ICS SubcommReport2009
ICS SubcommReport2009
ICS SubcommReport2009
Chair
Prof. Stanley FINNEY, Department of Geological Sciences, California State University at Long Beach, Long Beach, CA 90840, USA
TEL: 1-562-985-8637 (office); FAX: 1-562-985-8638; E-mail: scfinney@csulb.edu
Vice Chair
Prof. Shanchi PENG, Nanjing Institute of Geology & Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 39 East Beijing St., Nanjing 210008, China
TEL and FAX: 86-25-8328 2135; E-mail: scpeng@nigpas.ac.cn
Secretary General
Dr. Paul R. BOWN, Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
TEL: 44-0-20-7504-2431 office; FAX 44-0-20-7388-7614; E-mail: p.bown@ucl.ac.uk
December 2009
1
SUBCOMMISSION ON QUATERNARY STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
3. ORGANISATION
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3a. Nominated Officers for 2008-2010:
Three GSSP Working Groups are established and all continue to have fully functioning formal
working groups (see below for membership lists). An additional working group on the
Anthropocene was established during the year.
The Working Group on the Lower/Middle Pleistocene Subseries boundary currently comprises
11 members. It is chaired by Professor B. Pillans (ANU). Work has continued this year on the
boundary to be defined in a marine section at a point “close to” the Matuyama/Brunhes
boundary, three candidate GSSPs were to be evaluated: two in southern Italy (Montalbano Jonico
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section and Valle di Manche section), and a third in Japan (Chiba section). Following last year’s
withdrawl of the Montalbano Jonico section as a candidate GSSP, investigations have continued
on the choice of GSSP between the two remaining candidate sections; either the Valle di Manche
section (Italy) and the Chiba section (Japan). The group had planned to have the GSSP decision
made, by voting, earlier this year. However, this process was not completed, with some members
asking for further information on the two candidate sections before making a decision.
Japanese and Italian colleagues have been asked to prepare final cases for their respective
candidate sections. Once these are received, a summary document will be prepared, outlining
the relative merits and weaknesses of each candidate section, with a view to reaching a decision
early in 2010. The GSSP proposal is likely to require linkage with a proposed GSSP for the base
of a ‘standard stage’ for the period – provisionally termed the Ionian.
The Working Group on the Middle/Upper Pleistocene Subseries boundary has continued
throughout the year under the chairmanship of Professor T.Litt (Bonn). The aim was to find an
agreement about the selection of a geological section for a potential boundary stratotype
(GSSP).
A GSSP proposal defining the Middle/Upper (Late) Pleistocene boundary was already submitted
last year. It was proposed that a high-resolution core sequence from the Amsterdam Terminal
(the Eemian Stage parastratotype) should constitute the Global Stratotype Section and Point
(GSSP) for the base of the Upper (Late) Pleistocene Subseries (Quaternary System/Period). The
International Commission of Stratigraphy has approved this GSSP proposal. The voting by the
Quaternary Subcommission was 100% “Yes” (18 voting). The votes received from the ICS Full
Commission were 10 “Yes”(71%), and 4 “No”. The request for IUGS ratification of this GSSP
definition was considered by the IUGS Executive Committee, however especially based on
procedural matters, protocol and principle, the IUGS EC did not ratify this proposal as presented
by the SQS/ICS. We were encouraged to prepare a revised version, which is in preparation (with
special emphasis on stage/age definition). The resubmission is planned for 2010.
The Holocene working group will remain constituted to examine the potential utility of possible
formal subdivision of the series.
The Anthropocene Working Group, chaired by Dr J.Zalasiewicz (Leicester) was created in the
summer of 2009, following the proposal of the term Anthropocene by Crutzen (2002), its
subsequent analysis by the Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London
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(Zalasiewicz et al. 2008) and a session convened at the 2008 Fall Meeting of the American
Geophysical Union on this theme.
The purpose of the Working Group is to examine the term and its underlying stratigraphic basis
in more detail and to consider, and subsequently make recommendations on, its possible
formalization.
Activities this year have included the submission to (and acceptance by) the Royal Society of
London of a special volume of the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London devoted to this
theme. This will include papers on historical perspectives, stratigraphic context, sedimentation,
climate, land cover, ocean chemistry, cryosphere, biodiversity, deep time analogues and societal
response. Publication will likely be in late 2010 or early 2011. In addition, invited papers on the
Anthropocene have been submitted to the Geological Time Scale 2010 volume being compiled
(Gradstein et al.) and to Environmental Science and Technology.
The aim for the forthcoming year is to continue setting up the Working Group, to provide
appropriate cover of disciplines in both ‘deep time’ stratigraphy (to include the Holocene) and in
contemporary environmental phenomena, and also to provide appropriate global representation;
to establish and discuss methodologies to enable realistic comparison of present and deep time
processes; and to make initial comparisons of the scale of contemporary change relative to
changes see in the geological record.
In addition to the Working Group activities noted above, the Subcommission website continues
to be expanded at: http://www.quaternary.stratigraphy.org.uk This site is used as the main line
of communication for the Subcommission. It continues to be sponsored by the Journal of
Quaternary Science and Boreas (published by Wiley-Blackwell publishers). The pages are
maintained by Phil Gibbard.
This has been an historic year for the SQS; the dispute over the definition of the basal
Quaternary/Pleistocene boundary which began in 2001, was finally brought to a close. The chair
and colleagues (jointly from INQUA and SQS) were invited by the incoming ICS chair Professor
Finney to make a proposal and presentation at a specially convened discussion session at the
Oslo International Geological Congress in August. This discussion arises from the demand by
IUGS executive that the topic must be discussed in open session to allow both parties, for and
against, to air their opinions. Following this session a formal proposal was prepared jointly by
SQS and INQUA colleagues that formally requests that the base of the Quaternary/Pleistocene
be defined at the base of the Gelasian Stage at c. 2.558 Ma. The results of this voting round (the
third in the last 3 years), which is currently in progress, will be available in the coming year.
In connection with the voting on the definition of the Quaternary three papers have been published:
Gibbard, P. & Head, M.J. 2009 The definition of the Quaternary System/Period and the Pleistocene
Series/Epoch. Quaternaire 20, 125-133.
Gibbard, P.L. & Head, M.J. 2009 IUGS ratification of the Quaternary System/Period and the Pleistocene
Series/Epoch with a base at 2.58 Ma. Quaternaire 20, 271-272 (in press).
Gibbard, P. Head, M.J., Walker, M.J.C. & The Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy 2009 Formal
ratification of the Quaternary System/Period and the Pleistocene Series/Epoch with a base at 2.58 Ma.
Journal of Quaternary Science, DOI: 10.1002/jqs.1338 (in press).
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6. SUMMARY OF EXPENDITURE IN 2009:
TOTAL £225.00
All three working groups will continue to function in 2010. The Working Group on the
Pleistocene-Holocene Boundary will change focus to examine the possibility of defining formal
subdivisions for the Holocene. Other groups will also continue their deliberations. The
additional working group is now being established by Dr J. Zalasiewicz on the definition and
status of the term Anthropocene. At the time of writing he hs already established a working-
group membership of 10 colleagues. As noted above, a fifth working group is being planned.
This group will be charged with the task of assessing the case for formal definition of short-time
divisions of the Quaternary. Professor Martin Head (Brock University, St.Catherines) has
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already agreed to convene this group and some workers have already expressed an interest in
joining the group.
Apart for on-going sponsorship of the website, financial support will be sought by individual
members from their grant-awarding bodies for specific projects, such as research projects and
meetings, but support has also been received from INQUA through continued interaction with
the INQUA Commission on Stratigraphy and Geochronology.
The Science plan to be completed before the year 2010 will be as follows:
a. Formalisation of Global Stratotype section and Points (GSSP) for the Lower/Middle and for
the Middle/Upper subseries/subepoch boundaries of the Pleistocene Series/Epoch. The formal
nomenclature for the subseries/subepoch divisions of the Pleistocene will be Lower/Early,
Middle/Mid, and Upper/Late.
b. No international stage-level subdivisions for the Pleistocene or Holocene will be formalised.
c. The voting members, and make-up of each GSSP task group, should strive to provide a
uniform coverage of terrestrial, shallow-marine and pelagic settings with global coverage.
d. As noted above, the Subcommission will investigate the need and potential value in
establishing the term Anthropocene for the last 200 yr or so, i.e. the period during which human
modification of natural systems has become predominant.
e. As noted above, a fifth working group will assess the case for formal definition of short-time
divisions of the Quaternary.
f. Progress and discussions within the Subcommission are summarised and communicated
through the SQS website.
Together the officers “will compile a list of active persons willing to act as voting members.
The latter will consist of individuals who will represent the widest-possible range of Quaternary
stratigraphical expertise and will include no more than two persons from each geographical
region”. The full list is given below.
PL GIBBARD
Cambridge
6.11.09
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APPENDIX [Names and Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members)
Nominated officers
2nd Vice-Chair: Dr. John van Couvering (resigned September 2009) – this officer will not be
replaced.
American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79 St., New York, NY 10024 USA
Tel: 212-769-5657; Fax: 212-769-5653
E-mail: vanc@amnh.org
Dr Brent Alloway
Aurelian Resources Inc.
1100 - 350 Bay St.
Toronto, Ontario
M5H 2S6, Canada
Phone: +1 416-868-9100
Fax: : +1 416-868-1807
E-mail: balloway@aurelian.ca
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P O Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
[Courier address: Gracefield Research Centre
69 Gracefield Road, Lower Hutt, New Zealand]
Direct phone: +64-4-570 4847
Fax: +64-4-570 4600
E-mail: a.beu@gns.cri.nz
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Fax. +86 10 62052184/62010846
email:liujq@mail.igcas.ac.cn/liujiaqi2001@ yahoo.com.cn
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Professor Jan A. Piotrowski
Department of Earth Sciences
University of Aarhus
C.F. Moellers Alle 1120
DK- 8000 Aarhus C
Denmark
Tel.: +45 8942 2555
Tel.: +45 8942 9402
Fax: +45 8613 9248
Skype: jan.a.piotrowski
Dr Denis-Didier Rousseau
Ecole Normale Superieure
Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique
& CERES-ERTI
24 rue Lhomond
F-75231 Paris Cedex 5
France
tel +33-(0)14432 2724
fax: +33-(0)14432 2727
E-mail: rousseau@lmd.ens.fr
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Dr. Alexey S. Tesakov
Geological Institute
Russian Academy of Sciences
Pyzhevsky, 7
119017 Moscow
Russia
Tel.: +7 495 230-8085
E-mail: tesak@ginras.ru
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Working group leaders and corresponding members
members:
Dr. Art Bettis (Iowa, USA) art-bettis@uiowa.edu
Dr. Aleid Bosch (Zwolle, The Netherlands) A.Bosch@nitg.tno.nl
Dr. Andrey Dodonov (Moscow, Russia) dodonov@geo.tv-sign.ru
Professor Philip Gibbard (Cambridge, UK) plg1@cus.cam.ac.uk
Prof. Liu Jiaqi (Beijing, China) liujiaqi2001@yahoo.com.cn
Prof.Peter Kershaw (Clayton, Australia) Peter.Kershaw@arts.monash.edu.au
Prof.Wighart von Koenigswald (Bonn, Germany) koenigswald@uni-bonn.de
Dr. Jerry McManus (Wood's Hole, USA) jmcmanus@whoi.edu
Prof. Tim Partridge (Johannesburg (South Africa)
Dr. Charles Turner (Milton Keynes, UK) c.turner@open.ac.ukconvenor:
members:
Professor Thijs van Kolfshoten (Leiden),
Professor Anastasia Markova (Moscow),
Professor Jiaqi Lui (Beijing),
Dr Charles Turner (Cambridge),
Professor Luc Lourens (Utrecht),
Dr Martin Head (Cambridge),
Dr Cesare Ravazzi (Bergamo),
Dr Craig Feibel (New Jersey)
Dr Tom Meijer (Leiden).
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Paul Crutzen (Mainz, Germany)
Eric O'Dada (Nairobi, Kenya)
Erle Ellis (Baltimore, USA)
Mike Ellis (BGS, UK)
Philip Gibbard (Cambridge; Chair SQS)
Alan Haywood (Leeds, UK)
Andrew Kerr (Cardiff, UK)
Carlos Nobre (INPE, Brazil)
Simon Price (BGS, UK)
Will Steffen (ANU, Australia)
Mark Williams (Leicester, UK; Secretary)
An Zhisheng (Xian, China))
potential members:
PL GIBBARD
Cambridge
00.10.09
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SUBCOMMISSION ON NEOGENE STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
The SNS is the primary body responsible for providing optimum clarity and stability in the
Neogene Chronostratigraphic Scale by selecting and defining Global Stratotype Sections and
Points (GSSPs) for Series and Stages.
3. ORGANIZATION
The SNS is a subcommission of the ICS, founded in 1971. Reference is made to the annual
report of 1995 for a brief historical resume of the SNS. The subcommission has four regional
committees (Mediterranean, Pacific, Atlantic and Nordic) and keeps close contacts with the
Russian Neogene Commission chaired by Prof. Yuri B. Gladenkov. Apart from the executive
bureau, the SNS has 21 voting members and 35 corresponding members (see Appendix for full
list of officers and voting members). The SNS has presently one active working group for
defining the GSSP remaining for the Langhian and Burdigalian chaired by Isabella Raffi. The
SNS web site (www.geo.uu.nl/SNS) is used for news release and contains the following sections:
Home, News, Board, Members, Newsletters, GSSP’s, and Links.
Support for the SNS comes from the Chairman’s Institute in the Netherlands (Faculty of Geo-
sciences, Utrecht University). This institute also hosts the SNS web-site.
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4. INTERFACES WITH OTHER INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
There is a close link with (I)ODP because of its important role in the development of integrated
time scales for the Neogene, in testing the global correlation potential of bio-events, and in a
better understanding of climate and ocean history during this time span.
A short paper about the formal definition of the Serravallian GSSP following ratification by
IUGS has finally been accepted for publication in Episodes and will still be published this year
(Hilgen et al., 2009).
An integrated magnetostratigraphic and calcareous plankton stratigraphic study has been carried
out on the downward extension of the La Vedova section near Ancona (central Italy) which is
one of the most promising, potential boundary stratotype sections for defining the Langhian
GSSP (Iaccarino et al., 2009). The La Vedova section itself has been studied in detail and an
astronomical tuining has been established (Hüsing et al., 2009). An alternative section to define
the Langhian GSSP is St. Peter’s Pool located on Malta for which a preliminary astronomical
tuning and astrobiochronology was introduced ((Mazzei et al., 2009; Lirer et al., 2009). Both
sections were presented in considerable detail at the RCMNS congress in Napels (2-6
September). The study of these sections is part of the ongoing italian research project (PRIN
2006 - prot. 2006047534 - “In search of the Global Stratotype Sections and Points of the Burdi-
galian and Langhian Stages and paleoceanographic implications”) directed at defining the re-
maining GSSPs (Langhian and Burdigalian) in the Neogene.
In the aftermath of the debate and formal decision on the definition and status of the Quaternary,
members of SNS were heavily involved in the publication of several papers to express the
general viewpoint and concern of the Neogene community (Aubry et al., 2009; McGowran et al.,
2009; Van Couvering et al., 2009).
A remaining problem is the possible lack of suitable sections in the Mediterranean for defining
the Burdigalian GSSP. This is certainly the case if we prefer to have the Burdigalian GSSP
defined in an astronomically tuned deep marine section in the Mediterranean that directly
underlies the geologic time scale. The alternative option to have this boundary defined in (I)ODP
cores is being seriously considered by the Working Group on the Langhian and Burdigalian
GSSPs, and a decision about his issue will probably be made in 2010.
The other main problem is the outcome of the ICS vote on the Quaternary issue and the formal
ratification by IUGS which is considered unacceptable by many SNS members.
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7. SUMMARY OF EXPENDITURES IN 2009:
The study of the two potential boundary stratotype sections of La Vedova and St. Peter’s Pool
for defining the Langhian GSSP will be continued. Continuing search for suitable sections and/or
cores for defining the Burdigalian GSSP. In absence of suitable Mediterranean sections for
defining the Burdigalian GSSP, the option to formally designate this boundary in an ODP core
will be seriously explored.
2005
Selection of the Ras il Pellegrin section on Malta as the most suitable (Mediterranean) section to
define the Serravallian GSSP and the mid-Miocene Mi-3b oxygen isotope event as prime guiding
criterion for the boundary. Preparation of the Serravallian GSSP proposal.
2006
Serravallian GSSP proposal was sent out to SNS voting members; a quorum of about 86% was
reached and all votes were positive except for one which was positive but with reservations. Sub-
mission of revised proposal to ICS and acceptance of proposal by ICS with a 83% majority.
Submission of the Serravallian GSSP proposal to IUGS for formal ratification.
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2007
Ratification of the Serravallian GSSP proposal by IUGS. Pilot study of the La Vedova section, a
candidate section for the Langhian GSSP. Revision and update of SNS website.
2008
Integrated stratigraphic studies of the La Vedova section and its downward extension by italian
and dutch research teams, the latter section being candidate for defining the Langhian GSSP.
Revision and update of SNS website. Publication of several papers on the definition and status of
the Quaternary and Neogene. Preparation of a “Neogene” proposal for the formal ICS voting
procedure on the Quaternary-Neogene issue.
Organization of a workshop on the selection of boundary criteria and sections for defining the 2
remaining stage boundaries in the Miocene, namely the base-Langhian and the base-Burdigalian.
Potentially suitable sections in the Mediterranean region that may serve as Langhian GSSP have
been identified (La Vedova; St. Peter’s Pool). Crucial questions to be addressed during the work-
shop are: 1) which section is most suitable to be proposed as Langhian GSSP, 2) which prime
guiding criterion should be selected, and 3) should we abandon the ambition of having the
Burdigalian GSSP directly tied within an astrochronologic framework in order to have the GSSP
defined in a Mediterranean landbased section, or should we define this GSSP in drilled ODP
sequences at Ceara Rise or any other tuned sequence drilled by (I)ODP.
Selection of most suitable section/ODP core and guiding criteria for defining the Langhian and
Burdigalian GSSPs before 2012. Writing of proposals for the Langhian and Burdigalian GSSPs
in 2010-2012.
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***************************
APPENDIX [Names and Full Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members]
Subcommission officers
Chairman: Frederik J. Hilgen, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80021,
3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands, e-mail: fhilgen@geo.uu.nl
Vice Chairmen: David Hodell, Department of Geological Sciences, University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL 32611, USA. Email: dhodell@geology.ufl.edu
Now at: University of Cambridge, UK
Francisco Javier Sierro Sánchez, Departamento de Geología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad
de Salamanca, 37008 Salamanca, España. Email:sierro@usal.es
Secretary: Elena Turco, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universita' degli Studi di Parma,
Viale G.P. Usberti 157A, 43100, Parma, Italia. Email: elena.turco@unipr.it
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References:
Aubry, M.P., W.A. Berggren, J. Van Couvering, B. McGowran, F. Hilgen, F. Steininger, L. Lourens,
2009. The Neogene and Quaternary: chronostratigraphic compromise or non-overlapping magisteria?
Stratigraphy, 6, 1-16.
