1016/j.revpalbo.2008.04.010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Abundant palynomorphs are here reported for the first time from tuffaceous siltstones of the Middle Devonian Ulusubasite Formation at the Zhifang Section, eastern Junggar Basin, Xinjiang, Northwest China. Thirty-four miospore species assigned to 23 genera (four established species, two cf., 19 sp., and nine spp.), 19 acritarch species assigned to 19 genera (10 established species, three cf., five sp., and one spp.), and scolecodonts are identified. The biostratigraphic ranges of the acritarchs and miospores indicate a Mid Devonian age, corroborating the age assignment previously based on associated corals, brachiopods, and plant fossils. Paleogeographic reconstruction for the Middle Devonian indicates that the eastern Junggar Basin was part of the Kazakhstan Plate and situated in the low-mid latitudes of the Northern hemisphere between the Euramerican landmass to the west, and the North and South China, and Gondwana landmasses to the east and south. Although there is some miospore compositional similarity between the eastern Junggar Basin and the landmasses of Euramerica, South and North China, and Gondwana, it is not particularly high, and is mainly at the generic level. The acritarch assemblage, however, consists mostly of cosmopolitan species and provides new evidence for extending the marine linkage between North America, Baltica, the Junggar Basin of Kazakhstan, and Gondwana. Paleontologic and lithologic evidence indicates that the Ulusubasite Formation was deposited in a near-shore marine environment.

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More information

Published date: December 2008
Keywords: Middle Devonian, Junggar Basin, China, acritarch, miospore, biostratigraphy, paleogeography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 64269
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64269
ISSN: 0034-6667
PURE UUID: cc2660fc-c69a-4b63-a416-cc88287ae34b
ORCID for John E.A. Marshall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9242-3646

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Date deposited: 08 Dec 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:35

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Author: Huaicheng Zhu
Author: Reed Wicander

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