“…The recent findings of ecologically complex metazoan communities in shallow settings have also challenged the view that all shallow settings experienced anoxia (Beatty, Zonneveld, & Henderson, ; Twitchett, Krystyn, Baud, Wheeley, & Richoz, ), and relatively diverse metazoan communities have also been associated with microbialite successions (Forel, Crasquin, Kershaw, & Collin, ; Foster, Lehrmann, Yu, Ji, & Martindale, ; Hautmann et al., ; Yang et al., ). This has led some workers to suggest that other environmental stressors, such as high temperatures, are more significant factors than anoxia for extinctions in shallow settings (Foster, Lehrmann, et al., ; Song et al., ). Where microbialite successions had developed, putative coccoid fossils and lipid biomarker evidence suggest that the microbialites were produced by cyanobacterial mats (Heindel et al., ; Wu et al., ; Xie et al., ).…”