Hilgen, F.J., H.A. Abels, S. Iaccarino, W. Krijgsman, I. Raffi, R. Sprovieri, E. Turco and W.J.
Zachariasse, 2009. The Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) of the Serravallian Stage (Middle
Miocene). Episodes.
Iaccarino. S.M., E. Turco, A. Cascella, R. Gennari, F.J. Hilgen, and L. Sagnotti, 2009. Integrated
stratigraphy of La Vedova section (Conero Riviera, Italy), a potential candidate for the Langhian
GSSP. 13th RCMNS conference Napels, abstract vol.
Mazzei, R., N. Baldassini, S. Da Prato, L.M. Foresi, F. Lirer, G. Salvatorini, M. Verducci, M. Sprovieri,
2009. The St. Peter’s Pool section in the Malta Island. Work in progress on the Langhian GSSP. 13th
RCMNS conference Napels, abstract vol.
McGowran, B., B. Berggren, F. Hilgen, F. Steininger, M.-P. Aubry, L. Lourens, and J. van Couvering,
2009. Neogene and Quaternary coexisting in the geological time scale: The inclusive compromise.
Earth Sci. Revs.
Van Couvering, J.A., M.-P. Aubry, W.A. Berggren, F.M. Gradstein, F.J. Hilgen, D.V. Kent, L.J. Lourens,
and B. McGowran, 2009. What, if Anything, is Quaternary? Episodes
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SUBCOMMISSION ON PALEOGENE STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
Eustoquio Molina, Chairman
Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra
Universidad de Zaragoza
Calle Pedro Cerbuna, 12
E-50009 Zaragoza
Spain.
Tel. 34 976 761077, Fax. 34 976 761106
Email: emolina@unizar.es
Mission statement
The Subcommission is the primary body for facilitation of international communication and
scientific cooperation in Paleogene Stratigraphy, defined in the broad sense of multidisciplinary
activities directed towards better understanding of the evolution of the Earth during the
Paleogene Period. Its first priority is the unambiguous definition, by means of agreed GSSPs, of
a hierarchy of chronostratigraphic units, which provide the framework for global correlation.
Goals
a) to agree on an international set of stages and series for the Paleogene.
b) to establish basal boundary stratotypes (GSSPs) of the Paleogene stages and series.
c) to encourage research into the Paleogene by setting up and supporting Working Groups and
Regional Committees to study and report on specific problems.
d) to organize symposia and workshops on subjects of Paleogene stratigraphy.
e) to maintain a website informing on progress and coming events in Paleogene stratigraphy.
21
3) Working toward an international policy concerning conservation of geologically and
paleontologically important sites such as GSSPs. This relates to, inter alia, the IUGS Geosites
Programme and the UNESCO Geoparks Programme.
3. ORGANIZATION
Under the umbrella of the Subcommission, we set up Working Groups and Regional
Committees. At present are active the following:
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Furthermore, the Subcommission sponsors and International Meeting on the Paleogene about
every two years: Zaragoza, Spain (1996); Göteborg, Sweden (1999); Powell, USA (2001);
Leuven, Belgium (2003); Luxor, Egypt (2004); Bilbao, Spain (2006); Wellington, New Zealand
(2009).
Secretary: Prof. Simonetta Monechi, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra. Universitá di Firenze.
4, Via la Pira. I-50121 Firenze. Italy. monechi@unifi.it
Procedure used for selection: The procedure was the suggested by the Secretary of ICS.
Consequently, we sent an e-mail to all Subcommission voting members that invites nominations
for Chair and Vice-Chair: “In order to comply with the ICS procedures for the composition of the
board of ISPS, in the light of the IGC 2008 next year, ISPS needs to communicate to ICS the
composition of its board. At present Eustoquio Molina is chairman, Jan Hardenbol is vice
chairman and the secretary is Noël Vandenberghe. The secretary being a non elected office, we
have to propose to ICS only a chairman and a vice-chairman. The present board proposes to
reappoint Eustoquio Molina for a second 4 years term (2008-2012). Jan Hardenbol having
served 8 years would like to be replaced as vicechairman. The present Chair and vice Chair
nominate Noel Vandenberghe, the current secretary, to the position of Vice Chair. If you concur
or want to nominate someone else let us know ASAP and at the latest before 11/15. We will
inform you of the nominations obtained and the consequent proposition the present board will do
to ICS, who needs our proposition by 15th of November”. The result was: No other nominees
apart from us, 12 responded supporting our nominations and 8 did not respond. The new
Secretary was appointed with the support of the current Chairman, Vicechairman and Secretary.
Website status and activities: The Web address for ISPS site is:
http://wzar.unizar.es/isps/index.htm The web site content is the following: Home (overall
objectives, organization), Past & Future (accomplishments, problems and plans), Working
Groups and Regional Committees (annual reports), Literature (a selection of monographies on
the Paleogene). News/Books (two monographies on Paleogene Stratigraphy edited by
Luterbacher and Vandenberghe in 2004) and News/Events (Symposium on the Paleogene of
South, Central America and the Caribbean, La Plata, Argentina, 20-24th September, 2010).
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Some of our members participate also in the work of the following International projects:
Danian (Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary): The GSSP for the base of the Danian was defined
in the El Kef Section (Tunisia) and ratified by the IUGS in 1991. However, this GSSP was not
officially published in a prestigious stratigraphical journal of wide distribution. Since that time,
some problems arose because the detailed proposal was unknown to many scientists working on
the K/Pg boundary, new sections in Mexico were found and controversial interpretations were
proposed. Therefore, in order to resolve these problems, the ICS has required the ISPS to finally
publish the proposal and it was published in Episodes: Molina E., Alegret L., Arenillas I., Arz
J.A., Gallala N., Hardenbol J., Von Salis K., Steurbaut E., Vandenbeghe N. & Zaghbib-Turki D.
(2006). The Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point for the base of the Danian Stage
(Paleocene, Paleogene, "Tertiary", Cenozoic) at El Kef, Tunisia - Original definition and
revision. Episodes, 29(4), 263-278. In 2009 a second paper has been published in Episodes:
Molina, E., Alegret, L., Arenillas, I., Arz, J.A., Gallala, N., Grajales-Nishimura, J.M., Murillo-
Muñetón, G. & Zaghbib-Turki, D. (2009). The Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point for
the base of the Danian Stage (Paleocene, Paleogene, “Tertiary”, Cenozoic): auxiliary sections
and correlation. Episodes. 32 (2), 84-95.
Paleocene (Selandian and Thanetian): During 2009 in May several of the members of the
PWG participated in a major film project, directed by Alberto J. Gorritiberea and Asier Hilario,
about the Zumaia section, including coverage of the two GSSPs in the section. Early in 2009 we
were reached by the decision that the ICS had approved and ratified the suggested GSSPs for the
D-S and S-T boundaries. During the year work has focussed on finalizing the final document on
the GSSPs for publication in Episodes. This is planned to be submitted in time prior to a formal
inauguration procedure in Spring 2010.
Ypresian (Paleocene/Eocene boundary): The Working Group completed its task and proposed
to place the GSSP for the base of the Eocene Series in the Dababiya Section near Luxor in Upper
Egypt. The GSSP is located at the base of the Carbon Isotope Excursion, which was selected as
the criterion for the recognition of the Paleocene/Eocene boundary in 2002. The proposed
boundary section has a good chemostratigraphic (stable isotopes) and biostratigraphic record.
The "Benthic Foraminiferal Extinction Event", the peculiar planktonic foraminiferal and
calcareous nannoplankton assemblages linked to the Initial Eocene Thermal Maximum are well
represented in connection with the Carbon Isotope Excursion. The proposal for this GSSP was
accepted by the ISPS (May 2003) and the ICS (August 2003) and ratified by the IUGS (August
24
2004). A complete documentation of the proposed GSSP was published by Micropaleontology
Press and the official definition was published in Episodes: Aubry M.P., Ouda K., Dupuis, C.,
Berggren W.A., Van Couvering J.A. and the Members of the Working Group on the
Paleocene/Eocene Boundary (Ali J., Brinkhuis H., Gingerich P.R., Heilmann C., Hooker J., Kent
D.V., King C., Knox R., Laga P., Molina E., Schmitz B., Steurbaut E. and Ward D.R.) (2007).
The Global Standard Stratotype-section and Point (GSSP) for the base of the Eocene Series in
the Dababiya section (Egypt). Episodes. 30(4), 271-286.
Lutetian: After many years searching for a suitable section to define the Ypresian/Lutetian
boundary Stratotype, the Gorrondatxe section was found and the Lutetian GSSP was defined in a
very expanded and continuous section. The Ypresian/Lutetian Working Group decided, during
the final Workshop in Getxo (near Bilbao, Spain) in September 26, 2009, to define the Lutetian
GSSP at meter 167.85 of the Gorrondatxe section in a dark marly level where the nannofossil
Blackites inflatus first appears, approximately 48 Ma ago. Two candidate sections Agost and
Gorrondatxe where proposed and the Lutetian GSSP at Gorrondatxe was elected by consensus
after long discussions. All the events near the base of the Lutetian Stage were discussed and it
was considered that the absence of B. inflatus is not so certain and relevant like the presence of
B. inflatus in the lower sample of the Lutetian Stage Stratotype found by Aubry (1986) in
Palaeo.Palaeo.Palaeo. The FO of Discoaster sublodoensis was considered too old because it
appears in Chron 22n, which is clearly Ypresian. Consequently, it was considered that the FO of
B. inflatus is the best marker because it appears at or just below the base of the Lutetian Stage
Stratotype of Paris. Furthermore, in the lower Lutetian of Paris there is Nummulites laevigatus
and in Gorrondatxe the first sample above, with larger foraminifera, contains the first
Nummulites laevigatus like in the Paris basin. Planktic foraminifera were not used because of
their absence in the Lutetian Stage Stratotype in Paris. Nevertheless, it is clear that the first
appearance of Hantkenina in all the sections studied is about 4 Ma younger than the FO of B.
inflatus. The report to be voted by ISPS, ICS and IUGS is being prepared. The following papers
co-authored by the members of the Y/L Working Group were published:
Larrasoaña, J.C., Gonzalvo, C., Molina, E., Monechi, S., Ortiz, S., Tori, F. & Tosquella, J.
(2008). Integrated magnetobiochronology of the Early/Middle Eocene transition at Agost
(Spain): implications for defining the Ypresian/Lutetian boundary stratotype. Lethaia. 41,
395-415.
Ortiz, S., Gonzalvo, C., Molina, E., Rodríguez-Tovar, F.J., Uchman, A., Vandemberghe, N., &
Zeelmaekers, E. (2008). Palaeoenvironmental turnover across the Ypresian-Lutetian
transition at the Agost section, southeastern Spain: in search of a marker event to define the
Stratotype for the base of the Lutetian Stage. Marine Micropaleontology. 69, 297-313.
Payros, A., Orue-Etxebarria, X., Bernaola, G., Apellaniz, E., Dinarès-Turell, J., Tosquella, J., &
Caballero, F., (2008). Characterization and astronomically calibrated age of the first
occurrence of Turborotalia frontosa in the Gorrondatxe section, a prospective Lutetian
GSSP: implications for the Eocene time scale. Lethaia. 42, 255-264.
Payros, A., Tosquella, J., Bernaola, G., Dinarès-Turell, J., Orue-Etxebarria, X. & Pujalte, V.
(2009). Filling the North European Early/Middle Eocene (Ypresian/Lutetian) boundary
gap: Insights from the Pyrenean continental to deep-marine record. Palaeogeography,
Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 280, 313-332.
25
Bartonian: The work of the Lutetian-Bartonian Boundary Working Group during 2007, 2008
and 2009 has continued its focus on the base of magnetic polarity chron 19N as a guide horizon
for the base of the Bartonian. For the base of chron 19N to be a useful guide horizon for the base
of the Bartonian Stage, its correlation potential must be demonstrated. The working group has
continued to focus field and laboratory studies on the correlation potential of this horizon. The
section along the Contessa Highway near Gubbio, Italy remains the primary candidate for a
GSSP. Historically, this section has been the focus of important biostratigraphic studies of
planktonic foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils. The Contessa Highway section also
contains an excellent magnetic stratigraphy record in the Paleocene and Eocene. Results of a
high-resolution geomagnetic, geochemical, and biostratigraphic study of the Contessa Highway
section were published during 2007 (Jovane et al. 2007). Studies of the Barton Clay at Alum Bay
and Barton-on-Sea, U.K: Further study of the Barton Clay at Barton-on-Sea and at Alum Bay on
the Isle of Wight is desirable to clarify the magnetic stratigraphy of the traditional “unit
stratotype” of the Bartonian. Magnetic stratigraphy has been completed on the underlying
Bracklesham beds on the Isle of Wight and correlated with polarity chronozones through the use
of calcareous nannofossils. To date, no paleomagnetic data has been collected from the Barton
Clay. Results from this work will enhance our understanding of the chronostratigraphy of the
type Bartonian and enable better decision-making when selecting a final GSSP. Future Work:
Identifying reliable biostratigraphic horizons to serve as additional guides to the base of the
Bartonian remains a challenge. Several important biostratigraphic events occur near, but not
precisely at, this horizon and may assist with correlation. Several of these events are listed in
Fluegeman (2007). The working group hopes to complete its work and propose a GSSP for the
Bartonian by 2011. References:
Fluegeman, R. H., 2007, Unresolved issues in Cenozoic chronostratigraphy. Stratigraphy, vol. 4,
p. 109-116.
Jovane, L., Florindo, F., Coccioni, R., Dinarès-Turell, J., Marsili, S., Monechi, S., Roberts, A. P.,
and Sprovieri, M., 2007, The middle Eocene climatic optimum event in the Contessa
Highway section, Umbrian Apennines, Italy: Geological Society of America bulletin, vol.
119, p.413-427; doi: 10.1130/B25917.1.
Priabonian: Tasks of the Italian scientific community were to search for GSSPs of the Middle-
Upper Eocene and Lower-Upper Oligocene Transitions. Investigations on both transitions have
been undertaken by a number of researchers from several Italian Universities (i.e. Padua, Ferrara,
Florence, Urbino, Milan) and CNR Institutes as well as from some European and USA
Universities and Institutions of the "ALANO NET" and by the numerous scientists of the OLIS
Working Group coordinated by Rio (University of Padua) and Coccioni (University of Urbino),
respectively. During the first half of 2009 the multidisciplinary studies on the Alano di Piave
section (Veneto region, NE Italy), the potential candidate for defining the GSSP of the
Middle/Upper Eocene, equated to the base of the Priabonian Stage, have been completed. An
article, entitled "Integrated bio-magnetostratigraphy of the Alano section (NE Italy): a proposal
for defining the Middle-Late Eocene boundary" co-authored by Agnini, Fornaciari, Giusberti,
Grandesso, Rio & Stefani (Univ of Padua), Lanci (Univ. of Urbino), Luciani (Univ. of Ferrara),
Muttoni (Univ. of Milan), Palike & Spofforth (Univ. of Southampton, UK), have been submitted
for publication to the Geological Society of America Bulletin in August 2009; it was already
reviewed and the revised version will be returned to the Editor before the end of October. The
Alano section consists of ca. 120-130 m of bathyal gray marls interrupted in the lower part by 8
26
meters-thick package of laminated dark to black marlstones. Intercalated in the section there are
prominent marker beds, six of which are crystal tuff layers, whereas the other two bioclastic
rudites, useful for regional correlation. The section is easily accessible, crops out continuously, is
unaffected by any structural deformation, is rich in calcareous plankton and contains an
expanded record of the critical interval for defining the GSSP of the Priabonian. Integrated
calcareous plankton quantitative biostratigraphy (nannofossils and foraminifera), and a detailed
magnetostratigraphic analysis have been conducted in high resolution especially across the
critical intervals for defining the Priabonian Stage. Moreover, the depositional paleodepth of the
Alano section was estimated through the study of benthic foraminifera, whereas the detailed
oxygen and carbon isotope curve for the entire section is included in another paper, submitted to
Paleoceanography also in 2009, by Spofforth and co-authors entitled "Organic Carbon Burial
following the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO) in the central-western Tethys"
Rupelian (Eocene/Oligocene boundary): The GSSP for this boundary was selected in the
Massignano Section (central Italy), ratified by the IUGS in 1992 and officially published by
Premoli Silva and Jenkins (1993). Decision on the Eocene-Oligocene boundary stratotype.
Episodes. 13(3), 379-382.
Chattian: The formal proposal of the GSSP for the Rupelian/Chattian boundary at the Monte
Cagnero section (Umbria-Marche basin, NE Apennines, Italy) is in progress under the leadership
of R. Coccioni and A. Montanari, two of the co-authors of the paper on "Integrated stratigraphy
of the Oligocene pelagic sequence in the Umbria-Marche basin (Northeastern Apennines, Italy):
A potential GSSP for the Rupelian/Chattian boundary", published on the GSA Bulletin v. 120 in
2008.
The Paleogene Planktonic Foraminifera Working Group continued their work towards a major
revision of the Oligocene planktonic foraminifera. A meeting attended by 14 members was held
at the University of Fribourg in June hosted by Silvia Spezzaferi. Here the group reported on
progress and discussed species concepts over first drafts of illustrative taxonomic plates, collated
through the hard work of Dick Olsson with members contributing numerous SEM images of
representative specimens from around the globe. The inventory of Oligocene type SEM images
has also continued to grow, thanks to the efforts of Brian Huber and other members in tracking
down as many of these essential reference specimens as possible from far flung official and
unofficial repositories. Phylogenetic frameworks for many lineages have now started to
crystallize. For the Oligocene, which contains the roots of many modern planktonic lineages, this
has been aided by the results of molecular studies on Recent species. Michal Kurcera’s report at
the Fribourg meeting this year for example, provided insight into possible relationships among
Oligocene Globorotaloides, Globigerinella and microperforates after the recent gene-sequencing
27
of modern counterparts. Responsibilities for individual taxonomic chapters of the future
Oligocene Atlas have been defined and the goal for the next meeting (Stockholm University or
Amherst, UMAS) is to have draft versions of text. It has been agreed that our Oligocene studies
should extend to the base of the early Miocene where necessary to follow the evolution of a
number of key lineages that straddle the Oligocene-Miocene boundary.
28
for benthic foraminiferal events and potential sections to locate the GSSP of the base of the
Lutetian Stage. Finally, after a successful meeting in Getxo (Spain), during the Workshop on the
Ypresian/Lutetian boundary stratotype, the Gorrodatxe section was selected as the GSSP of the
base of the Lutetian. 4.- Oligocene: A Ph.D thesis on Oligocene benthic foraminifera will be
presented by the end of this year by R. Fenero (University of Zaragoza). References:
Alegret, L. and Thomas, E. (2009). Food supply to the seafloor in the Pacific Ocean after the
Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary event. Marine Micropaleontology, 73: 105-116.
Alegret, L. and Thomas, E. (2009). Cretaceous evolution of the genus Adercotryma
(Foraminifera) in the deep Pacific. Micropaleontology, 55 (1): 49-60.
Alegret, L., Ortiz, S., Orue-Etxebarria, X., Bernaola, G., Baceta, J.I., Monechi, S., Apellaniz, E.
and Pujalte, V. (2009). The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum: new data from the
microfossil turnover at the Zumaia section, Spain. Palaios, 24: 318-328.
