An assemblage of terrestrial trace fossils is described from the Lower Old Red Sandstone of Pembrokeshire, southwest Wales, preserved in mainly fine-grained alluvial facies (channel and overbank sediments, deposited by predominantly ephemeral flows within a semi-arid environment), and thin tuffaceous horizons. The ichnofauna is dominated by an extensive, but low diversity Beaconites ichnocoenosis, comprising the meniscate backfilled burrow Beaconites barretti. Concentrations of these burrows (up to 30 per square metre) show normal size distributions, representing periodic colonization events (inferred as a response to seasonal desiccation) of subaerially exposed (partly indurated) sediments, probably by a population of eoarthropleurid myriapods penetrating the substrate to the level of the water table in order to aestivate and/or moult. Arthropod trackways also characterize an active arthropod epifauna of arachnids (Paleohelcura; first Welsh record) and myriapods (two forms of Diplichnites up to 160 mm wide) and Diplopodichnus. Additional ichnotaxa include arthropod foraging and resting traces (bilobed trails, Tumblagoodichnus and Selenichnites), 'scratch arrays' and worm burrows (Cochlichnus, and Palaeophycus) and faecal pellets all representative of the Scoyenia ichnofacies.
Alluvial deposits of the St Maughans Formation (Lower Old Red Sandstone, Early Devonian) of Tredomen Quarry, near Brecon, southeast Wales, have yielded the oldest known trails of swimming fish as well as body fossils of heterostracans and osteostracans, their inferred producers. Undichna unisulca comprises a single sinusoidal wave (of varying amplitude and wavelength) and is attributed to the caudal lobe or fin of a swimming heterostracan or osteostracan. Variation in the dimensions of U. unisulca trails, together with functional analysis of their inferred producers, suggests different fish sizes and swimming speeds. Undichna cf. simplicitas shows a more complex arrangement of intertwined waves and is interpreted as being produced by a combination of the caudal fin, anal spine and paired pelvic spines of an acanthodian. A new ichnotaxon, Undichna trisulcata isp. nov., consists of three isolated furrows arranged in parallel with associated pectoral fin imprints, and is interpreted as either the trail left by a 'cruising' cephalaspid, intermittently pushing off the substrate with its pectoral fins, or a trail made by a cephalaspid landing on the substrate. The presence of Undichna within these relatively proximal fluvial sediments (displaying no evidence of marine influence) is indicative of an in situ vertebrate freshwater community. Taphonomic constraints on Undichna preservation, in combination with sedimentological analysis, suggest weak bottom currents and/or rapid burial, post-trail formation. Arthropod trackways (Diplichnites gouldi Types A and B, Protichnites isp., and Palmichnium pottsae), a bilobed trail (cf. Cruziana), worm burrows (cf. Cochlichnus) and large meniscate backfilled burrows (Beaconites barretti) contribute invertebrate components to this ichnofauna. The association of Diplichnites trackways on the same surfaces as Undichna supports a semi-aquatic habit of their inferred myriapod producers.
Trace fossils from the Middle Devonian Caherbla Group of the Dingle Peninsula, southwest Ireland, record a diverse arthropod fauna inhabiting a hot-arid intracontinental rift setting. Aeolian dunefield and coeval fluvial interdune deposits interfinger spatially and temporally with alluvial fan sedimentary rocks. Three distinct trace fossil assemblages are recognized. The Taenidium-Scoyenia ichnocoenosis occurs in alluvial fan and fluvial channel deposits, and includes the large backfilled burrow Taenidium, interpreted as eoarthropleurid aestivation chambers. The Rusophycus-Protichnites ichnocoenosis, composed of arthropod trackways and surface pits, occurs in an interdune ponded area that was susceptible to ephemeral fluvial flow, with Rusophycus showing preferred orientation into the oncoming palaeocurrent. Both the TaenidiumScoyenia and Rusophycus-Protichnites ichnocoenoses are assignable to the globally recurring continental Scoyenia ichnofacies. They are clearly substrate-controlled and moisture-related due to the ephemeral nature of the fluvial system. The Palmichnium-Entradichnus ichnocoenosis occurs in aeolian dune deposits, and includes Palmichnium, attributed to large stylonurid eurypterids, and Diplichnites, attributed to eoarthropleurids. These trackways represent the activities of dune pioneers that left their fluvial habitat to forage for detritus. Interface burrows (Entradichnus, Palaeophycus) were also constructed by arthropods moving just under the sand surface and vertical burrows (Cylindricum, Pustulichnus) were made by arthropods digging downward. Trace preservation in the aeolian environment was probably enhanced by heavy nocturnal dew-fall or light rain. The Palmichnium-Entradichnus ichnocoenosis is assigned to the globally recurring aeolian OctopodichnusEntradichnus ichnofacies. This aeolian facies, and associated ichnofauna described herein, represents the oldest development of a unique erg system in the Old Red Sandstone (Devonian) of the southern British Isles, and one of the oldest and most diverse aeolian ichnofaunas to be reported worldwide.
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