Evidence for seafloor microbial mats and associated metazoan lifestyles in Lower Cambrian phosphorites of Southwest China

The increase in the depth and intensity of bioturbation through the Proterozoic-Phanerozoic transition changed the substrates on which marine benthos lived from being relatively firm with a sharp sediment-water interface to having a high water content and blurry sediment-water interface. Additionall...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Lethaia
Main Authors: Dornbos, SQ, Bottjer, DJ, Chen, JY
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.nigpas.ac.cn/handle/332004/21881
https://doi.org/10.1080/00241160410004764
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Summary:The increase in the depth and intensity of bioturbation through the Proterozoic-Phanerozoic transition changed the substrates on which marine benthos lived from being relatively firm with a sharp sediment-water interface to having a high water content and blurry sediment-water interface. Additionally, microbial mats, once dominant on normal marine Proterozoic seafloors, were relegated to stressed settings lacking intense metazoan activity. This change in substrates has been termed the 'agronomic revolution', and its impact on benthic metazoans has been termed the 'Cambrian substrate revolution'. The shallow marine phosphorites of the Lower Cambrian Meishucun Formation of southwest China contain evidence suggestive of the presence of seafloor microbial mats. This evidence includes abundant and distinctive red-colored bedding planes enriched in heavy iron minerals and mica, interpreted as resulting from mat-decay mineralization and mica trapping by microbial mats. The radular grazing trace fossil Radulichnus is also found in this formation, indicating a firm, microbial mat-bound substrate. These radular scratches are always preserved with circular impressions around 10 cm in diameter, possibly the fossils of soft-bodied organisms. The first relatively intense bioturbation in this region is found in this formation and is dominated by horizontal Thalassinoides burrows, which could represent undermat mining behavior. The evidence for the presence of microbial mats in the Lower Cambrian Meishucon Formation, and for metazoan lifestyles associated with such mat-bound seafloors, reveals that normal marine environments dominated by typical Proterozoic-style soft substrates still existed during the Cambrian substrate revolution.