Emporia ESIRC

Fauna and Depositional Environment of a Late Pennsylvanian Vertebrate Fossil Locality in Southeastern Kansas

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dc.contributor.author McElroy, Aleksander
dc.date.accessioned 2016-05-03T19:37:38Z
dc.date.available 2016-05-03T19:37:38Z
dc.date.created April 1, 2016 en_US
dc.date.issued 2016-05-03
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3524
dc.description.abstract A vertebrate fossil locality in Greenwood County, Kansas, near the town of Toronto, in the Snyderville (Shale) member of the Oread (Limestone) Formation (Late Pennsylvanian, Virgilian) contains an abundance of disarticulated fossils weathering out of a paleosol. This new locality is stratigraphically between the previously-described Late Pennsylvanian Hamilton (Virgilian) and Garnett (Missourian) fossil localities, thus helping to fill the temporal gap between these two. The paleosol contains 11 paleohorizons of alternating grey and red clays capped by thin weathered sandstone blocks with micro-crossbedding, which is consistent with channel sand deposits. Over 2000 fossils were collected, all of which were disarticulated, complicating identification. Identified taxa include the xenacanth shark Orthacanthus, the lungfish Sagenodus c.f. S. Serratus, the temnospondyl amphibians, embolomerous and diadectid reptiliomorphs, and synapsid amniotes. So far, no fossil invertebrates or plants have been discovered. The fossil fish and the amphibians indicate the nearby presence of fresh water. This, together with the presence of the weathered sandstone blocks, suggests that the depositional environment was a fluvial floodplain. The remains were probably first disarticulated within the stream, and then the smaller bones, teeth, and spines were sorted while in the stream and/or during a flood event. They could then have been deposited in a depression in the landscape, such as a swale. The Toronto locality has faunal similarities to both the Hamilton Quarry and Garnett fossil localities. However, unlike both of these other localities, which have articulated specimens, this locality only has disarticulated specimens. Additionally, while the other two localities also each has invertebrates and flora, the Toronto locality has only vertebrates. The Garnett locality was an estuarine setting, whereas the Hamilton Quarry fossils were all deposited within a fluvial channel, and the Toronto locality was a floodplain that shows no direct marine influence en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.subject Earth Science en_US
dc.subject Geology en_US
dc.subject Sedimentology en_US
dc.subject Paleontology en_US
dc.subject Stratigraphy en_US
dc.title Fauna and Depositional Environment of a Late Pennsylvanian Vertebrate Fossil Locality in Southeastern Kansas en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
dc.college las en_US
dc.advisor Michael Morales en_US
dc.department physical sciences en_US

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