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Radiometric Dating of Ignimbrite from Inner Mongolia Provides no Indication of a Post‐Middle Jurassic Age for the Daohugou Beds
Author(s) -
KeQin GAO,
Dong REN
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
acta geologica sinica ‐ english edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.444
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1755-6724
pISSN - 1000-9515
DOI - 10.1111/j.1755-6724.2006.tb00793.x
Subject(s) - radiometric dating , paleontology , geology , cretaceous , inner mongolia , biostratigraphy , sequence (biology) , china , archaeology , geography , biology , genetics
Lacustrine deposits exposed at Daohugou, Inner Mongolia, China, have yielded superbly preserved vertebrate fossils. The fossil beds were first misinterpreted as of Early Cretaceous age, based on alleged occurrences of key fossils of the Jehol Biota. Compelling evidence revealed by more rigorous research involving regional biostratigraphy, radiometric dating, and paleontology supports the Middle Jurassic age of the fossil beds. Despite the awesome evidence for the Middle Jurassic age of the Daohugou beds, the age dispute has been resurrected recently by invoking an overturned stratigraphic sequence. A careful review of the data, however, found no evidence that this sequence has been overturned. In addition, many of the assumptions, on which the conjecture of the fossil beds being post‐Middle Jurassic is imprudently based, are self‐contradictory or otherwise misleading. Thus, the post‐Middle Jurassic age of the Daohugou beds as an unfounded conclusion can readily be dismissed