Fossil Record 15(2): 61-75, doi: 10.1002/mmng.201200004
Palaeogeography and palaeoecology of early Floian (Early Ordovician) cephalopods from the Upper Fezouata Formation, Anti-Atlas, Morocco
B. Kröger‡,
B. Lefebvre§‡ Björn Kröger, Museum für Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universität, Invalidenstraße 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany§ Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon “Terre, Planètes et Environnement”, UMR CNRS 5276, Université Lyon 1 & ENS-Lyon, Géode, 2 rue Raphaël Dubois, 69622 Villeurbanne cedex, France
© B. Kröger, B. Lefebvre. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Citation:
Kröger B, Lefebvre B (2012) Palaeogeography and palaeoecology of early Floian (Early Ordovician) cephalopods from the Upper Fezouata Formation, Anti-Atlas, Morocco. Fossil Record 15(2): 61-75. https://doi.org/10.1002/mmng.201200004 |  |
AbstractIn the central Anti-Atlas (Morocco), the Early Ordovician succession consists of about 1000 m of fossiliferous argillites and siltstones. The Upper Fezouata Formation (Floian) contains a comparatively rich and abundant cephalopod association. A small collection of these cephalopods is described herein for the first time. The cephalopods are interpreted as autochthonous or parautochthonous, representing a fauna, which originally lived nektobenthically in the open water above the sediments or related to the sea bottom. The cephalopod associations of the Upper Fezouata Formation are similar to other contemporaneous assemblages known from higher palaeolatitudes and associated with deeper depositional settings and in siliciclastically dominated deposits. They are composed almost exclusively of slender orthocones, in this case predominantly of
Destombesiceras zagorense n. gen., n. sp., which is interpreted as an early discosorid.
Bathmoceras australe Teichert, 1939 and
Bathmoceras taichoutense n. sp. from the Upper Fezouata Formation are at present the earliest unambiguous occurrences of bathmocerid cephalopods. Epizoans on the shell of a specimen of
Rioceras are the earliest evidence of bryozoans growing as potential hitchhikers on cephalopod shells, indicating an early exploitation of a pseudoplanktonic lifestyle in this phylum.
doi:
10.1002/mmng.201200004