Jim Gehling 'Palaeoecology and Environments of the Ediacara Biota Record in the Flinders Ranges'

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 08. 2024
  • Jim Gehling presents 'Palaeoecology and Environments of the Ediacara Biota Record in the Flinders Ranges' at the 2023 Adelaide Superbasin Mini-symposium
    Abstract:
    1. History and Discovery of the Ediacara Biota in the Flinders Ranges: Fossils of the Ediacara biota were first discovered by the late Dr Reginald Sprigg in circa 1946, within the shallow dipping Precambrian sandstones, below the copper-lead bearing basal Cambrian carbonates at north and south Ediacara hills, some 35 km west of the old township of Beltana. It took until 1957 before the late Prof. Martin Glaessner was convinced that these weird impressions in rippled sandstone were true fossils that were clearly older than strata bearing burrows and overlain by limestoes bearing “sponge-like” archaeocyath fossils, that had previously been considered, worldwide, to be the oldest known body fossils. By the 1970s, fossils of the “Ediacara fauna” had been discovered in England, Russia, Canada and China. Before and even after Ediacara was declared a “fossil reserve” fossils from the Ediacara hills were collected by museums and geology departments, world-wide.
    2. Ediacara fossil distribution: It was not until 1968, that Ediacaran fossils were discovered elsewhere, firstly at Brachina Gorge, and then traced from Devil’s Peak in the south, along the Heysen and Elder Ranges as far north as Leigh Creek, east of Blinman to Mulga View, and in the Amadeus Basin of the Northern Territory. Such fossil sites are generally protected by the difficult relief of the Rawnsley Quartzite as the virtual backbone formation of the Flinders Ranges.
    3. Nilpena: Ediacaran fossils were discovered by pastoralist, Ross Fargher, in the Mt Michael region, south of the Ediacara Hills. These fossils were identified by Pam Hazenhor and Richard Jenkins. The Farghers realized the value of keeping the fossil beds intact, on site, for both scientific and tourism purposes. I approached Ross Fargher in 2000 with the proposition that we study the Ediacara biota and avoid displacing any specimens in order to begin to understand the stratigraphic succession on site. Those fossil taxa, new to science, required as Museum “types” or name holders, are (necessarily) lodged in the SA Museum for global biostratigraphic purposes. This condition has been maintained by a ban on collection, other than for having type specimens in the SA Museum. The use of SA Museum collections, resin casts, photography and digital scanning, enables researchers to do comparative morphology and education.
    4. Distribution of Ediacara Biota in the Flinders Ranges: Two assemblages of Ediacara fossils have been discovered, Flinders Ranges wide, within the Rawnsley Quartzite, from the southern tip of Devil’s Peak east of Port Augusta, north to Leigh Creek and Copley, east to Balcanoona, and southeast to Reaphook Hill.
    5. Current Research: Based on a recent ARC grant, led by Prof. Diego Garcia Bellido (SA Museum and University of Adelaide), with Prof. Mary Droser (Riverside University, California), and I, managed by Trevor Ireland, two drill holes at Nilpena have produced the first complete core samples, through the Nilpena and Ediacara Sandstone Members of the Rawnsley Quartzite, north of the Nilpena Interpretation Centre. Description and analysis of these cores is a project for a new postdoctoral fellowship.
    Biography:
    • AO, BSc Hons & MSc (Adelaide), PhD (UCLA), DSc (Adelaide).
    • BSc Hons: University of Adelaide (1972).
    • Lecturer: University of South Australia and previous CAE’s (1973-1996).
    • MSc: Uni. Adel. 1982: “Sedimentology and stratigraphy of the Rawnsley Quartzite, Flinders Ranges”.
    • PhD: UCLA, California. 1992: Taphonomy of the Terminal Proterozoic Ediacara Biota, Sth. Aust.
    • Post Doc: Queens University, Ontario., on the stratigraphy and palaeobiology of the Ediacaran, Mistaken Point Formation in Newfoundland and Namibia. 1996-1998.
    • Senior Research Scientist, Palaeontology: South Australian Museum and Uni. Adelaide, Ediacaran and Cambrian palaeobiology and stratigraphy. (2003-2018).
    • Honorary Research Scientist: SA Museum. (2019 -).
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 4

  • @debrabaum2832
    @debrabaum2832 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thanks for a succinct and engaging explanation.

  • @wolfgangleyh2861
    @wolfgangleyh2861 Před rokem +1

    Excellent!

  • @jamiechippett1566
    @jamiechippett1566 Před rokem

    Hi if you get satellite map of South Australia on your phone or computer screen and then look closely with your 👁️👁️ s between mt Lyndhurst and Arkaroola in the Flinders ranges and zoom in up and down and focus clearly and you'll see a giant dinosaur foot claw with three huge toes and can even see toenails with giant snake wrapped around foot and eating one of its toes. Amazing gotta check this out and be blown away. Good luck and enjoy.👍🤠🇦🇺🦖🌏👀

  • @jamiechippett1566
    @jamiechippett1566 Před rokem

    Howdy if you get satellite map of Australia on your phone or computer screen and then turn satellite map of Australia upside down then look far right near coastal township of Karratha western Australia and then look closely with your 👁️👁️ s just above Karratha and zoom in up and down and focus clearly and you'll see two huge eyes on head with a huge bird beak type snout with wings spanning across continent and tail feathers ending up near Adelaide South Australia.check out all the dark red ocher section. A giant flying winged Phoenix type of creature spanning across two thirds of the nation and seems to be flying over and taking out dragon corner NSW,SA,Victoria border. WOW incredible gotta check this out and give it a crack. Remember to turn satellite map of Australia upside down to view correctly.good luck enjoy.👍🤠🇦🇺🐉🦅🌏👀