Data from: A quantitative and statistical discrimination of morphotaxa within the Ediacaran genus Palaeopascichnus

The Palaeopascichnida are a relatively understudied component of the Ediacaran biota. The eponymous Palaeopascichnus delicatus is comprised of serially arranged, mm-scale allantoid chambers that have variously been interpreted as evidence of movement, feeding traces, and body fossils of various affi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hawco, Jessica, Kenchington, Charlotte, McIlroy, Duncan
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5015743
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.jq7460s
Description
Summary:The Palaeopascichnida are a relatively understudied component of the Ediacaran biota. The eponymous Palaeopascichnus delicatus is comprised of serially arranged, mm-scale allantoid chambers that have variously been interpreted as evidence of movement, feeding traces, and body fossils of various affinities. Palaeopascichnus has most recently been compared to the deep-marine Xenophyophora, an extant group of large benthic protists that is characterized by large size and possession of stercomata within their cells. The construction and growth of the palaeopascichnids, and its implications for their phylogenetic affinity, are assessed using material from the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland, Canada. The application of quantitative morphological analysis to the study of over ninety well-preserved specimens of Palaeopascichnus demonstrates considerable variation in chamber shape and size, and in behaviour along the chamber series. The combination of morphometric and multivariate statistical analysis allows the recognition of natural groups within the dataset, thereby demonstrating variability within and between morphospecies. Morphological comparisons of fossil palaeopascichnids with extant protistan taxa support the proposed protistan affinity of Palaeopascichnus, allowing further resolution regarding the diversity and disparity within this prominent element of the later Ediacaran biotas of Gondwana and Baltica. Spreadsheet of all data_Hawco et al.All specimens, measurements, characters used in study and the full results of the cluster assignments.total_data_spreadsheet_Hawco et al.xlsxInterpretations of all cluster analyses_Hawco et al.Breakdown of how we interpreted the schematics for each cluster, as well as showing the averages for each character in each cluster for all iterationsInterpretations of cluster analyses_Hawco et al.xlsxSupplementary_information_Hawco_et_alSupplementary information file including results for the iteration where the branching palaeopascichnus specimens are treated separately, full ...