马里跨撒哈拉航道上白垩纪-下古近系沉积物的地层学和古生物学

IF 5.1 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History Pub Date : 2019-06-28 DOI:10.1206/0003-0090.436.1.1
M. O'Leary, M. Bouaré, Kerin M. Claeson, Kelly Heilbronn, Robert V. Hill, J. A. Mccartney, J. Sessa, F. Sissoko, L. Tapanila, E. Wheeler, E. Roberts
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引用次数: 15

摘要

从白垩纪晚期到始新世早期,一个陆表海周期性地将西非一分为二,与今天统治同一地区的撒哈拉沙漠形成鲜明对比。这个温暖的浅海被称为跨撒哈拉海道,是全球海平面上升的表现,与中生代晚期冈瓦纳超大陆的快速分裂有关。尽管随着时间的推移,它的大小有所不同,但据估计,撒哈拉沙漠外的海道覆盖了非洲大陆3000平方公里的面积,深度约为50米。海的边缘部分是由前寒武纪克拉通的高地形和西非的活动带确定的。在其大约5000万年的幕式存在中,经历了六个主要的海侵和退行期,跨撒哈拉海道留下了广泛的近岸海相沉积地层和丰富的化石。产生这些沉积物的水域支持并保存了许多现已灭绝的脊椎动物、无脊椎动物、植物和微生物物种的遗骸。这些物种记录了古代热带生命的区域图景,跨越了两个主要的地球事件:白垩纪-古近纪(K-Pg)边界和古新世-始新世热最大值(PETM)。尽管在这段时间内,大部分大陆的内陆地区都被广阔的外海淹没,但新兴的多大陆叙事往往忽略了跨撒哈拉海道,部分原因是基础研究,包括地质构造的命名和化石物种的初步描述和分析,仍有待完成。我们在此根据二十年来对马里共和国沉积矿床的实地考察和分析提供这样的综合。今天马里共和国的北部地区包括古海的一些最远的内陆地区。我们汇集并扩展了我们之前的地质和古生物学出版物,并提供了关于古代沉积岩和化石的新信息,这些信息记录了过去的古赤道生活。我们的研究是对该地区上白垩纪和下古近纪地质构造的第一个正式描述和命名,我们将这些名称与多个现代领土边界的区域相关性联系起来。古老的海道留下了有趣的、以前未分类的磷酸盐沉积物,很可能代表了地球上已知的最广泛的脊椎动物大化石骨床。这些骨床,以及与之相关的纸页岩和碳酸盐,保存了各种各样的化石组合,包括各种无脊椎动物和脊椎动物的新种,稀有哺乳动物和痕迹化石。浅海水域包括从三角洲系统到高盐河口、受保护的泻湖和碳酸盐浅滩的各种古环境。我们的首要目标是收集与非洲K-Pg地层剖面相关的脊椎动物化石。我们提供了这样一个剖面,与先前的观点一致,表明马里岩石在古新世早期存在沉积间隙,西非其他地方也提出了这种不整合。我们对跨越K-Pg边界的几种脊椎动物进化枝的系统发育分析已经阐明了多个分类群的进化枝-进化枝物种水平的生存和范围扩展。根据目前的证据,很少有跨撒哈拉海道的大型化石物种在K-Pg边界或PETM表现出明显的变化,尽管结果非常初步。在我们早期关于西非古新世钻岩双壳类首次记录的报告的基础上,我们在这里进一步描述了白垩纪和古近纪以现代热带特征分类群为主的软体动物动物群。在新发现的骨鱼目化石中,巨齿螈和一种新的始新世淡水鲶鱼的体型都很大,这是在非洲发现的最大的鲶鱼化石之一。我们新的古生态和动物重建显示了一个常绿阔叶林,其中包括一些已知的最古老的红树林。古代马里生态系统中有许多顶级捕食者,包括鳄鱼类、蛇类和阿米达科,其中一些是其分支中最大的物种。跨撒哈拉海道与主要海洋表现出间歇性的隔绝。这种环境变量可能创造了水生特有中心,刺激了对巨大的选择,就像以前在陆地岛屿上观察到的物种一样。
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Stratigraphy and Paleobiology of the Upper Cretaceous-Lower Paleogene Sediments from the Trans-Saharan Seaway in Mali
An epicontinental sea bisected West Africa periodically from the Late Cretaceous to the early Eocene, in dramatic contrast to the current Sahara Desert that dominates the same region today. Known as the Trans-Saharan Seaway, this warm and shallow ocean was a manifestation of globally elevated sea level associated with the rapid break-up of the supercontinent Gondwana in the late Mesozoic. Although it varied in size through time, the Trans-Saharan Seaway is estimated to have covered as much as 3000 km2 of the African continent and was approximately 50 m deep. The edges of the sea were defined in part by the high topography of the Precambrian cratons and mobile belts of West Africa. Over its approximately 50 million year episodic existence, through six major periods of transgression and regression, the Trans-Saharan Seaway left behind extensive nearshore marine sedimentary strata with abundant fossils. The waters that yielded these deposits supported and preserved the remains of numerous vertebrate, invertebrate, plant, and microbial species that are now extinct. These species document a regional picture of ancient tropical life that spanned two major Earth events: the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary and the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). Whereas extensive epeiric seas flooded the interior portions of most continents during these intervals, the emerging multicontinental narrative has often overlooked the Trans-Saharan Seaway, in part because fundamental research, including the naming of geological formations and the primary description and analysis of fossil species, remained to be done. We provide such synthesis here based on two decades of fieldwork and analyses of sedimentary deposits