Alegret, L., Ortiz, S. and Molina, E. (2009). Extinction and recovery of benthic foraminifera
across the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum at the Alamedilla section (Southern
Spain). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 279: 186-200.
Alegret, L., Ortiz, S., Arenillas, I. and Molina, E. (2009). What happens when the ocean is
overheated? The foraminiferal response across the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
at the Alamedilla section (Spain). Geological Society of America Bulletin, in press.
Fenero, R. (2009). Los microforaminíferos bentónicos del Eoceno terminal hasta el Mioceno
inicial: taxonomía, inferencias paleoecológicas y paleoambientales. Ph.D Thesis,
University of Zaragoza.
Ortiz, S., Alegret, L., Payros A., Orue-Etxebarria X., Apellaniz E., Molina, E. (2009). Benthic
foraminiferal turnover across the Ypresian/Lutetian transition at the Gorrondatxe section
(N Spain): response to sedimentary disturbance. In: Orue-Etxebarria et al., eds., The
Ypresian/Lutetian transition in the Gorrondatxe Beach (Getxo, W Pyrenees): Review,
recent advances and future prospects. Bilbao, p. 173-176. ISBN: 978-84-692-44876.
29
was mainly focused on the calcareous nannofossil Paleogene biostratigraphy and taxonomy. In
particular, was generated a taxonomic list for the entire Cenozoic to be entered in the new IODP
dataset system for the future IODP Expeditions (i.e. 320-321 Equatorial Pacific Expeditions). In
addition, was extensively discussed about the present status of early Paleogene calcareous
nannofossil biostratigraphy, the available dataset and unpublished results and the possibility to
improve the standard zonations (NP; Martini, 1971- Okada & Bukry, 1980). Finally, was
produced a biostratigraphic and biochronologic scheme for the entire Cenozoic based on most
recent and reliable data to be used as a common language for calcareous nannofossil specialist
and also entered in the IODP dataset system.
- A workshop on Paleogene calcareous nannofossils has been organized at Houston in March
2009, hosted by Mike Styzen. The workshop was well attended and productive. The participants
examined the species list compiled by PalNWG and discussed issues at the generic and specific
levels.
The committee held one meeting this year, in Fribourg Switzerland. The meeting was quite
successful and it shows that the stratigraphic community of Northern Europe is still active, trying
to combine the different stratigraphic methods and correlate to/from other basins as well. The
11th joint Meeting of RCNPS/RCNNS in 2009 was held in the city of Fribourg, situated in the
Molasse Basin in Switzerland from Thursday, August 27 till Saturday, August 29. The number
of attendants were 31. The lectures and posters represented a broad spectre of stratigraphy from
the Northern Hemisphere, ranging from problems when creating a new lithostratigraphic chart
for the Paleogene and Neogene of Switzerland; overview of the molasse of W.-Switzerland an
E.-France; the possible identification of early Eocene hyperthermals in the Corbières in SW
France by means of Foraminifera and Ostracoda; construction of a new database of Tertiary
index fossils for the Mainz Basin; incursions of Nummulites in the Belgian Ypresian to Early
Lutetian; orbital forcing that can be recognised in the marly parts of the Oligocene Boom Clay of
Belgium; Iran, where micropaleontology is being used to solve the age of the Asmari Formation
(Chattian/Aquitanian), calibrated with Sr87/Sr86 dating; Mammalia stratigraphy represented by
relatives of Tapirs from the Swiss Molasse Basin, and by the Ruminantia, which shows several
changes during the Oligocene and at the transition Oligocene-Miocene. All posters were briefly
presented as powerpoint/pdf in the lecture room, so that discussion at the posters them selves
flowed freely in the coffee breaks. This meeting, although the group was small, was very
successful. There was a good exchange of opinions in a very relaxed atmosphere, and, although
it did not concern the North Sea Basin strictly speaking, this is a region, which is important in the
understanding of possible connections to other parts, together with the effects of the Alpine
orogeny. It was decided to continue the work of the Regional Committee, and a process for
finding a venue for the next meeting in 2011 has started.
30
and Biostratigraphy and VII Latin American Congress of Paleontology (La Plata, Argentina, 20-
24th September, 2010). The aim of the symposium is to have an overview of research related to
the Paleogene of South and Central America, and to provide an opportunity for the meeting of
members of the Regional Committee to discuss current activities and working plans for 2011-
2012. The web page for the Regional Committee
(http://striweb.si.edu/jaramillo/committee/index.html) has been maintained and actualized,
including news, research activities and a list of recent publications concerning the Paleogene of
South and Central America.
31
Herman A.B., Akhmetiev M.A., Kodrul T.M., Moisseeva M.G., Iakovleva A.I., (2009). Flora
Development in Northeastern Asia and Northern Alaska during the Cretaceous-Paleogene
Transitional Epoch // Stratigraphy, Geol. Correlation, Vol. 17 N1, P. 88-109.
Oreshkina T.V. (2009). New data on Diatoms marine Paleogene deposits of Western
Kamchatka// Stratigraphy, Geological Correlation.Vol. 17 N3 P. 105-119.
Shcherbinina E.A., Aleksandrova G.N. (2009). High-Resolution Paleogene Study of nannofossil
and dinocysts assemblages from the Eastern Caucasus, Southern Russia // GNS. Science
Miscellaneous Series, 18. P. 122-128.
Vassilyeva O.N., Mussatov V.A. (2009). Paleogene nannoplankton and dinoflagellate cysts
biostratigraphy of Northern Prycaspian Depression // GNS Science Miscellaneous Series
18, P.148-153.
Beniamovsky V.N. (2009). Dnieper-Donets basin – is connecting link between North-Western
Eurasia seas by benthonic foraminifera // Transaction of Geological Inst. Ukrain. Ac. Sci .
Kiev, p. 207-211.
Vassilieva O.N., Mussatov V.A. (2009). Paleogene biostratigraphy of Northern Prycaspian
depression // Stratigraphy. Geol. Correlation. 30 p. (in press).
Akhmetiev M.A., Walter H., Kvachek Z. (2009). Mid latitude Paleogene Floras of Eurasia bound
the volcanic setting and paleoclimate events experience obtained the Far East Russia
(Sikhote-Alin) and Central Europe. (Charles Univ. publ.) (in press) , 70 p.
Akhmetiev M.A. (2009). Paleocene and Eocene Floristic and Climatic Change in Russia and
Northern Kazakhstan (in press) (publ. in Great Britain).
Kezina T.V. (2009). To the Paleocene age of Wuyun Formation (China) by palynological data //
Stratigraphy., Geological Correlation 2008 (in press)
Symposia and Meetings:
Paleogene Commission Members took part in 9 International and Russian Meetings and
Symposia and had 27 presentations.
CBER 2009 Wellington, New Zealand (Beniamovsky, Gavrilov, Shcherbinina, Vassilieva,
Mussatov, Iakovleva) (12-15 January 2009).
Paleostrat – 2009 Moscow) (Annual Meeting of Paleontol. Section Natural History Soc
(Moscow) (Beniamovsky) (February, 2009).
LIV Session Paleontological Society St Petersburgh (Beniamovsky) (6-9 April 2009).
Sino-Russian Symposium on Evolution and Development of Eastern Asian Flora based on
Paleontological Data Guangzhou, China, (Akhmetiev, Herman, Kodrul) November 24-29
2009.
International Symposium on Geoscienses in Northeast Asia, Changchun, China 27-28 2009.
7-Micropaleontolological workshop Micro-2009, Poland) (Beniamovsky) September 2009.
Diatom- 2009 Conference Minsk, Byelorussia (Oreshkina) September 2009.
8-International Symposium on the Cretaceous system Plymouth University (Great Britain) 6-12
September (Probleme K/T boundary) (Beniamovsky).
Annual Paleogene Commission Meeting St Petersburgh. 8-9 April 2009 (17 participants).
Program of this Meeting:
Akhmeiev M.A. Introduction. and Information about Paleogene Commission Activity 2008 and
main problems to 2009.
Beniamovsky V.N. Information about Meeting “Climate and Biota Events SBER– 2009”
Oreshkina T.V., Aleksandrova G.N. “New Data on diatoms and dinocysts PETM Transuralian
zone (Volga River Basin)
32
Popov S.V., Akhmetiev M.A., Sychevskaya E.K., Zaporozhets N.I. New Data oh Maykopian
Group stratigraphy (North Azerbaijan).
Fieldworks:
Study and sampling borehole material (K/T Boundary to Oligocene) (4 boreholes to 400-500 m)
South Part of West Siberian Plate (Omsk district) (Foraminifera, Diatoms, Dinocysts)
(Beniamovsky, Aleksandrova).
Study and sampling borehole 13) 200 km south-west from Volgograd (Paleocene-Eocene
deposits 250 m) (Nannoplankton, Fotaminifera, Dinocysts, Pollen and Spores, Mollusks,
Nummulites) (Popov, Zastrozhnov, Beniamovsky, Aleksandrova, Tabachnikova,
Zaporoxhets, Zakrevskaya).
Central Dagestan Area sections (nannoplankton, palynology) (Aleksandrova G.N., Shcherbinina
E.A.). (Gerga River Area sections), Danian and Zelandian deposits. Upper Dzhengutay
village vicinity (Thanetian- Ypresian deposits). Chirkey-water reservoir (Lower part of
Maylopian Group (Oligocene).
The main results of studying Paleogene deposits:
Reconstruction paleogeography, environment, biotic and abiotic changes on the main Paleogene
biospheric events (South Russia, West Siberian plate Far East) Correlation of regional
subdivisions based on different biotic groups. Paleoclimatic reconstructions and reflections of
climatic events on different biotic groups. Detail regional zonal subdivisons by different
microplanktonic groups. The Transition “Warm”-to “Cool” biosphere in Central Part of
Extratropical Eurasia.
A meeting on the Sakhalin-Kamchatka Paleogene was held in Moscow, April 2009, to consider
new materials and to outline plans of works for 2010-2011. The works include particularly a part
of a special project on geological evolution of the North Pacific shelf zones during the Cenozoic
(biotic changes, sedimentational features, tectono-magmatic activity, paleogeographic
rearrangements, climatic fluctuations, etc). Now it is very important to combine bio-, sequence-,
seismostratigraphic investigations. We began to study new material on diatom flora from the
Eocene of Kamchatka. The study of planktonic and benthic foraminifers and mollusks from the
Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary beds of Sakhalin has been completed. Planktonic foraminifers
were found there for the first time. A special paper "New Data on Maastrichtian-Paleogene
Foraminifers from Sinegorsk Horizon of Southern Sakhalin" was published in "Stratigraphy.
Geol. Correlation", 2009, Vol. 17, No. 4, pp. 443-453. A monographic treatment of Paleocene
and Ypresian of Kamchatka is continued. The Thanetian-Ypresian fauna (mollusks and
foraminifers) reflecting the known climatic optimum is unique for these latitudes. The study of
planktonic and benthic foraminifers from the Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary beds of Sakhalin
has been completed. Planktonic foraminifers were found there for the first time. A special
publication is under preparation. A monographic treatment of Paleocene and Ypresian of
Kamchatka is continued. The Ypresian fauna reflecting the known climatic optimum is unique
for these latitudes.
33
6. CHIEF PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN 2009
The problems encountered this year are essentially the same as those discussed in the previous
annual reports. ISPS can support only very insufficiently its working groups and regional
committees. In particular, we would need a substantial increase in our budget in order to support
and in part to reactivate regional committees in poorer areas (e.g. Africa, Indian Subcontinent,
SE Asia). Most of the secretarial and other expenses have been covered by the institutions of the
officers and other members of ISPS. Since money becomes tighter everywhere, these sources
may dry up.
INCOME
Carried forward from 2008 Euro 0
ICS Allocation for 2009 Euro 1817.29
TOTAL Euro 1817.29
Complete the work on the GSSPs of the base of the Priabonian and Chattian.
Screen and rejuvenate the list of the Corresponding Members.
Reactivate or close those Regional Committees and Working Groups which are asleep.
Update periodically the ISPS website.
Organize an International Symposium on the Paleogene of South, Central America and the
Caribbean, La Plata, Argentina, 20-24th September, 2010.
34
Please note that the financial situation has deteriorated in recent years, particularly in Latin
America and the former Soviet Union; an increase would help us to support the corresponding
Regional Committees more actively. We also will need some seed money to start new regional
committees or working groups.
At present, the GSSPs of the base of the Danian (= Cretaceous/Paleogene Boundary), the base of
the Ypresian (= Paleocene/Eocene Boundary), the base of the Rupelian (= Eocene/Oligocene
Boundary) and the base of the Aquitanian (= Paleogene/Neogene Boundary) have been
established and ratified by the International Union of Geological Sciences. Furthermore, in 2007
the base of the Selandian and Thanetian stages was defined by the Paleocene Working Group by
unanimous majority, both GSSPs were approved by the ISPS and the ICS and finally were
ratified by the IUGS in September 23, 2008.
In 2009 the base of the Lutetian has been defined and the proposal to be voted is being prepared.
Regarding the rest of the Paleogene Stages, good progress has been made in the search for the
remaining GSSPs.
The detailed reports of activities during the past four years of the Working Groups and Regional
Committees are included in the ISPS website: http://wzar.unizar.es/isps/index.htm
Complete and publish the GSSPs of the Paleogene. We hope to present proposals for the
remaining GSSPs in the year 2010 (Priabonian and Chattian) and by the year 2011 (Bartonian).
Support the organization of the International Symposium on the Paleogene of South, Central
America and the Caribbean, La Plata, Argentina, 20-24th September, 2010.
Produce an updated version of an integrated Paleogene time scale.
Produce a state-of-the-art review of the stratigraphic tools used in the Paleogene.
Preparation of standardized regional correlation charts and paleogeographic maps by the
Regional Committees.
35
APPENDIX (Names and Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members, 2008-2012)
INTERNATIONAL SUBCOMMISSION ON PALEOGENE STRATIGRAPHY
Subcommission officers
Chairman:
Eustoquio Molina, Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad de
Zaragoza, Calle Pedro Cerbuna, 12, E-50009 Zaragoza, Spain.
emolina@unizar.es
Vice-Chairman:
Noël Vandenberghe, Departement Geografie-Geologie, Afdeling Geologie,
Redingenstraat, 16, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium.
noel.vandenberghe@geo.kuleuven.be
Secretary:
Simonetta Monechi. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra. Universitá di Firenze.
4 Via la Pira. I-50121 Firenze. Italy.
monechi@unifi.it
36
South-American Regional Committee on Paleogene Stratigraphy. Chairman: Carlos
Jaramillo, Panama. JaramilloC@si.edu Secretary: Carolina Nañez, Argentina.
cnaniez@fullzero.com.ar
Website: http://striweb.si.edu/jaramillo/committee/index.html
Russian Paleogene Commission. Chairman: Mikhail A. Akhmetiev, Russia.
akhmetiev@ginras.ru Secretary: G. N. Aleksandrova.
Working Group on Paleogene Stratigraphy of the North Pacific. Chairman: Yuri B.
Gladenkov, Russia. gladenkov@ginras.ru
37
SUBCOMMISSION ON CRETACEOUS STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
SUBMITTED BY
Prof. Isabella Premoli Silva, Chair
University of Milano
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terrra “Ardito Desio”
Via Mangiagalli, 34, 20133 MILANO, Italy
telephone: 39-02 5031 5528 (direct line)
telefax: 39-02 5031 5494
Email: isabella.premoli@unimi.it
3. ORGANIZATION
In addition, there are 12 Voting Members of the Subcommission, from all the continents (to be
implemented). Over 130 Cretaceous scientists from all over the world and in many different
disciplines belong to one or more of the 9 Stage Working Groups of the SCS still active, or to the
Kilian Group. All WG members are treated as Corresponding Members of the Subcommission.
Effectively, anyone with interest and expertise that can contribute to our objectives is welcome
to do so. The great bulk of the Subcommission's work is carried out by these Working Groups.
38
Vice-Chair: Dr. Irek Walaszczyk (Warsaw, Poland)
Secretary: Dr. Silvia Gardin (Paris, France)
The WEB site for the Subcommission is in preparation; its address will be
<www.iscs.upmc.fr>
The Subcommission has liaised with successive meetings of the International Cretaceous
Symposium, which until 2004 have been promoted by the German Subkommission für Kreide-
Stratigraphie. The SCS has now taken over the responsability for selection of future venues,
though the successful applicants will organize individual congresses. At the 8th International
Symposium on Cretaceous System in September 2009, it was decided that the 9th International
Symposium on Cretaceous System will be convened in 2013 at Ankara, Turkey.
The Subcommission also liaises closely with the Subcommission on Jurassic
Stratigraphy, especially over the definition of the Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary.
When appropriate, the Subcommission liaises also with IGCP projects. In particular, a
strong liason was established by our collegues from IGCP 507 – “Cretaceous paleoclimatology”,
and IGCP Project 506 - Marine and Non-marine Jurassic: Global correlation and major
geological events (Project Co-Leader W. Wimbledon).
ICS has always been directly or indirectly linked to big international Projects as IODP,
IGCP, and CHRONOS (Mesozoic Planktonic Foraminifera Working Group, MPFWG).
General Activities
The Subcommission on Cretaceous Stratigraphy was deeply involved at the 8th International
Symposium on Cretaceous System in Plymouth (6-12 September 2009) with two sessions
dedicated to the “Cretaceous Stratigraphy and Stage Boundaries” and with a third session that
concerned specifically “The Jurassic/Cretaceous Boundary”.
Out of the eleven presentations two emphasized the need for an integrated multidisciplinary
approach to overcome the problems of “worlwide” applicability of the criteria chosen for
identifying any GSSP. As an example of the validity of this approach it can be mentioned
specifically the presentation on “A new integrated stratigraphy for the Albian Stage” by Gale and
co-authors.
In fact, since 2005 (Neuchatel Cretaceous Symposium) none of the missing Cretaceous GSSPs
have been ratified, even though the Santonian and Albian GSSP proposals have been circulated
for approval.
From the numerous recent contributions, although most of them not specifically dedicated to
Cretaceous GSSP sections, it clearly emerges that for global correlations there is a strong need
for stratigraphic tools other than fossils, that frequently suffer a spacially limited distribution and
too many times are affected by remarkable bioprovincialism. Based on these works a solid
integrated multiple stratigraphic framework is now available: carbon isotope stratigraphy from
continuous pelagic successions provided by deep-sea drilling in all oceans and/or
39
magnetostratigraphy turned out to be the best tools for long distance correlations.
A very well attended, business meeting of the Subcommission was held at the end of the 8th
International Symposium on Cretaceous System (Plymouth) in the afternoon of September 12.
The two hours meeting included (1) a brief presentation on the base Coniacian by Chris Wood
for the GSSP of which it was proposed tentatively a composite section merging the data from the
Salzgitter-Salder section (northern Germany) with the Slupia Nadbrze~na (central Poland).
However, some attendants, including ICS Secretary P. Bown, disagreed with this proposition
being against the ICS rules, and (2) a brief presentation on the base Santonian by C. Paul who
illustrated advantages/disadvantages of the two candidate GSSP sections, Olazagutia (Spain) and
Ten Miles Creek (Texas). No decision was made.
