Data from: The ichnogenus Tubotomaculum: an enigmatic pellet-filled structure from Upper Cretaceous to Miocene deep-marine deposits of southern Spain
The trace-fossil name Tubotomaculum has been extensively used to refer to spindle-shaped pellet-filled tubes present in Upper Cretaceous to Miocene deep-marine deposits of the western Mediterranean region. However, it has never been formally diagnosed, and accordingly it was regarded as a nomen nudu...
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Zusammenfassung: | The trace-fossil name Tubotomaculum has been extensively used to refer to
spindle-shaped pellet-filled tubes present in Upper Cretaceous to Miocene
deep-marine deposits of the western Mediterranean region. However, it has
never been formally diagnosed, and accordingly it was regarded as a nomen
nudum. In this paper, we formally introduce the ichnogenus Tubotomaculum,
including the new ichnospecies Tubotomaculum mediterranensis. Bioglyphs,
represented by scratch traces that may be present on the basal and lateral
surfaces of the structure, suggesting production by crustaceans. The
functional meaning of these structures challenges the simple model of a
mining strategy. Instead, the storing of pellets to use them as a
bacteria-enriched resource during times when organic detritus was scarce
is suggested. The association with chemoautothrophic bacteria in modern
analogs of Tubotomaculum provides a crucial piece of evidence to support
the cache model. Integration of information from modern environments and
the fossil record points to a connection between Tubotomaculum, mud
volcanism, fluid venting, and hydrocarbon seeps. The presence of bioglyphs
suggests firmgrounds that may have resulted from bottom current scouring
of the sea sediment, leading to erosional exhumation of previously buried
compacted sediment, which was therefore available for colonization by the
infauna. However, an alternative scenario involves enriched fluids related
to mud-volcanism resulting in reducing conditions that favored carbonate
precipitation and nodule formation just a few centimeters below the
sediment-water interface. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7g902 |