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A cryptic record of Burgess Shale-type diversity from the early Cambrian of Baltica

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posted on 2016-11-22, 09:14 authored by Ben J. Slater, Thomas H. P. Harvey, Romain Guilbaud, Nicholas J. Butterfield
Exceptionally preserved “Burgess Shale-type” fossil assemblages from the Cambrian of Laurentia, South China and Australia record a diverse array of non- biomineralizing organisms. During this time, the palaeocontinent Baltica was geographically isolated from these regions, but is conspicuously lacking in terms of comparable accessible early Cambrian Lagerstätten. Here we report a diverse assemblage of small carbonaceous fossils (SCFs) from the early Cambrian (Stage 4) File Haidar Formation of southeast Sweden and surrounding areas of the Baltoscandian Basin, including exceptionally preserved remains of Burgess Shale-type metazoans and other organisms. Recovered SCFs include taxonomically resolvable ecdysozoan elements (priapulid and palaeoscolecid worms), lophotrochozoan elements (annelid chaetae and wiwaxiid sclerites), as well as ‘protoconodonts,’ denticulate feeding structures, and a background of filamentous and spheroidal microbes. The annelids, wiwaxiids, and priapulids are the first recorded from the Cambrian of Baltica. The File Haidar SCF assemblage is broadly comparable to those recovered from Cambrian basins in Laurentia and south China, though differences at lower taxonomic levels point to possible environmental or palaeogeographic controls on taxon ranges. These data reveal a fundamentally expanded picture of early Cambrian diversity on Baltica, and provide key insights into high-latitude Cambrian faunas and patterns of SCF preservation. We establish three new taxa based on large populations of distinctive SCFs: Baltiscalida njorda gen. et sp. nov. (a priapulid), Baltichaeta jormunganda gen. et sp. nov. (an annelid) and Baltinema rana gen. et sp. nov. (a filamentous problematicum).

Funding

We acknowledge the support of Churchill College, Cambridge (BJS) and Clare Hall College, Cambridge (RG). This research was funded by the Natural Environmental Research Council, UK, grant NE/K005251/1 (BJS, THPH, RG, NJB).

History

Citation

Palaeontology, 2017, 60(1), pp.117–140

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Palaeontology

Publisher

Wiley for Palaeontological Association

issn

0031-0239

eissn

1475-4983

Acceptance date

2016-11-03

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2017-03-11

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pala.12273/full

Notes

Data archiving statement This published work and the nomenclatural acts it contains, have been registered in ZooBank: http://zoobank.org/References/AB48F49C-9D32-44C4-BDE8-349794BBE51A

Language

en

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