IDEAN   23403
INSTITUTO DE ESTUDIOS ANDINOS "DON PABLO GROEBER"
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
ENCRUSTATION IN NAUTILIDS: A CASE STUDY IN THE CRETACEOUS SPECIES CYMATOCERAS PERSTRIATUM, NEUQUÉN BASIN, ARGENTINA
Autor/es:
LUCI, L. & CICHOWOLSKI, M.
Revista:
PALAIOS
Editorial:
SEPM-SOC SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Referencias:
Lugar: Lawrence; Año: 2014 vol. 29 p. 101 - 120
ISSN:
0883-1351
Resumen:
Despite many advances in the study of the paleoecology of nautiloids and amonoids, there is still much ground to cover. Study of their encrusters provides information on their  paleoecology and taphonomy. In this work the encrusting fauna of abundant material of the nautilid Cymatoceras perstriatum (Steuer) is statistically and taxonomically analyzed in order to infer paleoecological and  taphonomic features of the fossil organism. The available material of C. perstriatum consists mainly of phragmocone fragments, with rare cases in which the body chamber was preserved. Nine encrusting taxa, evenly distributed across the nautilid shell (cementing bivalves, serpulids, sabellids, cyclostome bryozoans and  agglutinated foraminifers) were observed in and on C. perstriatum. Of these taxa, oysters are dominant. Encrusters are abundant, with a mean of 12 encrusters per shell. Internal  encrustation is common, especially inside the body chamber.  The orientation of encrusters is variable. Intensity of encrustation varies, with some shells heavily colonized while others  remained clean. The encrusting fauna is interpreted as mostly post mortem. Encrusters are distributed across the shell in a uniform way, lack particular orientation, and they are common on the inside of the Body chamber suggesting that encrustation occurred both  during necroplanktonic drift and as the shell rested on the sea bottom. A few encrusters were trapped between shell whorls, indicating that less extensive in vivo encrustation took  place.  Some differences in encrustation parameters were found among localities, corresponding to minor paleoenvironmental differences. Variable encrustation intensity  suggests moderate to prolonged duration of exposure of the shells. However those collected from an exceptional concentration at the El Salado locality were probably buried shortly  after death.