40
achieving correlation there and with both Boreal marine and non-marine (Purbeck) sequences -
wider correlation being the primary aim. There has been a clear acceptance that ammonites alone
are unlikely to effect consistent and widely applicable correlation, nor can they contribute in the
widespread non-marine sequences.
As a first step, the WG has agreed that the interval offering the best opportunities for
study, because it is the one with most, well-defined, markers, is that just below and above the
base of chron Ml8r. The upward sequence from the middle of Ml9n through Ml9n.lr, M19.ln and
into Ml8r, in particular, provides several well-established datums in close order, notably based
on calpionellids and nannofossil ranges, the calpionellid biozonation and magnetostratigraphy. In
particular, four reliable well-marked datums occur in an even shorter interval giving a core
framework for comparison. These are the base of calpionelid zone B, the 'explosive' appearance
of a monospecific association of small, globular Calpionella alpina (the alpina "acme", or the
alpina "bloom" auctorum), the FAD for two subspecies of Nannoconus (N. steinmannii minor
and N. kamptneri minor) and the base of Ml8r. In all cases, these are horizons which have been
widely and consistently recognized by a number of researchers, and where biozone B is
concerned, it has in recent years become a de facto working base for the Berriasian Stage
amongst a wider group of users. Macrofossil datums will be linked to this framework, and, for
instance, foraminiferid, radiolarian, geochemical and cyclostratigraphic signals must also be
added.
Thus primary markers and secondary constraining datums can be listed as follows:
Primary markers
1. base calpionellid biozone B
2. 'explosion' of small globular C. alpina
3. FAD Nannoconus steinmannii minor & N. kamptneri minor
4. base Ml8r
Secondary supporting markers
5. base Ml9n.ln
6. base Ml9n.lr
7. FAD Nannoconus wintereri & N. cuvillieri
8. base jacobi subzone
9. FAD Warrenia californica, Dichadogonyaulax bensonii & Ampulatisporis verbitskayae
10. base lamplughi biozone
11. base grandis subzone
12. LAD Dichadogonyaulax pannea, Egmontodinium polyplacophorum etc. in the late Portland
extinction.
(The labels "primary" and "secondary" are indicative, not absolute. They reflect the WG's
current focus of attention on the four closely located datums.)
Having discussed the consistency of proposed datums overall, the WG now studies the
precise stratigraphic relationships in this limited interval; that is, testing current assumptions on
the sequence of the four datums, on their ranges, relationships to one another and to other
datums. In addition, thought is being directed to secondary markers which could be tied directly
to the primary datums, or interdigitated between them, allowing correlation to wider
geographical areas. Thus the work of the WG in coming months is of precise calibration of
stratigraphic markers in the chosen Ml8r/Ml9n interval.
The base of M18r has been chosen in preference to short magnetic intervals below
because such short intervals are less easy to detect in shallow marine and non-marine settings.
The list above is far from exhaustive and more data will be added, to reinforce the framework
that is emerging. In relation to sequences that have been well documented, this interval can be
identified (using at least some of the chosen markers) and equates to, for instance, sections at
Bosso, Brodno, Torre de’ Busi, Puerto Escano in Tethys, Durlstone non-marine western Boreal,
and Nordvik in the far eastern Boreal.
41
Clearly the approach is constrained by the fact that the fuller range of evidence of the
kind discussed here comes from sequences in the Tethyan Realm and in Boreal regions, though a
number of localities in England and N. France have, for instance, a magnetostratigraphic record,
that can only be said of one other site (Nordvik, Siberia). Further, many more coherent sequences
of the 'right' age have been identified and documented in Tethys. Much detailed study and
refinement of the data lies ahead.” A paper on the main results is in preparation.
The next meeting of the Berriasian Working Group is planned at the Smolenice Castle
(50 km NE of Bratislava) for 6-9 April 2010, hosted by Dr Jozef Michalik and Slovak
colleagues.
42
As far as substage subdivision is concerned, most of members of the Kilian Group agree to use
the solution of the Brussels meeting: T. vandenheckii Zone as first zone of the Upper Barremian.
43
submitted for publication in Acta Geologica Polonica and contemporaneously to the
Subcommission before the end of 2009. Besides multiple biostratigraphies, the report now
includes also the isotope curves by Silke Voigt for both sections.
The need nowadays for a high-resolution framework to be exportable worlwide resulted in the
necessity of re-visiting several candidate sections, already studied paleontologically, by
implementing multiple biostratigraphies and stratigraphic tools other than fossils - those are
profoundly affected by bioprovincialism in several intervals - like magnetostratigraphy, stable
isotope stratigraphy, etc. In several cases, especially in the Late Cretaceous, the integration of
multiple bio-, physical stratigraphies revealed that the candidate sections were unsuitable as
GSSP. Consequently, new sections had to be searched and studied from the beginning. This
resulted in a delay in submitting the GSSP proposals, taking also into account that scientists from
different subdisciplines do not necessarily work at the same speed.
44
7. SUMMARY OF EXPENDITURES IN 2009 (ANTICIPATED THROUGH MARCH
2010):
I. INCOME
ICS subvention for 2009 (2500 $) Euro 1826.31
ICS extra subvention for support
to Russian scientists (1000$) Euro 676.37
------------------
Total income Euro 2502.68
II. EXPENDITURE
Meetings
_ The 5° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary WG is planned for 2-4 April, 2010 at
Smolenice Castle, Slovakia.
_ The 4° meeting of the Kilian Group will be held during the next congress of the
"Cephalopods, past and present" in September 2010 at Dijon (France).
_ ICS workshop, Prague, late May 2010
_ The 6° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary WG, pending
45
9. BUDGET AND ICS COMPONENT FOR 2010
See Accomplishments in ICS Annual Reports 2005 to 2009 (above) for additional details.
· Renewed research by WG members (resulting in a great number of publications, still
ongoing), based on research needs pinpointed by the 1995 Brussels, 2005 Neuchâtel and
2008 Oslo meetings.
· Presentation of the latest results to 7th International Cretaceous Symposium, Neuchâtel,
Switzerland. September 4-9, 2005.
· Workshop on the Aptian ammonite zonation, held in Lyon (Nov. 2005) focused the
discussion mainly on the ammonite faunal turnovers and the Lower/Middle Aptian
(Bedoulian/Gargasian) boundary in relation to the position of the Furcata Zone.
· Set up of the renewed Working Group on the Berriasian GSSP and the J/K boundary,
chaired by W.A.W. Wimbledon (Dec. 2006-Spring 2007).
· 2nd Workshop of the Kilian Group on the Hauterivian-Barremian zonation, held in Digne-les-
Bains (May 2007), from the Radiatus (base of the Hauterivian) to the Sarasini (top of the
Barremian) zones.
_ 3rd Workshop of the Kilian Group on the Hauterivian and Barremian zonation, held in
Vienna (April 2008)
· 1st official meeting of the renewed Working Group on the Berriasian GSSP and the J/K
boundary, chaired by W.A.W. Wimbledon in Bristol (July 2007).
· 2nd official meeting of the Working Group on the Berriasian GSSP and the J/K boundary,
chaired by W.A.W. Wimbledon in Marseille (July 2008).
· 33° Geological Congress, August 2008, Olso: SCS Symposium on “Stratigraphic
subdivisions of the Cretaceous System: State of the Art”. (Conveners: I. Premoli Silva, F.
Surlyk & I. Walaszczyk).
· 3rd official meeting of the Working Group on the Berriasian GSSP and the J/K boundary,
chaired by W.A.W. Wimbledon in Milan (March 2009).
· 4th official meeting of the Working Group on the Berriasian GSSP and the J/K boundary,
chaired by W.A.W. Wimbledon in Plymouth (September 2009).
46
The Chair and/or Vice Chair represented the SCS at:
SCS meeting during the 7th International Cretaceous Symposium, Neuchâtel,
Switzerland, September 2005
1° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary Working Group, Bristol (UK), July 2007
2° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary Working Group, Marseille, July 2008
SCS Symposium HPS-10 on “Stratigraphic subdivisions of the Cretaceous System: State
of the Art”. (Co-conveners: I. Premoli Silva, F. Surlik & I. Walaszczyk), at 33°
Geological Congress, August 2008, Olso:
3° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary Working Group, Milan, March 2009
4° meeting of the Berriasian and J/K boundary Working Group, Plymouth, September
2009
Meetings
· September 2009 - the 4th Workshop of the Berriasian and J/K boundary WG at the 7th
International Symposium on Cretaceous System, Plymouth (UK)
· September 2009 - Subcommission Official Meeting at the 7th International Symposium on
Cretaceous System, Plymouth (UK)
· April 2010 – the 5th Workshop of the Berriasian and J/K boundary WG is planned in (near
Bratislava, Slovakia)
· September 2010 – 4th Workshp of the Kilian Group at the 8th International Symposium
“Cephalopods present an past”, Dijon (France), focused on problems of the Aptian
and Albian stages
· September 2013 – 9th International Symposium on Cretaceous System, Middle East
Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. Convenor: Ismail Omer Yilmaz.
Objectives
· To submit the proposal of Santonian GSSP to ICS, and to submit it to Episodes for
publication
· To re-submit the proposal of Albian GSSP to the Cretaceous Subcommision voting
members, then to submit it to ICS, and possibly to Episodes for publication
· To bring recommendations for 6 of the remaining GSSPs to ICS as soon as possible
· To advance considerably on definition of criteria for identifying the base of the
Berriasian and the J/K boundary.
· To communicate the results as widely as possible.
· To develop new directions for the Subcommission as GSSP proposals are completed.
Specifically, future objectives will concern the subdivision of stages, with definition of
substages and related GSSPs.
Work Plan
2009 (end) - Complete voting on the proposal for the base of the Santonian
2010 – Finalize the proposal for the base of the Albian
47
2010 - Finalize proposals for the base of Valanginian, Hauterivian, Barremian, Aptian,
Coniacian, and Campanian
2010 - Finalize the proposal for the base of Berriasian (Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary)
2010 to 2013 – Definition of substages.
***************************
APPENDIX [Names and Full Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members]
48
Turonian WG: GSSP ratified. No chairman at present.
Cenomanian WG: GSSP ratified. No chairman at present.
Albian WG: Malcolm Hart, UK. mhart@plymouth.ac.uk
Aptian WG: Elisabetta Erba, Italy. elisabetta.erba@unimi.it
Barremian WG: Peter Rawson, UK. peter.rawson1@btinternet.com
Hauterivian WG: Jörg Mutterlose, Germany. Joerg.Mutterlose@rz.ruhr-uni-bochum.de
Valanginian WG: Luc Bulot, France. lucgbulot@aol.com
Berriasian (J/K boundary) WG: William A.P. Wimbledon, UK. newaberdon@tiscali.co.uk
49
SUBCOMMISSION ON JURASSIC STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
SUBMITTED BY
József Pálfy, Subcommission Chair
Department of Paleontology and Geology,
Hungarian Natural History Museum
POB 137 Budapest, H-1431 Hungary
Tel. +36 1 210-1075 / ext. 2310
Fax: +36 1 338-2728
Email: palfy@nhmus.hu
2b. Goals
These fall into four main areas:
(a) The definition of basal boundary stratotypes (GSSPs) and the refinement of standard and
regional hierarchical chronostratigraphical scales down to zonal and subzonal level,
through the establishment of multidisciplinary Task (and/or Working) Groups;
(b) Application, where possible, of cyclostratigraphy to develop astrochronologic estimates
of durations of chronostratigraphic units, and integration of radiometric dates to improve
the numerically calibrated time scale of the Jurassic;
(c) During IGCP Project 506, initiated by the Subcommission, the development of methods
of correlation between the units of the standard chronostratigraphic scale, established in
marine Jurassic sucessions, and non-marine successions, to enable reconstruction of the
history of the global biosphere and the lithosphere during the Jurassic Period;
(d) International coordination of and collaboration in research on Jurassic environments,
through the establishment of Thematic Working Groups, for example on
Paleobiogeography, Paleoclimate, Sequence Stratigraphy and Tectonics. Progress
towards these goals are showcased and scientific communications between experts of
50
various aspects of Jurassic stratigraphy is facilitated by the organization of the
International Symposia on the Jurassic System, held in every fourth year and sponsored
by ISJS.
In addition, the Subcommission has developed lines of communication with a wider public
through two initiatives (also called Working Groups for simplicity): one is concerned with
conservation of Jurassic geological sites such as those selected as GSSPs or ASPs; the second
encourages collaboration and liaison with non-professionals, notably fossil collectors, who have
valuable data to contribute towards the Subcommission’s goals.
3. ORGANIZATION
The Subcommission has an Executive consisting of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Secretary,
who are all Voting Members of the Subcommission. There are normally twenty other Voting
Members, and it is emphasised that thay are not elected to represent a country or region, but for
their personal expertise and experience. Each has agreed defined areas of responsibility, which
are published in the Subcommission Directory. Renewal of the membership has been pursued
this year. Replacement of those who have served the maximum allowed three terms or otherwise
wished to withdraw from duty now awaits ratification by the ICS Executive. The following 10
new voting members have been asked to serve, and each of them accepted the invitation:
Mabrouk Boughdiri (Tunisia)
Angela Coe (UK)
Susanne Feist-Burkhardt, (UK)
Bruno Galbrun (France)
Linda A. Hinnov (USA)
Atsushi Matsuoka (Japan)
Christian Meister (Switzerland)
Federico Olóriz (Spain)
Mikhail A. Rogov (Russia)
Yongdong Wang (China)
51
In addition to the Voting Members, there is a network of Corresponding Members, who have a
responsibility for communication in both directions between the Subcommission and researchers
on Jurassic topics in their region. Most are also active in one or more Working Groups.
The objectives of the Subcommission are pursued by Task Groups and Working Groups, either
Stratigraphical or Thematic, and each group is organized by a Convenor, sometimes assisted by a
Secretary, who are Voting or Corresponding Members.
The Subcommission sponsors an International Symposium on the Jurassic System every four
years. The next one is scheduled for 2010, to be held in China, and activities in preparation of
this major event have been a focal point of ISJS in the reported year. The Chairman of the
Organizing Committee is normally a Voting Member of the Subcommission, at this occasion the
Vice Chair, but the Committee is independent of the Subcommission.
4a IGCP Project 506: Marine and Non-marine Jurassic: Global correlation and major
geological events. This Project, which is associated with the Jurassic Subcommission, is led
by Vice Chair SHA Jingeng (China), with one Voting Member (Nicol MORTON, France)
and five Corresponding Members as Co-Leaders. The 8th Symposium of IGCP 506 was
held in Bucharest, Rumania in 28 August–3 September 2009.
The symposium was organised by Mihai E. POPA (University of Bucharest) and his colleagues.
It was held in the University of Bucharest, Faculty of Geology and Geophysics. The successful
symposium was attended by some 20 participants from 9 countries. Two days devoted to
scientific communications included 17 oral presentations, followed by a three-day field trip to
key Jurassic localities in the Iron Gates National Park and the Anina coal district in the Southern
Carpathians. The Abstracts and Field Guide Volume consists of 91 pages (available for
download at the conference website: http://mepopa.com/igcp506).
52
4b. Colorado Plateau Coring Project (CPCP)
This project, although not formally associated with the Jurassic Subcommission, is in overlap
of scientific interest with many of the ISJS activities and that of the members of the Jurassic
research community. A workshop was convened in May 2009, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to
further advance planning for the Colorado Plateau Coring Project (CPCP), and identify the target
site for initial coring. The giant continental and paralic epicontinental basins of the American
southwest are particularly well exposed on the Colorado Plateau and its environs and contain one
of the richest records of lower Mesozoic strata. This time period includes the major mass
extinction which marks the Triassic-Jurassic boundary and is notable by the evolutionary
appearance of the modern biota, and dramatic climate changes on the continents. Thirty-seven
researchers from nine countries (including several voting and corresponding members of ISJS)
participated in the CPCP workshop, its discussion, and its field trip visiting sites exposing the
latest Triassic to (?) Middle Jurassic Glen Canyon Group and Middle to (?)Late Jurassic San
Rafael Group, at Petrified Forest National Park, northern Arizona and other localities. Drilling
proposals have been and will be submitted to the US NSF and International Continental Drilling
Program (ICDP).
5a (ii) Sinemurian. The Sinemurian GSSP in Somerset (S.W. England) was ratified by IUGS in
2000 and published in Episodes 25/1, 22-28, 2002.
5a (iii) Pliensbachian. The Pliensbachian GSSP in Wine Haven section in Yorkshire (E.
England) was ratified by IUGS in 2005 and published in Episodes 29/2, 93-106, 2006.
5a (iv) Toarcian
There is generally accepted agreement, as reported by the late Serge Elmi to the 7th International
Congress on the Jurassic System in Krakow, Poland in September 2006, that the GSSP for the
base of the Toarcian Stage be placed at the base of bed 15e in the Ponta da Trovao section,
53
Peniche, Portugal. The basis for a proposal will be papers published in the proceedings of the
meeting of the Toarcian Working Group in Peniche in July 2005. The formal proposal, based
partly on files left by Serge Elmi, is being prepared by Rogerio Rocha, Antonio Goy and
colleagues. A first draft has been produced by this team in 2009, and it is currently under
revision. The Task Group has been reorganized, under the leadership of Rogerio Rocha, with
Emanuela Mattioli as secretary.
5a (v) Aalenian and Lower/Middle Jurassic Boundary. GSSP proposal of Fuentelsaz section
(Spain) ratified by IUGS in 2000 and published in Episodes 24/3,166-175, 2001.
5a (vi) Bajocian. Proposal of GSSP at Cabo Mondego section (Portugal) and ASP at Bearreraig,
Isle of Skye section (NW Scotland) was ratified by IUGS in 1996 and published in Episodes
20/1, 16-22, 1997.
5a (vii) Bathonian. Proposal of GSSP at the Ravin du Bès section near Digne Haute-Alpes,
France was ratified by IUGS in July 2008. Publication in Episodes is forthcoming.
5a (viii) Callovian
Research by the Working Group, Convenor John CALLOMON, to select the best marker for the
base of the basal zone and subzone of the Callovian Stage, and of the best section for GSSP were
completed in the early 1990s. The marker and section selected are the Kepplerites keppleri
horizon in the Albstadt-Pfeffingen, Swabia (S. Germany) section. A description and discussion
were published in the Proceedings of 5th International Jurassic Symposium (GeoResearch Forum
6, 41-54, 2000). The procedure should be completed in the near future and votes should be
formalized in compliance with the requirements of the ICS Statutes.
5a (x) Kimmeridgian
The basal boundary of the Kimmeridgian Stage has been, historically, a difficult problem
because of faunal provincialism so that it became clear some time ago that the Boreal/Subboreal
54
boundary was significantly older than the Submediterranean/Mediterranean boundary. The
former has several advantages, not least historical precedent. Therefore, a vote was held within
the Working Group to use the Subboreal base of the Kimmeridgian as the level at which the
GSSP should be placed and this was approved by a strong majority (67%), endorsed by an even
larger majority (77%) within the ISJS. Therefore, the base of the Kimmeridgian Stage should be
defined at the base of the Baylei Zone. In a vote within the Working Group, the Flodigarry
section, Staffin Bay, Isle of Skye, Scotland received a clear majority as the proposed GSSP
section. However, no clear support emerged for either of the two proposed ammonite horizons
(the Pictonia flodigarriense Horizon or the Pictonia densicosta Horizon) as the primary marker
for recognisition and correlation of the base of the Baylei Zone and the Kimmeridgian Stage.
