Pennsylvanian biota of the Sierra Agua Verde, Sonora, Mexico: biostratigraphic and paleogeographic considerations

Autores/as

  • Blanca E. Buitrón-Sánchez
  • Omar Chacón-Wences
  • Daniel Vachard
  • Juan José Palafox-Reyes
  • José Carlos Jiménez-López
  • Francisco Sour-Tovar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmb.2015.04.006

Palabras clave:

Carboniferous, NW Sonora, Pennsylvanian, Upper Paleozoic

Resumen

The marine biota from the middle Pennsylvanian outcrops of the Sierra Agua Verde, located in mid-eastern Sonora, consists of phylloid algae of the genera Komia and Eugonophyllum and a number of invertebrates. These species include bioaccumulations of chaetetids; brachiopods of the genera Dielasma sp., Reticulariina sp., Anthracospirifer sp., Antiquatonia sp.; bryozoans of the genus Thamniscus; tabulate corals such as
Syringopora and solitary corals such as Zaphrentis; fusulinid foraminifera such as Pseudostaffella, Eoshubertella texana, Fusulinella llanoensis, and Zellerella; gastropods of the genus Euomphalus and Donaldina; and the crinoid genera Cyclocaudex, Cyclocrista, Heterosteleschus, Lamprosterigma, Mooreanteris, Pentagonopternix, Preptopremium, Cycloscaspus, and Pentaridica. The material was collected from outcrops in the first 512m of the La Joya Formation, and their sediments have a total thickness of 780m and consist of limestone interbedded with calcareous mudstone and sandstone lenses. The age of the middle Pennsylvanian strata corresponds to that of the Atokan stage (311 million years). The species assemblages are typical of a shallow tropical marine benthos. The analysis of the distribution of the species allowed for the determination of their
paleogeographic relationships with the components of the biota of the Carboniferous strata of Texas and Kansas in the United States of America, which belong to the province of the North American Craton.

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