Open Access
Exceptionally preserved arthropodan microfossils from the M iddle O rdovician W inneshiek L agerstätte, I owa, USA
Author(s) -
Nowak Hendrik,
Harvey Thomas H. P.,
Liu Huaibao P.,
McKay Robert M.,
Servais Thomas
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
lethaia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.926
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1502-3931
pISSN - 0024-1164
DOI - 10.1111/let.12236
Subject(s) - taphonomy , lagerstätte , paleontology , ordovician , arthropod , trace fossil , geology , fauna , paleoecology , ecology , biology
The Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) Winneshiek Shale from Winneshiek County, Iowa, USA , hosts a Konservat‐Lagerstätte that has yielded a diverse fauna including soft‐bodied fossils. The shale is rich in organic content; in particular, algal material and fragmentary cuticular remains. Palynological acid treatment alongside modified, low‐manipulation processing enables the extraction of these ‘small carbonaceous fossils’ ( SCF s) from the matrix, allowing a more detailed view of their morphology. Together these methods have yielded exceptionally well‐preserved crustacean‐type setae and a population of distinctive microfossils which we identify as the feeding appendages of a small‐bodied arthropod. We present two hypotheses for their identity: as either pancrustacean mandibles, or euchelicerate coxae. Overall, the detailed topological similarities and implied functional equivalence to the coxae of xiphosurid chelicerates, in particular, outweigh the resemblance to certain branchiopodan and hexapodan mandibles. In turn, however, the restricted size range and lack of associated limb or carapace fragments pose a taphonomic conundrum, suggesting an extreme biostratinomic bias. By comparison with previously described arthropodan SCF s from the Cambrian of Canada, the Winneshiek fossils extend the geographic, palaeoenvironmental and temporal range of this taphonomic window and provide a complementary tool for reconstructing the diversity and ecology of the Winneshiek biota.