New magnetostratigraphic results will be published soon and these may shed new light to the
independent correlation potential of the horizons. The issue will be submitted to the Working
Group members for a new vote.
5a (xi) Tithonian
Progress in identifiying a possible GSSP for the base of the Tithonian is the least advanced of
any of the Jurassic Stages. Completion of ammonite biostratigraphic work on a possible
candidate section, Canjuers in southern France, offers the best hope for a GSSP proposal to
emerge in the near future.
5b. Publication of the Proceedings of the 7th International Congress on the Jurassic System
After some delay in editing and printing, the first of two volumes containing the proceedings of
the 7th International Congress on the Jurassic System held in Kraków, Poland in September
2006, was published as vol. 6 of Volumina Jurassica. It contains an Introduction, followed by
three sections which comprise thematic sets of papers on Facies analysis and reconstruction of
paleoenvironments, Palaeoecology, palaeobiogeography, and Geoconservation and
palaeontological heritage. The volume comprises a total of 14 papers on 173 pages of sub-A4
size, printed on high-quality glossy paper. The papers are also available for free download at
www.voluminajurassica.org.
55
7. SUMMARY OF EXPENDITURES IN FISCAL YEAR 2009 (UP TO DATE OF
REPORT)
To be appended.
The GSSP section, level and primary marker have been selected for the Toarcian, Callovian and
Kimmeridgian. Preparation of a formal proposal is well underway for the Toarcian, and
forthcoming in the near future for the Callovian and Kimmeridgian. The Oxfordian Task Group
awaits publication of the latest results from the leading candidate GSSP section, before
proceeding with the formal proposal and ballots. More research and publication is needed for the
Tithonian. A status summary is listed below:
(i) Toarcian: under the leadership of new Convenor, proposal being revised before
circulation among TG members;
(ii) Callovian: details of previous deliberations being prepared for publication and
resubmission of proposal;
(iii) Oxfordian: publication of key papers with relevant new results awaited in Volumina
Jurassica, before Task Group vote could be organized;
(iv) Kimmeridgian: GSSP section and basal zone agreed upon in Task Group and
Subcommission vote, precise level and marker not yet decided, impasse after an
inconclusive TG vote may be resolved after new magnetostratigraphic results will be
available.
(v) Tithonian: further work on candidate sections required, Canjeur.
56
Xinjiang, NW China (A2) Non-marine Jurassic and Cretaceous deposits and the Jehol Biota in
Western Liaoning Province, NE China; Mid-congress excursions: (B1). Excursion to National
Geopark and Museum of Jurassic Petrified Forest of Shehong, (B2) Visit the quake relics and
museum of the Wenchuan magnitude 8.0 Earthquake of May 12, 2008 in Sichuan and (B3)
Visits around Chengdu City for cultural and historic monuments; and post-congress excursions:
(C1) Non-marine Triassic and Jurassic in the Sichuan Basin, (C2) Marine Triassic, Jurassic and
Cretaceous in southern Tibet, and (C3) Marine and non-marine Jurassic deposits in Thailand.
8c. Proceedings of 7th International Congress on the Jurassic System, Krakow, Poland,
2006
All 35 papers submitted for publication in the Proceedings Volume have been peer reviewed and
14 of them were published in 2009. The remaining set of papers will appear in Volumina
Jurassica vol. 7. Publication was previously envisioned for 2009 but after some delay it is now
expected for early 2009.
8e. IGCP Project 506 Marine and Non-marine Jurassic: Global Correlation and Major
Geological Events: plans for 2010
This project is entering its fifth and final year. It is expected that the project, under the leadership
of ISJS Vice-Chair Jinjeng SHA, will showcase its results at the upcoming 8th International
Congress on the Jurassic System in China. In addition, there are tentative plans for an additional
field meeting in Argentina.
To be appended.
9b. Potential funding sources outside IUGS. Much of the costs of Task Group meetings and
other activities will be met by local support from host institutions and participation by individuals
by national research and travel grants from their own authorities. Benefits from use of IGCP 506
funds will also overlap with the objectives of ISJS.
57
SUBCOMMISSION ON TRIASSIC STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
SUBMITTED BY
Prof. Marco BALINI, Chairman
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra “Ardito Desio”
Università degli Studi di Milano
Via Mangiagalli 34, 20133 Milano, Italy
Tel. ++39 0250315512
E-mail: marco.balini@unimi.it
The objectives satisfy the IUGS mandate of fostering international agreement on nomenclature
and classification in stratigraphy; facilitating international co-operation in geological research;
improving publication, dissemination, and use of geological information internationally;
encouraging new relationships between and among disciplines of science that relate to Triassic
geology world-wide; attracting competent students and research workers to the discipline; and
fostering an increased awareness among individual scientists world-wide of what related
programs are being undertaken.
3. ORGANIZATION
58
3a. Officers for 2004-2008:
Chair: Dr. Michael J. Orchard, Canada
Vice-Chair: Prof. Marco Balini, Italy
Vice-Chair: Prof. Yin Hongfu, China
Secretary: Prof. Christopher R. McRoberts, USA
The official newsletter of the STS is Albertiana, printed twice in the year in Utrecht (The
Netherland) and downloadable at the website:
http://www3.bio.uu.nl/palaeo/Albertiana/Albertiana01.htm
The web site of the STS is hosted at SUNY – Cortland, where all the information on the
Subcommission activities are available: http://paleo.cortland.edu/sts/
IGCP Project 572: Restoration of marine ecosystems following the Permian-Triassic mass
extinction: Lessons for the present (2008-2012).
Publications
“The Triassic Timescale” S.G. Lucas (ed.), Geological Society of London Special publications.
The volume includes 15 contributions. The final version of the volume, including all the peer
reviewed manuscripts, has been submitted to the GSL in September 2009. The book reviews the
state-of-the-art of the Triassic time-scale and includes comprehensive analyses of Triassic
radioisotopic ages, magnetostratigraphy, isotope-based and cyclostratigraphic correlations and
timescale relevant marine and nonmarine biostratigraphy.
#37. Formerly scheduled for December 2008, but published in March, about 90 pages.
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#38. Scheduled for the end of September, with editing in progress.
The primary aim of Albertiana is to promote the interdisciplinary collaboration and
understanding among members of the Subcommission and within this scope serves as a platform
for announcements, meeting reports, business minutes, reviews, and Triassic literature
compilations as well as preliminary notes, progress reports, and articles on Triassic research.
Electronic versions are also available in PDF format at:
http://www3.bio.uu.nl/palaeo/Albertiana/Albertiana01.htm
Meetings:
8-11 May 2009. Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. Colorado Plateau Coring Project Workshop
2. The workshop consisted of two days of talks focused on nonmarine Upper Triassic
stratigraphy and correlation followed by a fieldtrip to the Petrified Forest National Park in
Arizona to examine nonmarine Upper Triassic strata. 35 scientists from 9 countries participated.
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/~polsen/cpcp/CPCP_09_workshop.html
21-26 June 2009. Cincinnati, USA. IGCP 572 Session at the 2009 North American
Paleontological Convention (NAPC 2009).
14-17 October, 2009, Nanjing, China. IGCP 572 workshop 4: Ecosystem evolution over the
Permian-Triassic transition, 10th Paleontological Society of China Congress & 25th CPC,
This symposium aims to update the studies on ecosystem collapse and re-building over the
Permian-Triassic transition based on sedimentary and fossil records from South China. There is a
growing number of new P/Tr boundary and Lower-Middle Triassic sections studied in South
China in recent years. The IGCP 572 symposium hopes to offer opportunities for various
Chinese working groups to communicate their new discoveries obtained from the newly found
P/Tr boundary and Triassic sections. The IGCP 572 session also provides unique opportunity for
non-Chinese working groups to communicate directly with various Chinese researchers, and thus
bridge their collaborations in short future.
Induan-Olenekian
At the end of 2007 after very lively discussions and two rounds of votes, the Task Group selected
as best GSSP candidate the Mud section (Spiti, India), with the proposed base of the Olenekian
at the FAD of the conodont Neospathodus waageni sensu latu at level MO4-13A3 of Mud O4
section. In 2008 further research aimed at refining the taxonomic variability of N. waageni leads
to discover some specimens possibly belonging to morphotypes of the group of N. waageni also
below the level MO4-13A3. In order to come to a stable conclusion one year of time was given
to the research group working on Mud section, with dead line the ICOS 2009 (Calgary, July, 12-
17). Two conodont specialists (M. J. Orchard and N. Goudemand) were involved in the study
and they both confirm the conclusion that N. waageni sensu latu first appears about 1 m below
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the level MO4-13A3. In October 2009 the Task Group is reactivated, with a suggested schedule
to fix another session of vote by the end of 2010.
Olenekian-Anisian:
Two boundary proposals were presented in 2007 (Albertiana #36). The first proposal was based
on the FAD of the conodont Chiosella timorensis supported by multidisciplinary data at Desli
Caira (Gradinaru et al.). The second proposal suggested the base of the magnetozone MT1n at
the same section (Hounslow et al.). During the Bad Goisern meeting in September, 2008 the
conodont specialists unanimously supported the FAD of C. timorensis as the best marker event
for the O-A boundary, as already stated by Gradinaru et al., 2006 (Albertiana #34). In 2009 the
research focused on the ammonoid calibration of the boundary interval, to test the isochrony of
the first occurrence of C. timorensis. Such a test is very difficult because often the Olenekian-
Anisian sections show reduced sedimentation rate and poor and/or not continuous ammonoid
record. H. Bucher expressed some concerns on the completeness of the uppermost Olenekian at
Desli Caira because some faunas correlative with part of the Haugi Zone of north America have
not yet been found. This part of the section was sampled again in late summer by Gradinaru
together with the latest Anisian, showing rather impoverished ammonoid faunas. The
possibilities of gaps at the top of the Olenekian at Desli Caira leads some authors to reconsider
other sections as Guandao (China), characterized by good conodont record accompanied by
stable isotope variations and paleomag record, or Nevada, where all the late Olenekian to early
Anisian ammonoid faunas are present but not in succession in the same section.
Ladinian-Carnian
The GSSP for the base of the Carnian stage has been defined in 2008 at level SW4 of the Prati di
Stuores/Stuores Wiesen (Dolomites, Italy) with the first occurrence of the ammonoid Daxatina
canadensis. The GSSP has been ratified in June, 2008 and the final paper for Episodes is in
progress.
Carnian-Norian
After the proposal of two candidate sections Black Bear Ridge (Williston Lake, British
Columbia, Canada) and Pizzo Mondello (western Sicily, Italy), the work of the Task Group is
now focusing on the selection of the primary and additional marker events. This implies
refinement on conodont and halobiid taxonomy and correlations. The research teams studying
the two sections work in very close cooperation, making the Task Group a really collaborative
and stimulating environment.
This year Zonneveld et al. have submitted to Stratigraphy the description of the stratigraphic and
sedimentologic framework of BBR section and have presented a second contribution on the
Upper Triassic of Williston Lake to the GSA. The monograph on halobiid and monotid bivalves
from Black Bear Ridge and other sections in the Williston Lake area by C. McRoberts is near to
the completion. The conodont monograph by M.Orchard is also close to the end.
The progress on Pizzo Mondello section is mostly due to the two PhD thesis of M.Levera and M.
Mazza (Milano University) and to M. Rigo (Padova University). Two contributions on
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conodonts have been presented at the ICOS 2009 (Mazza et al.; Rigo et al.). Moreover a paper on
the turnover of conodont genera at the C/N boundary (Mazza et al.) is in press in the special
volume of Paleo3 dedicated to the Proceedings of the Bolzano Triassic Climate symposium. M.
Mazza, M. Rigo, A. Nicora and M. Orchard have discussed and compared the conodonts from
both the candidate sections during a post ICOS informal meeting at Vancouver (end of July). M.
Levera is ending his PhD on the C/N halobiids. This year he discussed his collections with L.
Krystyn, P. De Capoa and C. McRoberts and compared his collections with type material in
Vienna and C. McRoberts collections from North America. Next year two field trips to BBR
(May) and PM (September) sections are planned. The Triassic workshop held in Sicily in
September will be a crucial opportunity for the Task Group to try to come to a conclusion.
Norian-Rhaetian
The study of the GSSP candidate Steinbergkogel (Austria) has been finished with a
complementary high-resolution palaeomagnetic sampling of the late Norian part for a still more
detailed correlation with other Tethyan sections. The distinct and sudden frequency change from
Epigondolella to Misikella conodont dominance identified in 2008 in the Steinbergokel section,
has been investigated and proven for contemparaneity in 20 sections from various Tethyan
regions between Austria and Indonesia. This easily detectable event can now be used as the most
important proxy for identifying the Norian–Rhaetian boundary in marine sediments of the Tethys
Realm. Additional conodont studies further have demonstrated the widespread occurrence of the
Epigondolella mosheri group in the Tethys. Some morphotypes of this group may allow a cross-
correlation of the boundary into the Panthalassa Realm of North America.
The slackening of the activities experienced in 2008 unfortunately is still continuing in 2009.
The lack of IGCP support with the end of IGCP 467 is only one of the reasons, being the most
important the reduction of research funding related to the general economic crisis started with the
second half of 2008. In several countries the budget for the research is notably reduced and the
allocation of funds delayed. This affects the field work, data analysis and, most dramatically lead
to a reduction of research contracts for PhD students and post-doc young scientists.
The IGCP 572 still provide some support for investigations on the Early Triassic.
ICS FUNDING
Subcommission allocation $ 2500
STS EXPENDITURES
Albertiana $ 800
Contribution to Officer’s travel expenses $ 800
Preliminary test of Sicily 2010 field trip* $ 900
TOTAL $ 2500
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*2 day excursion for 3 people (September 14-17, 2009)
February 20-26, 2010. IGCP 572, 5th workshop. Recovery of ecosystems after the P-Tr mass
extinction: Field workshop in Oman, Gutech of Muscat, Oman. The field workshop aims to
investigate the recovery of ecosystems following the end-Permian mass extinction through
analyses of the rock and fossil records via studies of biostratigraphy, paleontology, paleoecology,
sedimentology, geochemistry and biogeochemistry in Oman, which was situated at the northern
margins of the Gondwana during the P/Tr transition.Scientific Committe for the Fieldworkshop:
Michaela Bernecker (GUtech, Muscat), Sylvie Crasquin (Paris), Alda Nicora (Milano), Aymon
Baud (Lausanne), Charles Henderson (Calgary), Leopold Krystyn (Vienna) and Oliver Weidlich
(Kassel).
May, 21-24, 2010. Field trip to Black Bear Ridge, Williston Lake (British Columbia, Canada).
The field trip is organized by J.P. Zonneveld (Univ. Alberta, Edmonton) and will allow the visit
of one of the two GSSP candidate section.
June, 3-6, 2010. Wuhan, China, IGCP 572, 6th workshop. Meeting and Field Workshop in South
China, International Conference of Geobiology, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan. IGCP
572 is one of major sponsors of the ICG2010 and will organize three sessions: Permian/Triassic
(P/Tr) mass extinction, Triassic restoration of marine ecosystems and Global distribution of
Early Triassic microbialites at the IGC, Wuhan in the summer of 2010. The symposium aims to
update the studies on the P/Tr mass extinction and possible causes, investigate the restoration
mechanisms and processes of marine ecosystems following the P/Tr mass extinction through
studies of biostratigraphy, palaeontology, palaeoecology, sedimentology, geochemistry and
biogeochemistry, and elucidate the growing mechanisms and environmental significance of the
Early Triassic microbialites. Three potential field excursions are also organized before and after
the symposium: 1) Meishan-Chaohu excursion route: examining the P/Tr mass extinction and its
aftermath from platform ramp to basin setting; 2) Guizhou excursion route: assessing recovery
pattern and processes of palaeo-communities in various facies settings; 3) Southern Tibet
excursion route: collapse and re-building of marine ecosystems in Gondwana margins.
June 28 to July 3, 2010. London, UK, IGCP 572, 7th workshop. Permo-Triassic ecosystems
session and workshop; 3rd International Palaeontological Congress (IPC 3), London; 2010.
IGCP 572 is organizing a thematic session addressing the Permian-Triassic mass extinction and
subsequent recovery and a half-day workshop on the microbial ecosystem following the end-
Permian mass extinction.
More information on IGCP acivities can be found at the following link: http://www.ipc3.org>,
<http://www.igcp572.org>.
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September, 5-10, 2010. Dolomites (Italy). 7th International Field Workshop on Triassic. Triassic
of the Dolomites. This excursion is a great opportunity to visit the best Triassic sections of the
Dolomites, that are recently been recognized as World Heritage Site for the superb Triassic
successions by the UNESCO. The excursion is organized by G. Bachmann (Halle University)
and P. Gianolla (Ferrara University).
September, 12-16, 2010. Palermo. Triassic workshop in western Sicily. The workshop includes 2
days of presentations at the Museo Geologico Gemmellaro and 2 days of field excursions in
western Sicily and immediately follows the International Field Workshop in the Dolomites. The
field excursion program includes the historical Permian of the Sosio Valley, some significant
Upper Triassic sections in platform and basinal settings, including the Pizzo Mondello section,
candidate for the definition of the GSSP of the Norian Stage. Correspondence: M. Balini,
University of Milano and P. Di Stefano, University of Palermo.
GSSP deliberations
The I-O Boundary: A new vote is scheduled for the end of 2010.
The O-A Boundary: Two competing GSSP proposals based on fossils and on magnetozone on
the same Desli Caira section (Romania) have been submitted to the Task Group. Concerns on the
time significance of the first occurrence of the conodont Chiosella timorensis lead to a new
sampling of ammonoids at Desli Caira section and re-opened the discussions. In such a situation
it is difficult to schedule a vote.
The L-C Boundary: The GSSP has been ratified by IUGS in June, 2008. The final presentation of
the GSSP on Episodes is in progress.
The C-N Boundary: The search for the primary and additional marker events in progress and
several new data are in press. For this reason the final proposals, expected for the end of 2009,
have been delayed to the end of 2010, after the visit of the two candidate sections by the Task
Group scheduled for May and September 2010.
The N-R Boundary: The primary marker event and the candidates section was designated in
2008. The final proposal for the Steinbergkogel section, Austria is expected by few months.
TOTAL $4300
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Dept. of Geosciences, University of Utrecht provides facilities for the production of Albertiana
and hosts its web-site.
Dept. of Geosciences, Cortland, New York hosts the STS website.
National research and travel grants provide support to individuals, and host institutions provide
in-kind support to the executive and task group chairs.
Because of lack of IGCP financial cover, in 2009 no funding are available for the organization of
meetings of the Middle and Upper Triassic Task Groups.
