A Late Jurassic Boreal echinoderm Lagerstätte from Janusfjellet, central Spitsbergen, Arctic Norway

A well preserved, low diversity assemblage of fossil echinoderms is described from the Volgian Slottsmøya Member (Agardhfjellet Formation) on central Spitsbergen. Five species are recognized: the isocrinid Chariocrinus sp. A, the pedinoid Hemipedina sp. A, the forcipulate asteroid Asteriidae sp. A,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rousseau, Julie
Other Authors: Hans Arne Nakrem, Øyvind Hammer
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/12551
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-28904
Description
Summary:A well preserved, low diversity assemblage of fossil echinoderms is described from the Volgian Slottsmøya Member (Agardhfjellet Formation) on central Spitsbergen. Five species are recognized: the isocrinid Chariocrinus sp. A, the pedinoid Hemipedina sp. A, the forcipulate asteroid Asteriidae sp. A, the ophiacanthid Ophiotreta sp. A and the ophiurid Ophiurinae sp. A. A depositional environment model reconciling autecologic, taphonomic and sedimentary evidence is presented. The Janusfjellet Lagerstätte was formed by a single, rapid burial event during a storm, which entombed together autochthonous asteroids and ophiuroids and allochthonous crinoids and echinoids on a dysoxic muddy seafloor. Comparable echinoderm material from the Boreal Late Jurassic—Early Cretaceous is scarce, outdated and usually poorly described and illustrated. The scarcity of reported occurrences probably results from a collector bias for rare complete specimens and does not reflect the true echinoderm composition of Mesozoic high-latitude communities.