in the Republic of Mali. Northern parts of the Republic of Mali today include some of the farthest inland reaches of the ancient sea. We bring together and expand on our prior geological and paleontological publications and provide new information on ancient sedimentary rocks and fossils that document paleoequatorial life of the past. Ours is the first formal description of and nomenclature for the Upper Cretaceous and lower Paleogene geological formations of this region and we tie these names to regional correlations over multiple modern territorial boundaries. The ancient seaway left intriguing and previously unclassified phosphate deposits that, quite possibly, represent the most extensive vertebrate macrofossil bone beds known from anywhere on Earth. These bone beds, and the paper shales and carbonates associated with them, have preserved a diverse assemblage of fossils, including a variety of new species of invertebrates and vertebrates, rare mammals, and trace fossils. The shallow marine waters included a wide range of paleoenvironments from delta systems, to hypersaline embayments, protected lagoons, and carbonate shoals. Our overarching goal has been to collect vertebrate fossils tied to a K-Pg stratigraphic section in Africa. We provide such a section and, consistent with prior ideas, indicate that there is a gap in sedimentation in Malian rocks in the earliest Paleocene, an unconformity also proposed elsewhere in West Africa. Our phylogenetic analyses of several vertebrate clades across the K-Pg boundary have clarified clade-by-clade species-level survivorship and range extensions for multiple taxa. Few macrofossil species from the Trans-Saharan Seaway show conspicuous change at either the K-Pg boundary or the PETM based on current evidence, although results are very preliminary. Building on our earlier report of the first record of rock-boring bivalves from the Paleocene of West Africa, we further describe here a Cretaceous and Paleogene mollusk fauna dominated by taxa characteristic of the modern tropics. Among the newly discovered fossil osteichthyans, large body size characterizes both the pycnodonts and a new freshwater Eocene catfish species, one of the largest fossil catfishes found in Africa. Our new paleoecological and faunal reconstructions show an evergreen, broadleaf forest that included some of the oldest mangroves known. The ancient Malian ecosystem had numerous apex predators including Crocodyliformes, Serpentes, and Amiidae, some of which were among the largest species in their clades. The Trans-Saharan Seaway exhibited intermittent isolation from major seas. This environmental variable may have created aquatic centers of endemism, stimulating selection for gigantism as previously observed for species on terrestrial islands.
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CiteScore
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自引率
2.90%
发文量
4
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>18 weeks
期刊介绍: The Bulletin, published continuously since 1881, consists of longer monographic volumes in the field of natural sciences relating to zoology, paleontology, and geology. Current numbers are published at irregular intervals. The Bulletin was originally a place to publish short papers, while longer works appeared in the Memoirs. However, in the 1920s, the Memoirs ceased and the Bulletin series began publishing longer papers. A new series, the Novitates, published short papers describing new forms.
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