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Constraining the biotic transitions across the end‐Ordovician mass extinction in South China: Bio‐ and chemostratigraphy of the Wulipo Formation in the Meitan area of northern Guizhou
Author(s) -
Wang Guangxu,
Wei Xin,
Luan Xiaocong,
Wu Rongchang,
Percival Ian G.,
Zhan Renbin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
geological journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.721
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1099-1034
pISSN - 0072-1050
DOI - 10.1002/gj.3816
Subject(s) - ordovician , extinction event , paleontology , chemostratigraphy , geology , extinction (optical mineralogy) , benthic zone , fauna , excursion , biostratigraphy , isotopes of carbon , ecology , oceanography , total organic carbon , population , biological dispersal , demography , sociology , biology , political science , law
The richly fossiliferous succession of the Wulipo Formation in the Huangjiaba area near Meitan in northern Guizhou, SW China, represents one of the very rare records of shelly fauna across the Ordovician and Silurian transition worldwide. This area is therefore crucial for understanding the pattern and dynamics of the end‐Ordovician mass extinction (EOME). Historically, the Wulipo Formation was dated as middle Rhuddanian (early Silurian). However, its fauna shows a close affinity with Transitional Benthic Fauna 3 (TBF 3), now known to be confined within the late Hirnantian (latest Ordovician) in well‐constrained successions globally. Here we present for the first time, chemostratigraphic data from the Wulipo Formation which confirm the presence of the Hirnantian Isotope Carbon Excursion. A critical review of faunal evidence further indicates a late Hirnantian age for this formation, and thus the hitherto only known anomalous TBF 3 record documented from South China is convincingly redated. The important implication is that the substantial biotic recovery after the EOME commenced globally at the very beginning of the Silurian with an overall amelioration of physical conditions. The new findings also suggest a much wider distribution of postglacial warm‐water benthic faunas on the Yangtze Platform during the late Hirnantian than previously envisaged.