Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland

The thick and relatively complete Jurassic succession of eastern Greenland provides a unique biostratigraphic record for the North Atlantic region. The main biostratigraphic control for the succession has been provided by molluscs, especially ammonites and to a lesser extent by bivalves and belemnit...

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Main Authors: KELLY, Simon, GREGORY, F., BRAHAM, William, STROGEN, Dominic, WHITHAM, Andrew
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Volumina Jurassica 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626
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author KELLY, Simon
GREGORY, F.
BRAHAM, William
STROGEN, Dominic
WHITHAM, Andrew
author_facet KELLY, Simon
GREGORY, F.
BRAHAM, William
STROGEN, Dominic
WHITHAM, Andrew
author_sort KELLY, Simon
collection Geological Quarterly
description The thick and relatively complete Jurassic succession of eastern Greenland provides a unique biostratigraphic record for the North Atlantic region. The main biostratigraphic control for the succession has been provided by molluscs, especially ammonites and to a lesser extent by bivalves and belemnites. The late John Callomon and colleagues recognised 93 Boreal ammonite-bearing horizons in the Mid to Late Jurassic. This provides a reliable backbone to the biostratigraphy of these strata, prompting a palynological colleague to comment that they are the “Policemen of Jurassic Stratigraphy”. Other biostratigraphically significant microfossil and palynological groups, can be calibrated against this standard, but on their own cannot achieve the same precision.The Early Jurassic of eastern Greenland does not have such fine control as later parts of the period. No single biostratigraphic group can be used successfully throughout the interval, and there are only three significant ammonite faunas during this period. Reliance on various different organisms is necessary to cope with the changing range of marine to non-marine environments. CASP field-work from 1990 to 2012 has resulted in the collection of much biostratigraphic material. In this article, published data are summarised together with previously unpublished data in the form of a unified table. The integrated chart shows detailed columns for the whole eastern Greenland Jurassic. It demonstrates the ammonite, palynological and microfossil events/biozones and horizons which are correlated by time. More limited information is available on belemnites, bivalves and macroflora. This is the first time such an integrated bio­stratigraphic scheme has been assembled for the Jurassic of eastern Greenland. It will be of value to the offshore oil-industry in the northern North Atlantic and on the Barents Shelf as well as to field geologists in Greenland.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Greenland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Greenland
North Atlantic
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
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language English
op_collection_id ftjgq
op_relation https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626/18335
https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626
op_rights Copyright (c) 2019 Volumina Jurassica
op_source Volumina Jurassica; Vol. 13 No. 1 (2015): Volume 13; 43 - 64
1731-3708
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publishDate 2019
publisher Volumina Jurassica
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spelling ftjgq:oai:geojournals.pgi.gov.pl:article/26626 2025-01-16T22:06:20+00:00 Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland KELLY, Simon GREGORY, F. BRAHAM, William STROGEN, Dominic WHITHAM, Andrew 2019-08-06 application/pdf https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626 eng eng Volumina Jurassica https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626/18335 https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626 Copyright (c) 2019 Volumina Jurassica Volumina Jurassica; Vol. 13 No. 1 (2015): Volume 13; 43 - 64 1731-3708 1896-7876 Jurassic integrated biostratigraphy ammonites palynology micropalaeontology Greenland info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2019 ftjgq 2024-07-30T03:29:10Z The thick and relatively complete Jurassic succession of eastern Greenland provides a unique biostratigraphic record for the North Atlantic region. The main biostratigraphic control for the succession has been provided by molluscs, especially ammonites and to a lesser extent by bivalves and belemnites. The late John Callomon and colleagues recognised 93 Boreal ammonite-bearing horizons in the Mid to Late Jurassic. This provides a reliable backbone to the biostratigraphy of these strata, prompting a palynological colleague to comment that they are the “Policemen of Jurassic Stratigraphy”. Other biostratigraphically significant microfossil and palynological groups, can be calibrated against this standard, but on their own cannot achieve the same precision.The Early Jurassic of eastern Greenland does not have such fine control as later parts of the period. No single biostratigraphic group can be used successfully throughout the interval, and there are only three significant ammonite faunas during this period. Reliance on various different organisms is necessary to cope with the changing range of marine to non-marine environments. CASP field-work from 1990 to 2012 has resulted in the collection of much biostratigraphic material. In this article, published data are summarised together with previously unpublished data in the form of a unified table. The integrated chart shows detailed columns for the whole eastern Greenland Jurassic. It demonstrates the ammonite, palynological and microfossil events/biozones and horizons which are correlated by time. More limited information is available on belemnites, bivalves and macroflora. This is the first time such an integrated bio­stratigraphic scheme has been assembled for the Jurassic of eastern Greenland. It will be of value to the offshore oil-industry in the northern North Atlantic and on the Barents Shelf as well as to field geologists in Greenland. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland North Atlantic Geological Quarterly Greenland
spellingShingle Jurassic
integrated biostratigraphy
ammonites
palynology
micropalaeontology
Greenland
KELLY, Simon
GREGORY, F.
BRAHAM, William
STROGEN, Dominic
WHITHAM, Andrew
Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title_full Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title_fullStr Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title_short Towards an integrated Jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern Greenland
title_sort towards an integrated jurassic biostratigraphy for eastern greenland
topic Jurassic
integrated biostratigraphy
ammonites
palynology
micropalaeontology
Greenland
topic_facet Jurassic
integrated biostratigraphy
ammonites
palynology
micropalaeontology
Greenland
url https://vjs.pgi.gov.pl/article/view/26626