Morphometric analysis of Chattian–Early Aquitanian Miogypsinidae from Iraq and their stratigraphic distribution in the Arabian Tethys
A biometric study of Chattian–Early Aquitanian taxa from shallow marine transgressive carbonate deposits in the Oligo-Miocene sedimentary basin of Kirkuk, Iraq, provides new insight into their taxonomy, stratigraphy, and palaeobiogeography. Their evolution is based on a distinct change in general ne...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Arabian journal of geosciences 2017-12, Vol.10 (24), p.1-17, Article 542 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A biometric study of Chattian–Early Aquitanian taxa from shallow marine transgressive carbonate deposits in the Oligo-Miocene sedimentary basin of Kirkuk, Iraq, provides new insight into their taxonomy, stratigraphy, and palaeobiogeography. Their evolution is based on a distinct change in general nepiont morphology, which agrees with the principle of nepionic acceleration. Each
Miogypsinoides
group is represented by more than one lineage. We demonstrate for the first time the parallel evolution of
Miogypsina
and
Miogypsinoides
in the late Chattian of north-eastern Iraq. We assign specimens into two lineage groups:
Miogypsinoides formosensis
of the Late Chattian, with smaller embryon and longer post-embryonic spirals, which evolved into
Miogypsinoides bantamensis
of the Early Aquitanian; and
Miogypsinoides sivasensis
, with shorter spirals and larger embryon, originally found in late Chattian to Early Aquitanian deposits. This group evolved into large embryon and longer post-embryonic spiral specimens of the upper Azkand Formation, assigned to
Miogypsinoides dehaartii
and associated with
Miogypsina gunteri-basraensis
and
M. gunteri
due to their peculiar morphological features.
Miogypsina
specimens are related to
Miogypsina basraensis
, which have much smaller embryon dimensions. This part of the sequence corresponds to
Ms. formosensis
and is overlain by a
Miogypsina
ex. interc
. gunteri
-
basraensis
succession, a composite species that evolved to
Miogypsina gunteri
, the most common Miogypsinids taxon in the carbonate upper Azkand Formation, thereby acting as a reference for the evolution of this taxon and its transition to
M.
ex. interc
. tani-gunteri
.
Miogypsinoides
evolution in the Iraqi sedimentary basin is similar to Western Tethys evolution yet differs from Indo-Pacific evolution. |
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ISSN: | 1866-7511 1866-7538 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12517-017-3311-7 |