Organization
Renewal of STS voting and corresponding membership in 2001. Voting membership was
reduced from 31 to 26, and a broader geographical and disciplinary base established. This was
the first significant turnover of voting members since the inception of the STS. A summary of all
members’ research interests was published in Albertiana 26. Four new GSSP Task Group chairs
were appointed. A second renewal took place in the Fall of 2004 with 11 new voting members
amongst 25: this addressed the ICS recommended limit for terms served as well as lapsed
members. A second web site was created to supplement that of Albertiana and host discussion
groups.
Meetings/ workshops
1. Extinction events, faunal turnovers, and natural boundaries within and around the Late
Triassic. Vancouver, Canada. May 25th -28th, 2003. Conodont workshop on the Carnian-
Norian boundary.
2. Triassic geochronology and cyclostratigraphy a field symposium, September 11th -15th 2003.
Focus on Secada core research and Middle Triassic time scales. Conodont workshop on the
Olenekian-Anisian boundary.
3. Field workshop in Spiti, India, 26th June-6th July 2004. Conodont workshop on the Ladinian-
Carnian boundary.
4. International Geological Congress, Florence, Italy, August 20-28, 2004. G22-06: Triassic in
Tethys Realm; DWO-09: Upper Triassic boundaries.
5. Meeting on Triassic Chronostratigraphy and Biotic Recovery. Chaohu, China, May 23-25,
2005. Focus on I-O boundary
6. Symposium on Circum-Panthalassa Triassic Faunas and Sequences, at INTERRAD
conference. Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand, in Wellington, Wellington, New
Zealand. March 19-24, 2006.
7. Symposium on Triassic Conodonts: Taxonomy and Time Scales, at the First International
Conodont Symposium (ICOS1), in Leicester, England, July 17-21, 2006.
8. Conference, The Boreal Triassic. Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Arctic Norway, August 16-20,
2006.
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9. International meeting on The Global Triassic. Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. May (19-)23-
25, 2007.
10. Field workshop on the Carnian-Norian boundary, Williston Lake, NE BC, Canada. May 27-
31, 2007.
11. Symposium, The Triassic climate, Bolzano/Bozen, Italy, June 3-6, 2008.
12. Symposium and field workshop, Upper Triassic subdivisions, zonations and events, Bad
Goisern, Austria, September 28-October 2, 2008.
Publications
14 issues of Albertiana (#24-37) were published in 2000 thru 2008. Each of these issues was
made available for download from the web.
Abstract volumes/ field guides prepared for meetings in Romania, Oman, Stuores, Felsoors,
Vancouver, St Cristina, Spiti, Chaohu, Wellington, Leicester, Longyearbyen, Albuquerque,
Bolzano and Bad Goisern.
Task groups
Base-Induan
The Permian-Triassic boundary Task group ended the activities in 2001, with the ratification of
the GSSP at the first appearance of the conodont Hindeodus parvus at the base of bed 27c, within
the Yinkeng Formation at Meishan, Changxing County, Zhejiang Province, South China.
Induan-Olenekian
The Induan-Olenekian boundary Task Group, formed in 1997, reviewed the options for a GSSP
in the Russian Far East but found them lacking because of strong remagnetization of Triassic
rocks and poor recovery of I/O conodont assemblages. A section in Chaohu, Anhui Province,
China subsequently became the focus of intensive study. Ammonoid and conodont
biostratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy were undertaken. The FAD of the
conodont Neospathodus waageni was identified as a potential GSSP datum: it lies 26 cm below
the FAD of the flemingitid ammonoids, and is located slightly prior to the top of the second
Triassic normal magnetozone, and prior to the peak of the first Triassic positive excursion of
д13C. A preliminary conodont biostratigraphy for Chaohu was summarized in Albertiana #29
(2004), and the ammonoids described in Albertiana #31. This boundary and proposed GSSP was
the focus of a meeting held in China during June 2005, at which time many members of the task
group were able to examine the section. Several publications on Chaohu appeared in 2006 (see
Albertiana #33 and 34), including an account of the conodont succession, and papers on the
bivalves, ammonoids and palynomorphs.
After 2004 field work carried out in Mud, Spiti, an evaluation of the Mikin Fm. for establishing
an Induan-Olenekian boundary GSSP candidate began (see Albertiana #35). The rocks include
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top Gyronites, complete Flemingites, and basal Euflemingites ammonoid intervals. Three
boundary options based in ammonoids were suggested and provisionally tied to the FAD of
Neospathodus waageni subspp. Initial conodont studies identified useful taxa common to
Chaohu. The ammonoid record appears superior to that at Chaohu but the section lacks a
magnetostratigraphy. Both the proposal and studies on the conodonts and C-isotopes from Spiti
appeared in Albertiana #36, as did an account of the considerable discussion on this boundary
that took place during and after the Svalbard meeting.
Two ballots were organized in 2007, based on the FAD of Neospathodus waageni sensu lato at
Mud and at Chaohu. Mud got the majority of votes at the end of 2007, with proposed GSSP at
the base of level MO4-13A3 of Mud section 4. In 2008 further research on Mud samples, aimed
at refining the taxonomic variability of N. waageni, leads to discover some specimens possibly
belonging to morphotypes of the group of N. waageni also below the level MO4-13A3. In order
to come to a stable conclusion one year of time was given to the research group working on Mud
section, with dead line the ICOS 2009 (Calgary, July, 12-17). Two conodont specialists (M. J.
Orchard and N. Goudemand) were involved in the study and they both come to the conclusion
that N. waageni sensu lato first appears about 1 m below the level MO4-13A3. In October 2009
the Task Group is reactivated and the discussion re-opened. The mandate of the Task Group is to
organised a round of vote by the end of 2010.
Olenekian-Anisian
A field workshop was held at Desli Caira, in Dobrogea, Romania, in June 2000, to view the
Olenekian-Anisian boundary candidate. Major work was undertaken on ammonoid, nautiloid,
conodont, and foraminiferid biostratigraphy. Both chemo- and magneto-stratigraphic analyses
were largely completed. At the 2003 field workshop in St. Christina, a conodont workshop
amongst task group members agreed that the appearance of the conodont Chiosella timorensis at
the base of bed 7 was a suitable datum for GSSP definition. Further geochemical sampling was
undertaken in 2004 to fill a perceived gap in the coverage at the principal section. Further work
has been undertaken on correlative sections in South China, Spiti, and South Primorye, Russia.
In particular, a section at Guandao in the Nanpanjiang Basin of Guizhou Province, South China
produced an excellent dataset, including isotopic dates from about this boundary (~247 Ma).
At Desli Caira, the FAD of the conodont Chiosella timorensis corresponds to a significant
change in the ammonoid fauna, and a little below a peak of a positive C isotope excursion; it
falls within a short reversed polarity interval situated between two short normal intervals that
follow the longer reversed interval in the upper Spathian. The Guandao section lacks rich
ammonoid faunas but it is relatively expanded and has an excellent conodont succession and
numerous dated ash beds that place the O-A boundary at 247.2 Ma. At the Svalbard meeting, E.
Grădinaru presented data on the ammonoids and nautiloids of Desli Caira: the boundary is placed
between beds with Deslicairites simionescui n.g. n.sp., Procarnites kokeni and other upper
Spathian ammonoids below and the Paracrochordiceras-Japonites Beds of basal Anisian age
above. Especially important for correlation with the Boreal Realm is the outstanding occurrence
of olenekitids (Deslicairites, ?Svalbardiceras) in the topmost Olenekian of the Tethys and of
?Karangatites at the very base of the Anisian at Desli Caira. Karangatites is the zonal marker for
the base of the Anisian in Arctic Siberia. The use of the FAD of the conodont Chiosella
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timorensis as a datum for the O-A boundary was challenged due to variation in its taxonomic
treatment and evolution in our understanding of the group leading to historical records of the
species occurring within Olenekian strata. A study of Chiosella based on the collections from
both Desli Caira and Guandao was undertaken in order to clarify its taxonomy and demonstrate
its utility as a global index. A paper on this topic was published in Albertiana #34.
The proposal for the GSSP at Desli Caira on the first occurrence of C. timorensis at the base of
the level GR7 was published in Albertiana #36 (Gradinaru et al.) that included also the report of
ammonoid faunas. In the same issue of Albertiana a second GSSP proposal was presented by
Hounslow et al. They suggested the base of the magnetozone MT1n at Desli Caira section to by
pass bio-chronostratigraphic problem. This proposal is supported by an extremely interesting and
detailed magnetostratigraphic correlation schemes including South China, Kcira, Desli Caira,
Spitzbergen, Spain, UK, Germany and Poland.
In 2009 the discussion in the Task Group stalled on test of the isochrony of the first occurrence
of C. timorensis. Such a test is necessary to demonstrate the significance of this bioevent as
primary marker for the GSSP, but on the other hand it is very difficult because the ammonoid
record of the best O-A sections is poor or discontinuous. H. Bucher expressed some concerns on
the completeness of the uppermost Olenekian at Desli Caira because some faunas correlative
with part of the Haugi Zone of north America have not yet been found. For this reasons this part
of the section was sampled again in late summer by Gradinaru together with the latest Anisian,
showing rather impoverished ammonoid faunas. The possibilities of gaps at the top of the
Olenekian at Desli Caira leads some authors to reconsider other sections as Guandao (China),
characterized by good conodont record accompanied by stable isotope variations and paleomag
record, or Nevada, where all the late Olenekian to early Anisian ammonoid faunas are present
but not in the same section. Unfortunately no good ammonoids have been reported so far from
Guandao, while the Nevada successions are usually remagnetized. Another interesting section is
Atlasov Cape in South Primorye (Russia). However the ammonoid record of this section is
endemic and no data on conodonts are available.
Anisian-Ladinian
During the St. Christina meeting (2003) a formal task group was formed in order to finalize the
more than 10 year of research and discussions on the Anisian-Ladinian boundary. Three
alternate proposals were published in Albertiana #28, and the choice was concluded in a series of
votes within STS during 2004. The IUGS ratified the choice on 21st March 2005. The GSSP is
thus defined at the top of "Chiesense groove", located about 5 m above the base of the
Buchenstein Beds at Bagolino, northern Italy; the lower surface of the overlying thick limestone
bed has the lowest occurrence of the ammonoid Eoprotrachyceras curionii. Secondary global
markers in the uppermost Anisian include the lowest occurrence of conodont Neogondolella
praehungarica and a brief normal-polarity magnetic zone. The GSSP level is bracketed by U-Pb
single zircon age data, indicating that the boundary age is within the range 240-242Ma. A
description of the GSSP was published in Episodes. Since summer 2009 the GSSP site is
accessible through a geological pathway with explanatory notes and ammonoid casts provided by
the local administration of Bagolino and the Natural History Museum of Brescia.
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Ladinian-Carnian
A field workshop in the Italian Dolomites during July 1998 focused on the section at Prati di
Stuores, the subject of a formal Ladinian-Carnian boundary GSSP proposal. A dedicated Task
Group was established in 2001. Subsequently fieldwork was carried out in two other regions:
Spiti and Nevada. Studies in Spiti have included four expeditions, with two in Nevada. Crucial
biostratigraphic data concerns the distinction between prospective index ammonoids Daxatina
and Trachyceras, the FAD of the prospective conodont Metapolygnathiformis polygnathiformis,
and the appearance of the bivalve Halobia.
Work in the Dolomites included a very heavy resampling of the Prati di Stuores section which
resulted in a single incomplete specimen of Metapolygnathus polygnathiformis noah near the bed
with the FAD of Daxatina. The Padova research group sought new sections in the Eastern
Dolomites to better document the interval between the top of Daxatina beds and base of
Trachyceras aon. In Spiti, as in Prati di Stuores, Daxatina appears towards the top of the range
interval of the genus Frankites, and Trachyceras overlaps with highest Daxatina. However, the
FAD of the conodont M. polygnathiformis predates the oncoming of Daxatina by several meters.
Doubtful Halobia still appear within the Frankites beds but well established occurrences are
higher, within the beds with Trachyceras. The pros of the Spiti sections are the concurrent record
of ammonoids, conodonts and bivalves, which allows the intercalibration of the bioevents. The
cons are the remagnetization of the section, the thermally degraded/destroyed palynomorph
content, and the accessibility limited to the summer months, due to the altitude.
In the successions in New Pass, Nevada, Frankites sutherlandi overlaps the lower part of the
range of Trachyceras gr. T. desatoyense, several meters above the FAD of T. desatoyense.
Halobia appears in the same beds from where F. sutherlandi was recovered and possibly is even
older. The richest beds in ammonoids of the South Canyon section overlie a sudden facies
change, with the drowning of a carbonate platform. South Canyon does not appear to be a
possible GSSP candidate mostly because of the facies change and the remagnetization due to the
nearby Cenozoic volcanic rocks. The section is, however, of great significance for large-scale
correlations of North America with the Tethyan realm
M. Gaetani, the task group chair, distributed a questionnaire in June 2006 concerning the status
of the boundary deliberations and the pros and cons of various fossil criteria. An outcome of this
was that, in spite of a lack of an ancestor for Daxatina, ammonoids were favored for definition of
the boundary. M. Balini, the principal worker on the ammonoid faunas of this boundary interval,
visited the Smithsonian Museum for comparative studies and then completed his collections in
South Canyon, Nevada. He reports a much more detailed view of the lithologic as well as of the
faunal succession, with bed-by-bed data from 5 sites: A, B, D, E, F, three of which have yielded
conodont fauna.
The Albuquerque Symposium (May 2007) was the most important moment for the discussion of
the GSSP options. The third and last possible candidate section, South Canyon (Nevada), was
visited by the Task Group during the pre-congress field trip. Several contributions on British
Columbia, Nevada and Prati di Stuores were presented at the symposium and data were
published in the New Mexico Musuem Bulletin (#40 and #41: Balini et al., Balini & Jenks;
Orchard; Orchard & Balini; Mietto et al.). The detailed bed-by-bed study of South Canyon, the
69
most important site to test the correlations of the Tethyan bioevents with North American
successions, shows interesting faunal similarity with the Tethyan successions. This locality, that
previously was regarded to as representing the basal part of the Carnian in North America
actually yields typical Upper Ladinain fossils in the lower part, such as Frankites sutherlandi,
Metapolyganthus intermedius and bivalves of the group of Daonella elegans. The stratigraphic
position of Daxatina is also very similar with respect to the Tethys. The upper part of the range
of the overlaps with the lower part of the range of Trachyceras.
The significance of the new data and the selection of the marker event for the definition of the
GSSP of the Carnian stage was discussed during the Business Meeting of the STS. The FO of
Metapolyganthus polygathiformis, previously considered as possible marker for the base of the
Carnian, was no more supported by the conodont specialists while the FAD of Daxatina
canadensis achieved the general consensus. A final dossier was published in Albertiana #36, and
the proposal was voted by 72% of the Task Group members. IUGS ratified the GSSP in June
2008.
Carnian-Norian
The Task Group on the Carnian-Norian boundary was established in 2001. Key sections in
Canada, Sicily, Slovakia, Turkey, and Oman have been studied resulting in an integrated bio-,
magneto- and chemostratigraphic cross-correlation of key sections in the Tethys. The Pizzo
Mondello section in Sicily contributes a magnetostratigraphic profile tied to a preliminary
conodont zonation for the C-N boundary interval in Tethys. Alternate views of its correlation
with the cyclostratigraphically calibrated Newark non-marine successions, place the base of the
Norian at about 214 Ma or 228 Ma. A preliminary new conodont zonation from a potential GSSP
at Black Bear Ridge, Western Canada was presented during a formal Workshop on Upper
Triassic boundaries at the IGC in Florence in 2004.
Discussions during ICOS1 centered on the suitability of key CNB conodont taxa for
intercontinental correlation. It was agreed amongst those present that the FAD of Epigondolella
quadrata, a higher level than those previously considered, might be a suitable index but this was
not widely supported. New work in both Canada and Sicily was planned.
New integrated biostratgraphic investigations at Pizzo Mondello started at the end of 2006 in
connections with three PhD thesis of Milano and Padova Universities. Two of them focus on
conodonts and halobiids. Preliminary results were presented at the Albuquerque meeting (May
2007) and a more advanced report was printed in Albertiana #36 (Nicora et al.). The
biostratigraphic record of Pizzo Mondello is more complete than reported in literature. Besides
conodonts, new amnonoids, halobiids and radiolaria were documented. Ammonoids document
the last two chronozones of the Carnian and the first zone of the Norian. Halobiids also
document the Upper Carnian and the Lower Norian. The radiolarian faunas although found in
relatively few samples are very rich with more than 45 taxa.
In 2009 some data from the two sections have been submitted for publications. These include
stratigraphic and sedimentologic description of Black Bear Ridge section and conodont data
from Pizzo Mondello section. At the end of July the conodont specialists working on the two
70
sections (M. Mazza, A. Nicora, M. Orchard and M. Rigo) met in Vancouver and discussed
taxonomy and correlations. Nearly at the same time the bivalve specialists C. McRoberts and M.
Levera compared faunas and discussed taxonomy in a meeting at SUNY Cortland. In September
Pizzo Mondello section was visited by J.P. Zonneveld and Milano team in the framework of
preparation of the field excursion for the Triassic Workshop Sicily 2010.
Norian-Rhaetian
A Norian-Rhaetian boundary Task Group was formed in 2001. Sections in western Canada,
USA, and Austria were studied and produced important ammonoid, bivalve, and conodont data.
Magnetostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic studies were undertaken in Queen Charlotte
Islands, Canada. Rock magnetism carried a Cretaceous overprint. A carbon isotopic anomaly
was identified at a potential boundary where radiolarians show distinctive faunal change and
which is the FAD of the conodont Epigondolella mosheri, which approximates the Amoenum
Zone in North America. A field workshop in the Gabbs Valley Range of Nevada in March 2005
included sampling of both N/R and T/J boundary strata. Palynology results were disappointing,
but the presence of the ‘Tethyan’ conodont Misikella was confirmed - a first for the North
American autochthon.
In Austria, a section in the Hallstatt and Zlambach Formation produced good ammonoids,
pelagic bivalves, conodonts, rare radiolarians, and palynomorphs, as well as a
magnetostratigraphy. A distinctive dinoflagellate change occurs midway through the Zlambach
section with the FO of Rhaetogonyaulax rhaetica, a datum that may have potential in correlation
with shallow marine and/or high latitude basins.
At Steinbergkogel, Austria, a potential GSSP candidate, the FAD of the conodont Misikella
posthernsteini was proven to be isochronous with the FO of the ammonoid Cochloceras. This
well-constrained bioevent is closely above the FO of the conodont Misikella hernsteini and a
magnetic polarity change from a long normal to a well developed reversed interval. The
distinctive dinoflagellate change, which occurs with the FO of Rhaetogonyaulax rhaetica in the
Zlambach section, is stratigraphically higher than the other two options and corresponds to
another ammonoid change with the FO of the widely distributed genera Cycloceltites and
Vandaites. A formal presentation of Steinbergkogel as candidate section was done for the
Albuquerque Symposium (Krystyn et al., New Mexico Museum Bulletin 41) and updated with
magnetostratigraphy in Albertiana #36. Steinbergkogel section was visited during the Bad
Goisern meeting in 2008 and impressed the participants for the amount of work done by the
group leaded by L. Krystyn. The thickness of the boundary succession is unfortunately rather
thin, and the facies is not constant. However the section is of great interest because the Norian-
Rhaetian boundary is commonly very poorly documented all over the world. The last problem to
be solved in order to come to the final vote of the Task Group consists in the demonstration of
the significance of events recorded at Steinbergkogel by their correlations with other sections.
