Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland

Populations of Polybessurus bipartitus Fairchild ex Green et al., a large and morphologically distinctive microfossil, occur in silicified carbonates of the Upper Proterozoic (700-800 Ma) Limestone-Dolomite "Series," central East Greenland. Large populations of well-preserved individuals p...

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Published in:American Journal of Botany
Main Authors: Knoll, Andrew, Swett, Keene, Golubic, Stjepko, Greene, Julian W.
Language:English
Published: Botanical Society of America 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3157879
https://doi.org/10.2307/2443874
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spelling ftharvardudash:oai:dash.harvard.edu:1/3157879 2023-05-15T16:03:38+02:00 Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland Knoll, Andrew Swett, Keene Golubic, Stjepko Greene, Julian W. 1987 application/pdf http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3157879 https://doi.org/10.2307/2443874 en_US eng Botanical Society of America http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2443874 American Journal of Botany Green, Julian W., Andrew H. Knoll, Stjepko Golubic, and Keene Swett. 1987. Paleobiology of distinctive benthic microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," central East Greenland. American Journal of Botany 74, no. 6: 928-940. 0002-9122 http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3157879 doi:10.2307/2443874 1987 ftharvardudash https://doi.org/10.2307/2443874 2022-04-04T12:36:42Z Populations of Polybessurus bipartitus Fairchild ex Green et al., a large and morphologically distinctive microfossil, occur in silicified carbonates of the Upper Proterozoic (700-800 Ma) Limestone-Dolomite "Series," central East Greenland. Large populations of well-preserved individuals permit reconstruction of P. bipartitus as a coccoidal unicell that "jetted" upward from the sediment surface by the highly unidirectional secretion of extracellular mucopolysaccharide envelopes. Reproduction by baeocyte formation is inferred on the basis of clustered envelope stalks produced by small cells. Sedimentological evidence indicates that P. bipartitus formed surficial crusts locally within a shallow peritidal carbonate platform. Among living microorganisms a close morphological, reproductive, and behavioral counterpart to Polybessurus is provided by populations of an as yet undescribed cyanobacterium found in coastal Bahamian environments similar to those in which the Proterozoic fossils occur. In general morphology and "jetting" behavior, this population resembles species of the genus Cyanostylon Geitler (1925), but reproduces via baeocyte formation. Polybessurus is but one of the more than two dozen taxa in the richly fossiliferous biota of the Limestone-Dolomite "Series." This distinctive population, along with co-occuring filamentous cyanobacteria and other microfossils, contribute to an increasingly refined picture of ecological heterogeneity in late Proterozoic oceans. Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Other/Unknown Material East Greenland Greenland Harvard University: DASH - Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard Greenland American Journal of Botany 74 6 928
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collection Harvard University: DASH - Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard
op_collection_id ftharvardudash
language English
description Populations of Polybessurus bipartitus Fairchild ex Green et al., a large and morphologically distinctive microfossil, occur in silicified carbonates of the Upper Proterozoic (700-800 Ma) Limestone-Dolomite "Series," central East Greenland. Large populations of well-preserved individuals permit reconstruction of P. bipartitus as a coccoidal unicell that "jetted" upward from the sediment surface by the highly unidirectional secretion of extracellular mucopolysaccharide envelopes. Reproduction by baeocyte formation is inferred on the basis of clustered envelope stalks produced by small cells. Sedimentological evidence indicates that P. bipartitus formed surficial crusts locally within a shallow peritidal carbonate platform. Among living microorganisms a close morphological, reproductive, and behavioral counterpart to Polybessurus is provided by populations of an as yet undescribed cyanobacterium found in coastal Bahamian environments similar to those in which the Proterozoic fossils occur. In general morphology and "jetting" behavior, this population resembles species of the genus Cyanostylon Geitler (1925), but reproduces via baeocyte formation. Polybessurus is but one of the more than two dozen taxa in the richly fossiliferous biota of the Limestone-Dolomite "Series." This distinctive population, along with co-occuring filamentous cyanobacteria and other microfossils, contribute to an increasingly refined picture of ecological heterogeneity in late Proterozoic oceans. Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
author Knoll, Andrew
Swett, Keene
Golubic, Stjepko
Greene, Julian W.
spellingShingle Knoll, Andrew
Swett, Keene
Golubic, Stjepko
Greene, Julian W.
Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
author_facet Knoll, Andrew
Swett, Keene
Golubic, Stjepko
Greene, Julian W.
author_sort Knoll, Andrew
title Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
title_short Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
title_full Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
title_fullStr Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Paleobiology of Distinctive Benthic Microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," Central East Greenland
title_sort paleobiology of distinctive benthic microfossils from the upper proterozoic limestone-dolomite "series," central east greenland
publisher Botanical Society of America
publishDate 1987
url http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3157879
https://doi.org/10.2307/2443874
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre East Greenland
Greenland
genre_facet East Greenland
Greenland
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2443874
American Journal of Botany
Green, Julian W., Andrew H. Knoll, Stjepko Golubic, and Keene Swett. 1987. Paleobiology of distinctive benthic microfossils from the Upper Proterozoic Limestone-Dolomite "Series," central East Greenland. American Journal of Botany 74, no. 6: 928-940.
0002-9122
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3157879
doi:10.2307/2443874
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2307/2443874
container_title American Journal of Botany
container_volume 74
container_issue 6
container_start_page 928
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