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Oldest known naiaditid bivalve from the high-latitude Late Devonian (Famennian) of South Africa offers clues to survival strategies following the Hangenberg mass extinction

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dc.contributor.author Scholze F.
dc.contributor.author Gess R.
dc.date.accessioned 2018-09-19T22:04:22Z
dc.date.available 2018-09-19T22:04:22Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 0031-0182
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/144662
dc.description.abstract © 2017 Elsevier B.V.A phased mass extinction event (which culminated in the Hangenberg event) marked the end of the Devonian period and had a significant impact on the palaeoecology and faunal diversity of vertebrate and invertebrate communities. In the present study the taxonomy of bivalves from the Waterloo Farm lagerstätte of the Upper Devonian, Famennian, Witpoort Formation (Witteberg Group, Cape Supergroup) was studied and compared with known Carboniferous examples. For the first time, Devonian bivalves of the Naiaditidae are described from a high-latitude palaeogeographic setting of Gondwana. The presented data suggests a high-latitude origin for post-Hangenberg event Naiaditidae, found at lower latitudes during the Early Carboniferous. This may have resulted from migration to lower latitudes in response to reduced global temperatures, which were associated with climatic perturbation at the time of the Hangenberg event, and which persisted into the Early Carboniferous. Taxa that were adapted to temperature ranges existing at high latitudes during the Late Devonian are likely to have followed these temperature ranges towards lower latitudes with decreasing global temperatures. Here they may have occupied free ecospace available in the aftermath of the Late Devonian extinction event.
dc.relation.ispartofseries Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
dc.subject Gondwana
dc.subject Naiadites
dc.subject Pteriomorphia
dc.subject Waterloo Farm
dc.subject Witpoort Formation
dc.subject Witteberg Group
dc.title Oldest known naiaditid bivalve from the high-latitude Late Devonian (Famennian) of South Africa offers clues to survival strategies following the Hangenberg mass extinction
dc.type Article
dc.relation.ispartofseries-volume 471
dc.collection Публикации сотрудников КФУ
dc.relation.startpage 31
dc.source.id SCOPUS00310182-2017-471-SID85011582060


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  • Публикации сотрудников КФУ Scopus [24551]
    Коллекция содержит публикации сотрудников Казанского федерального (до 2010 года Казанского государственного) университета, проиндексированные в БД Scopus, начиная с 1970г.

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