This rather complex task engaged L. Krystyn team for most of 2009. At the present a correlation
chart for sections in the Tethyan Realm is almost ready and some possibilities of direct
correlations with North America, based on conotons of the group of Epigondolella mosheri is
under evaluation.
71
11. OBJECTIVES AND WORK PLAN BEYOND 2009.
The slowing down of the research activities in 2009, unfortunately forces a revision of the work
plan scheduled last year. Realistically the objective of the STS, i.e, the completion of the
definition of the GSSP of the Triassic System (I-O, O-A, C-N and N-R) can be achieved by
2012. The schedule is strictly depending on the end of the economic crisis.
Work plan:
2010: vote of the I/O and N/R boundary Task Groups. Possibly also for the O/A and C/N T.G.
2011: further ballots, if necessary
2012: start of work on the substages, but only if the primary goals of the STS are accomplished.
***************************
APPENDIX [Names and Full Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members]
Chairman: M. J. Orchard, Geological Survey of Canada, 625 Robson Street, Vancouver, B.C.
V6B 5J3, Canada, e-mail: morchard@nrcan.gc.ca
Vice Chairman: Yin Hongfu, China University of Geosciences, Yujiashan, Wuhan, Hubei,
430074, Peoples Republic of China. hfyin@cug.edu.cn
Vice Chairman: Marco Balini, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, via Mangiagalli 34, I-20133
Milano, Italy. Marco.Balini@unimi.it
Secretary/ STS web: Christopher A. McRoberts, Department of Geology, State University of
New York at Cortland, P.O. Box 2000, Cortland, New York 13045 USA.
mcroberts@cortland.edu
Albertiana Editor/ Webmaster: Wolfram M. Kuerschner, Laboratory of Palaeobotany and
Palynology, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, 3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands.
W..M.Kurschner@bio.uu.nl
Chairman: Marco Balini, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, via Mangiagalli 34, I-20133
Milano, Italy. Marco.Balini@unimi.it
Vice Chairman: Mark Hounslow, Centre for Environmental Magnetism and Palaeomagnetism,
Geography Dept, Farrer Avenue, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK., LA1 4YQ.
m.hounslow@lancaster.ac.uk
Vice Chairman: Jinnan Tong, GPMR and BGEG laboratories at China University of
Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China. jntong@cug.edu.cn
72
Secretary/ STS web: Christopher A. McRoberts, Department of Geology, State University of
New York at Cortland, P.O. Box 2000, Cortland, New York 13045 USA.
mailto:mcroberts@cortland.edu
Albertiana Editor/ Webmaster: Wolfram M. Kuerschner, Laboratory of Palaeobotany and
Palynology, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, 3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands.
W..M.Kurschner@bio.uu.nl
Base Induan (Triassic): Yin Hongfu, China. hfyin@cug.edu.cn. Mission ended in 2001.
Base Olenekian: Y. Zakharov, Russia. yurizakh@mail.ru
Base Anisian: E. Gradinaru, Romania. egradin@geo.edu.ro
Base Ladinian: A. Baud, Switzerland. Aymon.Baud@sst.unil.ch. Mission ended in 2004.
Base Carnian: M. Gaetani, Italy. maurizio.gaetani@unimi.it Mission ended in 2008.
Base Norian: L. Krystyn, Austria. leopold.krystyn@univie.ac.at
Base Rhaetian: L. Krystyn, Austria. leopold.krystyn@univie.ac.at
Non-marine auxiliaries: S. Lucas, USA. Lucas, Spencer, DCA. spencer.lucas@state.nm.us
73
List of Voting Members (2008-2010)
74
SUBCOMMISSION ON PERMIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
3. ORGANIZATION
The Subcommission has an Executive consisting of a Chairman, a Vice-Chairman, and a
Secretary; all three are Voting Members of the Subcommission. There are sixteen total Voting
Members representing most regions of the world where Permian rocks are exposed. The
objectives of the Subcommission are pursued by both stratigraphic and thematic Working Groups
that are retired upon completion of their directed task. For example, the Working Groups on the
Carboniferous-Permian Boundary, on the Guadalupian stages (Middle Permian), on the base-
Lopingian boundary (base-Wuchiapingian Stage), and on base-Changhsingian have been retired
upon the successful establishment of their defining GSSP’s and ratification by IUGS. The current
working groups include the following: 1. Cisuralian stages, 2. Continental Permian, 3.
Transitional biotas as gateways for global correlation, 4. Neotethys, Paleotethys, and S. China
Correlations, and 5. International Lopingian Working Group.
3a. Officers for 2008-2012:
Chair: Professor Charles M. Henderson, University of Calgary
Vice-Chair: Dr. Vladimir Davydov, Boise State University
Secretary: Dr. Shuzhong Shen, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology
75
4. INTERFACES WITH OTHER INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
SPS interacts with many international projects on formal and informal levels. SPS has taken an
active role on the development of integrated chronostratigraphic databases by participating with
CHRONOS and PALEOSTRAT (now GeoStratSys), which are NSF funded initiatives. Vladimir
Davydov and Walter Snyder are concentrating on developing their system to include improved
taxonomic dictionaries, database sharing and manipulation with PALEOSTRAT. SPS is also
involved in a NSFC supported study comparing the Proterozoic-Cambrian transition with the
Permian-Triassic transition.
5. CHIEF ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND PRODUCTS IN 2009
GSSPs: Progress was made on the three remaining Lower Permian (Cisuralian) stage GSSPs
including base-Sakmarian, base-Artinskian, and base-Kungurian. Samples collected during an
international field excursion conducted in early July 2007 (reported in Permophiles #49; p. 4-6)
have been processed for stable isotope geochemistry, radioisotopic ages and biostratigraphy.
These results were discussed at the Calgary business meeting in July 2009 and some decisions
were made (see Permophiles 53 for fuller explanation). In summary, we have decided to change
the section and point for the base-Sakmarian to the Usolka section. The Kondurovsky section
failed to reproduce the requisite conodont results and problems about the evolution of
Sweetognathus merrilli were discussed during ICOS2009. Fortunately, the Usolka section had
been fully worked up as a potential parastratotype and we have excellent carbon isotope, U-Pb
isotopic ages and abundant conodonts to define the boundary. It was also decided that the base-
Artinskian is ready to prepare a final proposal and vote by SPS now that conodonts have been
reproduced and carbon isotopes have been added to the excellent U-Pb dates as correlation tools.
At both of these sections the Sr isotopes of conodonts have also been shown to be an accurate
correlation tool. Finally, it was decided that the Mechetlino section in Russia is not satifactory for
a GSSP – samples did not yield conodonts, zircons are all reworked, and the rocks are too deeply
weathered to produce meaningful carbon isotopic values. Two sections in the United States,
which have already been extensivelystudied are now being considered as potential GSSPs using
the same point (FAD of N. pnevi); these include the Cassia Mts in southern Idaho and Rockland
sections in northern Nevada. We plan to complete proposals and vote for the base-Sakmarian and
base-Artinskian early in 2010. We hope to complete the final GSSP for the base-Kungurian early
in 2011.
Publications: The December 2008 issue of Permophiles (#52) was produced online during
January 2009 and distributed as a pdf document to a mailing list of 280. The June 2009 issue
(#53) was produced in July 2009 during a conodont symposium at the University of Calgary.
Permophiles 53 has three parts including: 1) the regular issue with an edited version of the field
guide on Argentine Late Paleozoic, 2) the abstract volume for ICOS2009, and 3) the fieldtrip
guidebook for ICOS 2009 on the geology of the southern Canadian Rocky Mts. We have a
complete series of Permophiles on our website (1978 to 2009).
Meetings: The SPS conducted two business meetings including 1) at the end of a field expedition
(Feb 16 to March 2, 2009) to Patagonia Argentina at the Museo Paleontologico Egidio Feruglio
in Trelew, Argentina and 2) during the International Conodont Symposium (ICOS) at the
University of Calgary July 14, 2009. These were reported in Permophiles 53.
Membership: There was one addition to the membership in 2009. During the business meeting
in Argentina it was decided that SPS should have more representation from countries where the
Gondwanan succession is exposed. Dr. Nestor R. Cuneo from Argentina has agreed to become a
voting member. We therefore now have 17 voting members representing Argentina (1), Australia
(2), Canada (1), China (3), France (1), Germany (1), Italy (1), Japan (1), Russia (3), and United
States (3). We also have five honourary Members.
76
6. CHIEF PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN 2009
There were no major problems in 2009, but decisions to reject one of our potential GSSP sites
will delay the completion of SPS GSSP activity.
77
TOTAL BUDGET REQUEST (ICS) $3,000.00
Request is for $1000.00 to cover expenses for printing and postage for Permophiles, GSSP
proposals, and some correspondence as well as website costs. In addition, SPS requests an extra
$2,000.00 to partially subsidize travel costs for participants to the ICS workshop to be held in
Prague during May 30-June 3, 2010 (especially for Davydov).
10. REVIEW CHIEF ACCOMPLISHMENTS OVER PAST FIVE
YEARS (2005-2009)
The SPS has approved the general divisions of the Permian and has now had 6 GSSP’s ratified by
ICS and IUGS (Asselian, Roadian, Wordian, Capitanian, Wuchiapingian, Changhsingian).
Proposals for the latter two stages were published in Episodes in 2006. Support for
documentation (fieldwork and publications) of the various chronostratigraphic methods for the
establishment of the GSSP’s has been the most outstanding and differentiating character of this
Subcommission. Substantial work has been conducted toward producing excellent proposals for
the remaining stages. Permophiles has become an internationally respected newsletter and bears
an ISSN designation (1684-5927) and is deposited in the National Library of Canada; nine issues
were published during the five year period. See Accomplishments in 2009 (above) for additional
details.
Once the GSSP process is completed SPS will shift focus toward three directions beginning in
2011:
1. correlations into continental deposits,
2. correlations across provincial boundaries and within the Tethys region,
3. detailed documentation of the geologic evolution of the Earth during the Permian with respect
to the established chronostratigraphic framework.
78
membership.... Shuzhong Shen at Nanjing China maintains the site and Henderson and Shen both
have administrator rights.
GSSP’s: The proposal for the base-Lopingian (base-Wuchiapingian) was ratified by ICS and
IUGS in 2004. The proposal for the base-Changhsingian was voted and ratified by SPS in 2004.
The proposal for the base-Changhsingian was voted and ratified by ICS/IUGS in 2005. The base-
Wuchiapingian and base-Changhsingian (Upper Permian or Lopingian Series) GSSPs were
published in Episodes (volume 29, No. 3&4) in 2006. Progress was made on the three remaining
Lower Permian (Cisuralian) stage GSSPs including base-Sakmarian, base-Artinskian, and base-
Kungurian. An international field excursion was conducted in early July 2007 (reported in
Permophiles #49; p. 4-6) and samples for carbon isotopes, geochronology and biostratigraphy
were collected and have now been processed. The geochemical samples will provide further
correlation potential for the proposed GSSPs; these materials are being analyzed at Boise State
University and the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology. The biostratigraphy samples
will determine reproducibility of GSSP definitions. Decisions have been made on the basis of this
new work and this is described above in section 5.
Publications: The December 2003 issue of Permophiles (#43) was produced at Reston, Virginia
in February 2004 and distributed to a mailing list of 280 from the University of Calgary later in
the year. The June/December 2004 issue of Permophiles (#44) was produced at Pend Oreille,
Idaho during October 2004 and was distributed in December 2004 from the University of
Calgary. The June 2005 issue of Permophiles (#45) was produced at Nanjing China during June
2005 and distributed to a mailing list of 280. The December 2005 issue of Permophiles (#46) was
produced at the University of Calgary during November 2005 and distributed as a pdf on our
website. In addition the remaining back issues of Permophiles were scanned and added to our
website providing a complete series of communications by Permophiles since 1978. The June
2006 issue of Permophiles (#47) was produced at Nanjing China during June 2006 and
distributed as a pdf document to a mailing list of 280. The December 2006 issue of Permophiles
(#48) was produced at the University of Calgary during November 2006 and distributed as a pdf
on our website. We now have a complete series of Permophiles on our website (1978 to 2006).
The June 2007 issue of Permophiles (#49) was produced at Nanjing China during June 2007 and
distributed as a pdf document to a mailing list of 280. The December 2007 issue (#50) was
produced in January 2008 after a field excursion to Australia. June 2008 issue (#51) was
produced in Calgary in July 2008. December 2008 (#52) was produced online in January 2009
and #53 was produced in July 2009 in Calgary. We now have a complete series of Permophiles
on our website (1978 to 2009).
Meetings: The SPS conducted its annual business meeting at the IGC meeting in Florence, Italy
on August 23, 2004 with 23 people in attendance. This business meeting was preceded by a
session on “The Lower Permian Cisuralian Stages” co-chaired by Boris Chuvashov and Charles
Henderson. This was a successful session with six oral presentations and several posters that
demonstrated clear progress in the definitions for the Cisuralian stages. Abstracts for these papers
appear in Permophiles issue #44. The SPS conducted two business meetings in 2005 including at
the Triassic Chronostratigraphy and Biotic Recovery meeting in Chaohu, China on May 23, 2005
with 27 in attendance and at the Non-marine Permian Conference at Albuquerque New Mexico
on Oct. 23, 2005 with 28 in attendance. This latter conference was organized by Spencer Lucas
and was very successful with 68 people in attendance from 12 countries. The SPS conducted one
business meeting at the 2nd International Palaeontology Congress in Beijing, China in June 2006.
79
The SPS conducted one business meeting at the XVI International Congress on the Carboniferous
and Permian in Nanjing, China in June 2007 and is reported in Permophiles #49. Business
meetings were held in Sydney Australia (January 2008; Permophiles #50) and IGC in Oslo
(August 2008). In 2009 business meetings were held in Trelew Argentina and at ICOS2009 in
Calgary.
Membership: During 2004 the voting membership of SPS saw considerable renewal. We have a
completely new executive and six new voting members. In order to allow this renewal, a few
members were asked to retire their voting status. The SPS executive has decided to name a new
membership category, Honourary Members, to reflect the significant past and continuing
contributions of these retiring voting members. The first Honourary Members are Professors
Brian Glenister, Heinz Kozur, and Claude Spinosa. Honourary Members will receive GSSP
proposals and be invited to comment on the merits of the proposal, but they will not vote on the
proposal. The comments of Honourary Members will be included in subsequent versions of the
proposal. Only one change in voting membership occurred in 2005. Professor Giuseppe Cassinis
of Italy retired as a voting member and Dr. Marc Durand of Universite de Nancy, France was
voted by the executive as a replacement. Two changes were made to voting membership in 2006.
Dr. John Utting retired as a voting member and was named by the SPS Executive as a Honourary
Member given his long service to SPS (past Secretary) and distinguished research record in Late
Paleozoic palynology. Dr. Lucia Angiolini was nominated by the executive to fill this vacancy.
This increased the membership from Europe bringing it more in line with other major regions.
Secondly, we sadly lost our distinguished colleague and friend Professor Jin Yugan who died in
June 2006 (see Permophiles 48 for a tribute). His was a very distinguished career in Late
Paleozoic paleontology and service including as a past-Secretary and past- Chairman of SPS. He
has been replaced as a voting member by Professor Yue Wang. There were no changes to the
membership in 2007, but as noted in the 4 year summary we have made several changes over the
past four years. In addition, the current executive will continue for a second term. We currently
have 16 voting members representing Australia (2), Canada (1), China (3), France (1), Germany
(1), Italy (1), Japan (1), Russia (3), and United States (3). We also have five honourary Members.
No changes in 2008. In 2009 we added one new voting member, Dr. Nestor R. Cuneo from
Argentina to add to our complement noted above.
Summary (2004-2009): In 2004 a new SPS executive was named including Charles Henderson
as Chair, Vladimir Davydov as Vice-Chair, and Shuzhong Shen as Secretary. In terms of the
voting membership, nine of sixteen members were new during the reporting period (56%
renewal). SPS also instituted a new membership category, Honourary Member, and five
individuals have been sonamed. SPS conducted five business meetings during the fouryear period
at major international meetings. Two GSSP proposals for the base-Wuchiapingian (also base-
Lopingian Series) and base-Changhsingian were prepared, voted, ratified and published in
Episodes during the past four years. Significant progress has been made on the last three
Cisuralian GSSP proposals for the base-Sakmarian, base-Artinskian, and base-Kungurian stages.
An international workshop was conducted in July 2007 to determine reproducibility and
accessibility as well as collect new geochemical data. During the reporting period, Permophiles
#43 to #53 have been produced with #54 to come later this year. In addition, a website was
constructed and hosted by the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology during the
reporting period. Among other items, this website has pdf versions of all issues of Permophiles
dating back to #1 in 1978.
***************************
APPENDIX
Officers and Voting Members as of November 2009
80
Dr. Lucia Angiolini
Dipartimento di Scienze Terra “A. DEsio”
Via Manggiagalli 34, 20133
Milano, Italy
81
Sredny pr. 74
St. Petersburg 199026 Russia
82
Prof. Brian F. Glenister
Department of Geology
University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
83
SUBCOMMISSION ON CARBONIFEROUS STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
84
format for download, and 8) Links - provides web links to important websites such as those of
the ICS and IUGS.
Membership
The SCCS has a total of 21 voting members (see list at end of report), and approximately 278
corresponding members (see latest issue of Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy for contact
information). Meetings of the SCCS are held every two years, both at the quadrennial meetings
of the International Congress on the Carboniferous and Permian, and at a Field Meeting
convened by the SCCS alone midway between the congresses. The latest Field Meeting was held
in Russia from August 11th to 19th, 2009 (see Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, v. 26 for
details).
SCCS has six current task groups and one exploratory Project Group:
Task Group to redefine the Devonian-Carboniferous Boundary [which is also the base of the
Lower Mississippian Series and Tournaisian Stage], a joint task group was established in early
2008 that comprises 10 members appointed by Thomas Becker of the Devonian Subcommission
and 10 members selected by Philip Heckel of the SCCS in 2008, who summarized the reasons for
establishing the group in the 2008 issue of Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 26, p. 3].
At present the SCCS executive are directing the task group but a chairman will be appointed by
the SCCS if required. Richards summarized the recent work of the group through May 2009 in
this year’s Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 27, p. 7-9].
Task Group to establish the Tournaisian-Viséan Boundary [which is also the base of the
Middle Mississippian Series], chaired by George Sevastopulo (Ireland). Using e-mail
communications from the chairman, Richards and Aretz summarized the recent activities of the
group through May 2009 in the Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy for 2009 [v. 27, p. 9-
10].
Task Group to establish the Visean-Serpukhovian Boundary [which is also the base of the
Upper Mississippian Series], chaired by Barry Richards (Canada), who summarized the recent
work of the group through May 2009 in this year’s Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v.
27, p. 10-12].
Task Group to establish the Bashkirian-Moscovian Boundary [which is also the base of the
Middle Pennsylvanian Series], chaired by John Groves (USA), who summarized the recent work
of the group through May 2009 in this year’s Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 27, p.
12-14].
