42The cosmopolitan biogeography of many fish genera strongly indicates marine-based 43 dispersal, while strontium isotopic data suggest these same fish were exposed, at times, to ). An intriguing characteristic of this episode was the apparent widespread adoption of 68 a euryhaline habit amongst organisms as diverse as microconchids, ostracodes, xiphosurans 69 and fish (Anderson and Shuster 2003; Carpenter et al. 2011; Bennett et al. 2012; Gierlowski-70 Kordesch and Cassle 2015). Euryhaline animals are relatively rare in modern ecosystems 71 (Edwards and Marshall 2013; McCormick et al. 2013), and their dominance in Carboniferous 72 times suggests marine communities converged on similar osmoregulatory strategies in order 73 to utilise empty non-marine coastal ecospace for feeding and breeding (Williams et al. 2006; 74 Carpenter et al. 2014), prior to the widespread colonisation of freshwater tracts further inland. 75The mid-Carboniferous diversification event coincided with a sharp growth of 76Gondwanan ice sheets and the onset of significant Milankovitch-driven glacio-eustatic 86Much recent attention has been given to the apparent dominance of a euryhaline mode 87 of life amongst mid-Carboniferous fish communities (Schultze 2009; Carpenter et al. 2011 Carpenter et al. , 88 2014Carpenter et al. , 2015. However, consensus regarding ecology is currently lacking, with some 89 researchers arguing on palaeogeographic, sedimentological and geochemical grounds that fish 90 taxa, especially xenacanthid sharks (Masson and Rust 1984), may have been obligate 91 freshwater organisms (Śtamberg and Zajíc 2008;Fischer et al. 2011 Fischer et al. , 2013 Montañez and 92 Cecil 2013). In this paper, we describe a new fish fauna from the Carboniferous 93 (Pennsylvanian) of New Brunswick, Canada (Fig. 1A), and demonstrate -based on 94 independent indicators of palaeo-salinity -that fish taxa existed across a brackish to marine 95 gradient, and that communities must therefore have been euryhaline. We discuss how these 96 new findings improve understanding of Carboniferous fish ecology and the mid- 97Carboniferous diversification of non-marine ecosystems in particular. The fish fossils reported here were obtained from opencast mine sites (now reclaimed) within 102 the Minto Coalfield, Queens County, New Brunswick, Canada (Fig. 1A-C 98 +REVISE FOR TETRAPOD STORY 123Extensive borehole arrays indicate that this basal unconformity is marked by a major silcrete 124 paleosol, up to 9 m thick in places (Sullivan 1981; St Peter 2000), which mantles the 125 basement complex and indicates seasonally-dry climate weathering over the preceding (Fig. 3A), implying that the basin deepened towards the 137 southwest, and sediment progressively onlapped towards the northeast; and (2) NE-SW- Coal, fine towards the southwest (Fig. 3B) and suggest sediment transport in that direction. 140We note, however, that this inferred palaeoflow direction opposes regional patterns of Geological Surveys Branch, Fredericton (Fig. 4A). 154The low...
Ichthyerpeton bradleyae (Huxley in Wright and Huxley, 1866) is one of the seven tetrapods originally described by Huxley from the Jarrow Assemblage (Pennsylvanian, Langsettian Regional Substage equated with the Bashkirian International Stage) in south-eastern Ireland. The holotype, one of only two specimens considered to represent the taxon, consists of the postcranial skeleton, which has been highly compressed and has undergone extensive replacement of bone by carbonaceous material. The holotype is studied using microcomputed tomography, which reveals that the vertebral column has at least 25 diplospondylous vertebrae with cylindrical centra. Neural arches and a haemal arch are described for the first time. Neural arches in the caudal region are paired and neural spines only contact one another dorsally. The hemal arch is fused and wraps around the ventral margin of the centrum. A stout femur and tibia are described. The morphology of the femur is unique for early tetrapods, with fibular and tibial condyles of similar length and lacking an adductor crest. The morphology of the femur, and its length relative to the tibia, suggests that the holotype of I. bradleyae preserves an immature individual. The tibia is a flat bone characteristic of stem tetrapods. Phalanges from the right and left pes are present. Because the phalanges are disarticulated, a phalangeal count cannot be determined. Despite the new anatomical information, the systematic position of I. bradleyae is still difficult to establish; however, it does not belong within the colosteids, temnospondyls, or embolomeres, to which it has previously been assigned.
F I G . 1 . Keraterpeton galvani TCD.38352 from the Jarrow assemblage. Scale bar represents 10 mm. Photograph kindly provided by Maria McNamara.
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