2021
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.11800
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Furongian (Jiangshanian) occurrences of radiodonts in Poland and South China and the fossil record of the Hurdiidae

Abstract: The Furongian period represents an important gap in the fossil record of most groups of non-biomineralizing organisms, owing to a scarcity of Konservat-Lagerstätten of that age. The most significant of these deposits, the Jiangshanian strata of the Sandu Formation near Guole Township (Guangxi, South China), have yielded a moderately abundant, but taxonomically diverse soft-bodied fossil assemblage, which provides rare insights into the evolution of marine life at that time. In this contribution, we report the … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…In Ramskoeldia platyacantha Cong et al, 2018 and a number of isolated body flaps from the Emu Bay Shale (Daley et al, 2013), the flaps are broad and roughly triangular, with a posterior margin essentially perpendicular to the trunk axis, with a wide anterior zone ornamented with strongly anterodistally directed strengthening rays. This occasionally leads to their confusion with the body flaps of peytoiids (Zhu et al, 2021). In peytoiids, flaps are generally short, either subcircular or triangular, and may be paired with dorsal flaps (Van Roy et al, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Ramskoeldia platyacantha Cong et al, 2018 and a number of isolated body flaps from the Emu Bay Shale (Daley et al, 2013), the flaps are broad and roughly triangular, with a posterior margin essentially perpendicular to the trunk axis, with a wide anterior zone ornamented with strongly anterodistally directed strengthening rays. This occasionally leads to their confusion with the body flaps of peytoiids (Zhu et al, 2021). In peytoiids, flaps are generally short, either subcircular or triangular, and may be paired with dorsal flaps (Van Roy et al, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Classification and terminology herein followed Kimmig and Pratt (2015), Lerosey-Aubril and Pates (2018), Lerosey-Aubril et al (2020a, b), Pates et al (2021a), Wu et al (2021a, b), and Zhu et al (2021).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The last Drumian localities are the Jince Formation and the Buchava Formation (Czech, Gondwana) with Hurdia (Chlupáč and Kordule, 2002;Mikuláš et al, 2012;Daley et al, 2013a;Wu et al, 2022). The only two hurdiids found in the Furongian, and the last of the Cambrian hurdiids, are from the Sandu Formation (Jiangshanian-South China) with an undetermined hurdiid and the Wiśniówka Formation (Jiangshanian-Baltica) with a Peytoia (Zhu et al, 2021;Wu et al, 2022). In the Ordovician, there is the Afon Gam (Tremadocian-Avalonia) that has a hurdiid specimen (Pates et al, 2020;Wu et al, 2022).…”
Section: Hurdiidaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hurdiidae are the most geographically widespread, being the only family found in the North China domain so far (Sun et al, 2020a;Wu et al, 2022). It is also the only family that lived in higher latitudes, in Baltica at a bit more than 30 °, and in Czech at around 60 °, during the Cambrian (Chlupáč and Kordule, 2002;Mikuláš et al, 2012;Zhu et al, 2021;Wu et al, 2022). During the Lower Ordovician, there were only hurdiids found, with fossils collected from high paleolatitudes of the southern hemisphere under the 60 °S latitude in the north margin of Gondwana and the south of Avalonia, both surrounding the Rheic ocean that was opening at that time (Van Roy et al, 2015;Pates et al, 2020;Zhu et al, 2021;Wu et al, 2022).…”
Section: Biogeographic and Temporal Distribution Of Radiodontamentioning
confidence: 99%