Cambrian Evolutionary Radiation: Context, Correlation, and Chronostratigraphy--Overcoming Deficiencies of the First Appearance Datum (FAD) Concept

TitleCambrian Evolutionary Radiation: Context, Correlation, and Chronostratigraphy--Overcoming Deficiencies of the First Appearance Datum (FAD) Concept
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsLanding, E, Geyer, G, Brasier, MD, Bowring, SA
JournalEarth-Science Reviews
Volume123
Pagination133-172
KeywordsFAD concept, Global correlation, Laolinian Stage, Lenaldanian Series, Lower Cambrian, Zhurinskyan Stage
Abstract

Use of the first appearance datum (FAD) of a fossil to define a global chronostratigraphic unit's base can lead to intractable correlation and stability problems. FADs are diachronous—they reflect species' evolutionary history, dispersal, biofacies, preservation, collection, and taxonomy. The Cambrian Evolutionary Radiation is characterised by diachronous FADs, biofacies controls, and provincialism of taxa and ecological communities that confound a stable Lower Cambrian chronostratigraphy. Cambrian series and stage definitions require greater attention to assemblage zone successions and non-biostratigraphic, particularly carbon isotope, correlation techniques such as those that define the Ediacaran System base. A redefined, basal Cambrian Trichophycus pedum Assemblage Zone lies above the highest Ediacaran-type biotas (vendobionts, putative metazoans, and calcareous problematica such as Cloudina) and the basal Asteridium tornatum–Comasphaeridium velvetum Zone (acritarchs). This definition and the likely close correspondence of evolutionary origin and local FAD of T. pedum preserves the Fortune Head, Newfoundland, GSSP of the Cambrian base and allows the presence of sub-Cambrian, branched ichnofossils. The sub-Tommotian-equivalent base of Stage 2 (a suggested “Laolinian Stage”) should be defined by the I′/L4/ZHUCE δ13C positive peak, bracketed by the lower ranges of Watsonella crosbyi and Aldanella attleborensis (molluscs) and the Skiagia ornata–Fimbrioglomerella membranacea Zone (acritarchs). The W. crosbyi and A. attleborensis FADs cannot define a Stage 2 base as they are diachronous even in the Newfoundland “type” W. crosbyi Zone. The Series 2 base cannot be based on a species' FAD owing to the provincialism of skeletalised metazoans in the Terreneuvian–Series 2 boundary interval and global heterochrony of the oldest trilobites. A Series 2 and Stage 3 (a suggested “Lenaldanian Series” and “Zhurinskyan Stage,” new) GSSP base is proposed at the Siberian lower Atdabanian δ13C IV peak—which correlates into South China, Avalonia, and Morocco and assigns the oldest trilobites to the terminal Terreneuvian Series.

URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.03.008
DOI10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.03.008