Task Group to establish the Moscovian-Kasimovian Boundary [which is also the base of the
Upper Pennsylvanian Series], and the Kasimovian-Gzhelian Boundary, chaired by Katsumi
Ueno (Japan) who succeeded Elisa Villa (Spain) at the Oslo IGC meeting in August 2008. Ueno
summarized the recent work of the group through May 2009 in this year’s Newsletter on
Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 27, p. 14-18].
Project Group on Upper Paleozoic boreal biota, stratigraphy and biogeography, chaired by
Marina Durante (Russia), who did not submit reports since 2005, is terminated because of
sickness.
85
Project Group on Carboniferous magnetostratigraphy, chaired by Mark Hounslow (United
Kingdom), who summarized the recent work of the group through May 2009 in this year’s
Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 27, p. 18-19].
86
S. sulcata is slightly earlier than reported by Heckel (2008) and at the 2008 IGC workshop and is
at the base of bed 84b at La Serre rather than the base of bed 85. At this position, S. sulcata co-
occurs with S. praesulcata at a sharp facies break and the evolutionary lineage from S.
praesulcata to S. sulcata is absent in the underlying strata. Because the FO of S. sulcata may not
be the best event to define the D/C boundary, Kaiser (2009) suggested the evolutionary lineage
from Protognathodus kockeli to Protognathodus kuehni could be used to define the D-C
boundary as there are many sections worldwide that contain the lineage. She also indicated other
protognathodid lineages show potential for boundary definition; however, more study of those
lineages is required before one can be used.
Task-group members Carlo Corradini and Sandra Kaiser have started to work on the
taxonomic and phylogenetic problems within the S. Praesulcata - S. sulcata lineage and
protognathodid lineages. They presented their initial findings in a paper (Morphotypes in the
early Siphonodella lineage: implications for the definition of the Devonian/Carboniferous
boundary) presented at the Second International Conodont Symposium (ICOS 2009) held in
Calgary, Canada from July 12th to 17th 2009. Their study (Corradini and Kaiser, 2009) indicates
several morphotypes occur in the transition from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata and that the position
of the current D-C boundary at La Serre is based on subjective interpretations.
During the SCCS workshop following the ICOS 2009 conference session, no consensus
was reached on whether or not the Siphonodella lineage could be used for D-C boundary
definition or even if S. praesulcata and S. sulcata should be considered as two different species.
Specialists attending the workshop agreed that the D-C boundary can not remain at its present
position at La Serre (base of bed 89) and that a new GSSP must be selected either lower in the
section or in another section. They also decided that the initial problem to resolve was the
selection of a suitable taxon for boundary definition. Three options were presented: continue use
of the S. praesulcata-S. sulcata lineage but find a better way to speciate it, select a different
lineage (protognathodids), and use the first occurrence of another taxon.
On August 14th, during the southern Uralian component of the SCCS field meeting in
Russia, several SCCS members visited two sections that spanned the D-C boundary and
contained the S. praesulcata-S. sulcata lineage (see Pazukhin et al., 2009). At the related
technical session, the conclusions reached about the GSSP at La Serre were similar to those made
at the Calgary ICOS 2009 meeting, but the Russian conodont specialists thought the current event
marker, the FAD of S. sulcata, could be used for boundary definition.
Task Group to establish the Tournaisian-Viséan boundary
Following approval of the proposed GSSP [see Devuyst et al. (2003) for early version of
proposal] at Pengchong in southern China, by the SCCS in late 2007 and its ratification by the
ICS and IUGS, task-group member François-Xavier Devuyst has been preparing the final report
about the Tournaisian-Viséan boundary GSSP. After completion of the report, the task group will
be dissolved according to ICS rule (7.5).
Task-group member Hongfe Hou is trying to organize an official ceremony for the placement
of the "golden spike" in the GSSP section at Pengchong. Several task-group members and SCCS
officials plan to attend the historic ceremony.
The Task Group to establish the Viséan-Serpukhovian boundary considers the first
evolutionary appearance of the conodont Lochriea ziegleri in the lineage Lochriea nodosa-
Lochriea ziegleri to be the best event for boundary definition. The lineage along with associated
faunas and strata are being studied in several areas but the Nashui section in south China and the
Verkhnyaya Kardailovka section in Russia have the best potential as GSSP candidates and are
receiving intensive study.
87
Task-group member Yuping Qi and associates at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and
Palaeontology recognized the L. nodosa – L. ziegleri lineage in the Nashui section in southern
Guizhou province, People’s Republic of China (Qi and Wang 2005). Qi has finished his detailed
analysis of the conodonts across the Viséan/Serpukhovian boundary in the Nashui section and
incorporated the results in his doctoral thesis (Qi, 2008). In the Nashui section, conodonts within
the L. nodosa - L. ziegleri lineage are well preserved and abundant. Elements transitional
between L. nodosa and L. ziegleri are plentiful at Nashui, occurring through several metres of
section, and the oldest representatives of L. ziegleri could be readily distinguished from the
associated transitional forms of L. nodosa.
Several task-group members and John Groves are continuing a detailed analysis of the
foraminifers, stable-isotope geochemistry and sedimentology of the Nashui section and a nearby
shallow-water limestone-dominant section at Yashui (by city of Huishui) in Guizhou province
that spans the Viséan/Serpukhovian boundary. The goal of studying the Yashui section is to
establish the relationship of the coral and foraminiferal zones to the L. nodosa - L. ziegleri
lineage.
Nikolaeva et al. (2005) recognized the L. nodosa – L. ziegleri lineage in a, deep-water,
carbonate section along the Ural River opposite the village of Verkhnyaya Kardailovka in the
southeastern Urals, Russia. During the SCCS field meeting, held in Russia in August 2009, task-
group and other SCCS members visited the Kardailovka section to determine how it compared
with Nashui in terms of its suitability as a GSSP candidate. They concluded the boundary interval
was well exposed but noted only three to five metres of well-exposed strata lay below it, whereas
at Nashui many metres of conodont-bearing strata are exposed. More of the section below the
boundary interval at Kardailovka can be excavated and the section has the advantage of
containing abundant ammonoids. Nikolaeva and her colleagues have thoroughly examined the
section and published a synthesis of their studies on the ammonoids, conodonts, and ostracodes
(Nikolaeva et al., 2009). The synthesis indicates conodonts that are transitional between L.
nodosa and L. ziegleri occur in the Kardailovka section immediately below the FAD of L.
ziegleri.
The task group and SCCS have not voted on either rejecting or accepting the first
evolutionary appearance of L. ziegleri for boundary definition.
88
demonstrably Moscovian fusulinid is at 183.45 m, where a specimen of Eofusulina sp. was
recovered.
Donets Basin, Ukraine. Katsumi Ueno and Tamara Nemyrovska continue their work on
fusulinids and conodonts from the Donets Basin. The Malonikolaevka section has yielded
interesting results that were summarized by Ueno and Nemyrovska (2008). At Malonikolaevka,
the proposed boundary marker Declinognathodus donetzianus first occurs in Limestone K1 in
evolutionary continuity with its ancestor D. marginodosus. Limestone K1 also contains
unquestioned occurrences of the Moscovian fusulinid Eofusulina.
Northwest Spain. Javier Sanz-López, Silvia Blanco-Ferrera and Elisa Villa are conducting
integrated foraminifera and conodont biostratigraphic analyses at the San Antolin-La Huelga
section along the Bay of Biscay in the Cuera area (Villa 1995; Villa et al. 1997). The Bashkirian-
Moscovian boundary is provisionally placed about 180 m above the base of the section in lower-
slope deposits. The boundary is marked by the lowest occurrence of Idiognathoides postsulcatus,
and this level is slightly higher than the lowest occurrences of Declinognathodus marginodosus
and Profusulinella ex gr. prisca. The San Antolin-La Huelga section contains four conodont taxa
identified as potential Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary markers: Id. postsulcatus,
Diplognathodus ellesmerensis, Neognathodus nataliae and Declinognathodus donetzianus. The
lowest occurrences of these conodonts are in the order listed, spanning a stratigraphic interval of
over 300 m.
South Urals, Russia - Elena Kulagina has completed a study of Depratina prisca in which she
documented its evolutionary origin and showed its first occurrence in the south Urals can be used
to identify the base of the Moscovian (Kulagina 2009). [Many western specialists regard
Depratina as a junior synonym of Profusulinella.] Kulagina showed that D. prisca was derived
from Staffellaeformes staffellaeformis via the intermediates Staffellaeformes eoprisca and
Depratina praeprisca. Occurrences of D. prisca have been examined at the Askyn, Basu and
Uklykaya sections. The well-exposed Basu section, visited during the August 2009 SCCS field
meeting, contains the fist appearance of Depratina prisca a few metres below that of D.
donetzianus (Kulagina et al., 2009). The discovery of the Declinognathodus lineage at the Basu
River section along with a rich fusulinid fauna including the P. prisca group make it a good
potential candidate section for a GSSP.
The Task Group to establish the Moscovian-Kasimovian Boundary is focusing on the
stratigraphic occurrences and distribution of the conodonts Idiognathodus sagittalis Kozitskaya
1978 and Idiognathodus turbatus Rosscoe and Barrick 2009a and their ancestors as potential
biostratigraphic markers for defining the base of the Kasimovian Stage. The use of either
conodont would raise the boundary level one substage from the traditional position at the base of
the Krevyakinian Substage, to approximately the base of the Khamovnikian but the move will
facilitate global correlation. Other biostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic events near the FAD
levels of the species will be examined because of their potential as auxiliary events for
identifying the base of the Kasimovian. Using the new research direction, the group made the
progress summarized below.
Andara Massif, N.W. Spain. Spanish task-group members are studying the Moscovian-
Kasimovian transition in the Castillo del Grajal and Morra del Lechugales sections, which
embrace the uppermost part of the carbonate-dominant Picos de Europa Formation and the Las
Llacerias Formation. Fusulinid biostratigraphic data indicate the study interval ranges from the
top of the Fusulinella Zone (upper Moscovian) to the lower Montiparus Zone (Khamovnikian).
The Protriticites Zone, spanning at least 245 m, is well exposed and fusulinid rich. Preliminary
sampling indicates the occurrence of the conodont Idiognathodus sagittalis and its potential
89
ancestor I. n. sp. 1 of Goreva et al. (2009), allowing correlation with the Moscow Basin and the
North American Midcontinent.
Moscow Basin, Russia. The section in the Afanasievo quarry (Kasimovian neostratotype in
Moscow Basin) is a potential GSSP candidate for the lower boundary of the Kasimovian. The
section has diverse macrofaunas and microfaunas and offers potential for precise correlation with
Eurasian sections. The best-recognized and most-correlated levels are the base of the Montiparus
montiparus fusulinid zone, defined by the first occurrence of the genus Montiparus, and base of
the Idiognathodus sagittalis conodont zone. In the quarry, Idiognathodus sagittalis first appears
at the base of the middle member of the Neverovo Formation along with I. turbatus. The position
is close to the FAD of the fusulinid Montiparus (M. paramontiparus) at the base of the Neverovo.
Goreva et al. (2009) recognized Idiognathodus n. sp. 1 as the possible ancestor of I. sagittalis.
The form appears in the lower Suvorovo Formation, but becomes more advanced and abundant in
the overlying Voskresensk Formation. The first appearance of I. sagittalis in the lineage is a
potential marker for the base of the Kasimovian.
Donets Basin, Ukraine. Davydov and his student Rimma R. Khodjanyazova recently studied
the taxonomy and biostratigraphy of fusulinids within the Moscovian-Kasimovian transition in
the Kalinovo section of the Donets Basin, examining fusulinids from limestone units of the C31
(N) and C32 (O) suites and correlated them into the Moscow Basin. They concluded that within
the Kalinovo succession the base of the Krevyakinian (traditional base of the Kasimovian) can be
placed at the N3 limestone, based on the occurrence of Protriticites with thick walls penetrated
by coarse pores. Age-diagnostic fusulinids are less abundant in the N5-N5/1 interval but it is
probably equivalent to the Voskresensk Formation in the upper part of the Krevyakinian
Substage because of the potential Ratmirovo age of O1. The O1-O1/1 interval is correlated with
the Ratmirovo and the lower part of the Neverovo Formation because O1 contains abundant
Obsoletes but also yields Montiparus montiparus and M. paramontiparus. The O2-O3 interval is
correlated with the middle to upper part of the Neverovo as O2 contains M. subcrassulus, which
occurs in the middle member of the Neverovo in the Moscow Basin (Goreva et al., 2007). The
correlations that Davydov and Khodjanyazova propose differ substantially from those of Heckel
et al. (2007), which are based on integrated cyclothem and conodont correlations. To cross-check
the results with those of Heckel, Nemyrovska and Ueno have initiated an analysis of the
conodont and fusulinid biostratigraphy in the Kalinovo section.
Midcontinent Basin, U.S.A. Rosscoe and Barrick recently carried out a more detailed study
of Idiognathodus turbatus (established by Rosscoe and Barrick, 2009a) and related forms using
specimens from several sections in the Midcontinent Basin. They restricted the species concept to
include only elements with expanded, well-developed rostral lobes and a distinctive medial
nodosity. The revision placed the FAD of (revised) I. turbatus at the base of the Hertha
Cyclothem, two cycles higher than it was originally recognized in Rosscoe and Barrick (2009a).
Nashui section, south China. The Nashui section (Qi et al., 2007) in southern Guizhou
Province is one of the most-continuous and best-exposed sections embracing the Moscovian-
Kasimovian boundary. It consists of carbonate-slope deposits that are rich in conodonts and
contains some fusulinids. Qi and Wang Zhihao investigated the conodont succession across the
boundary at Nashui and recognized the Idiognathodus podolskensis, Swadelina subexcelsa,
Swadelina makhlinae - Sw. nodocarinata, Idiognathodus sagittalis, Streptognathodus
cancellosus, and Streptognathodus gracilis zones, in ascending order. The first occurrence of I.
sagittalis occurs 225 m above the base of the section. Ueno systematically sampled the boundary
interval for fusulinids and the conodont-fusulinid biostratigraphy is being investigated.
90
The Task Group to establish the Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundary has selected the conodont
Idiognathodus simulator (s.s.) as the event marker for defining the base of the Gzhelian Stage
(Heckel et al., 2008) and is directing its research toward selecting a suitable section for the GSSP
in three main areas.
Moscow Basin, Russia. The Russian task-group members have completed a comprehensive
study of the lithostratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the stratotype of the Gzhelian Stage in the
Gzhel quarry in the Moscow Basin near Moscow. In the quarry only the lower part of the stage is
exposed, occurring in the Rusavkino Formation. The section comprises bed 1 of member 4
(middle Rusavkino) and beds 2-9 of member 5 (upper Rusavkino). Two ecological assemblages
of fusulinids are recognized, replacing each other upwards in the section. The lower one occurs in
beds 4 and 5 and includes Quasifusulina longissima, Q. ultima, Q. eleganta, Rauserites
postarcticus, R. paraarcticus, and others. The upper assemblage is preserved in bed 8 and
consists of a rich population of Rauserites, including dominant R. rossicus and minor R.
postarcticus and R. paraarcticus. Three morphological groups are distinguished in the R. rossicus
population from bed 8. It is, therefore, necessary to consider the polymorphic status of R.
rossicus for regional correlation.
The Gzhel section contains abundant conodonts. A single juvenile specimen of Idiognathodus
simulator was extracted in the top of bed 3, but typical I. simulator first appear in bed 4 along
with Streptognathodus pawhuskaensis and Idiognathodus tersus. Alekseev and others also re-
examined conodonts from the stratotype of the Rusavkino Formation situated near Rusavkino
east of Moscow and in borehole 6k, drilled at Konyashino village north of Gzhel. They showed
that I. aff. simulator (= Idiognathodus eudoraensis Barrick, Heckel and Boardman, 2008), a
potential ancestor of I. simulator, appears in the late Kasimovian Troshkovo Formation and also
in the lower and middle members of the overlying Rusavkino Formation. The FAD of I.
simulator in the Moscow Basin is close to that of Rauserites rossicus.
In the Moscow Basin, a specific and well recognizable assemblage characterizes the I.
simulator Zone (Barskov et al., 1982, 1984; Alekseev and Goreva, 2007). In addition to I.
simulator, it includes Streptognathodus pawhuskaensis, Idiognathodus tersus, I. toretzianus, I.
luganicus, I. sinistrum, and Gondolella bella. Based on the first appearance of I. simulator, the
lower boundary of the Gzhelian lies within the Rusavkino Formation near the base of its upper
member. Although the proposed stage boundary is somewhat above the formation's base, the
regional and interregional correlations will not be significantly impacted.
Nashui section, South China. Qi (2008) established a detailed conodont biostratigraphy across
the Kasimovian-Gzhelian transition in the Nashui section. In ascending order, he recognized the
Streptognathodus gracilis, Streprognathodus guizhouensis, Streptognathodus simulator
(=Idiognathodus simulator sensu Barrick et al., 2008), Streptognathodus nashuiensis, and
Streptognathodus firmus zones. According to Qi, the first occurrence of S. simulator is 265 m
above the base of the section. Last December, Ueno and Wang Yue measured the Kasimovian-
Gzhelian boundary interval in the section, and collected samples for fusulinid study. The work
suggests that a composite conodont/fusulinid biostratigraphy can be developed for the section.
Because the Nashui section is a completely exposed carbonate-slope succession containing a rich
conodont record throughout, it has great potential as a GSSP candidate for the Kasimovian-
Gzhelian boundary.
Usolka section southern Urals, Russia
For establishment of the GSSP, Russian colleagues are undertaking a detailed re-description
and recollection of the Usolka section in the southern Urals and have published a comprehensive
synthesis of their preliminary results (Davydov et al., 2008).
91
Progress by the Project Group on Carboniferous Magnetostratigraphy has been hampered by
a shortage of members and lack of integration with the activities of the other SCCS task groups.
The group is particularly interested in collaborating with task groups working on sections and
boundaries where magnetostratigraphy could be employed, to facilitate international correlations.
Sections that have low thermal maturity and are dominated by siliciclastics are the most suitable
for magnetostratigraphic analyses (based on the review in the SCCS Newsletter, v. 22: 35-41) but
carbonates can be used.
The search for Mississippian sedimentary rocks that are likely to carry a primary
magnetisation, to construct a magneto-stratigraphic timescale, have focused on two sections in
southern Scotland. Both sections have good potential for recovery of primary magnetisation
because they are dominated by siliciclastics and their thermal maturity is low. The first section
(~400 m thick) is at Cove in the Cockburnspath outlier on the southern flank of the Midland
Valley Basin and shows a transition from fluvial red-bed facies into lacustrine and flood-plain
deposits with local marine influence. The succession includes the Inverclyde and Strathyclyde
groups and represents an interval from the latest Devonian into the late Viséan (Asbian) (Cossey
et al., 2004). The second section (~600 m thick) is at Kirkbean on the northern edge of the
Northumberland Basin and is of early to late Viséan age, overlapping in age with the upper part
of the Cove section. The Kirkbean succession represents shallow-marine setting with intervals
recording fluvial and distal delta-front progradation. The section contains conodonts but their
biostratigraphy has not been studied in detail and chronostratigraphic relationships to other
sections in the Northumberland Basin are not well established (Cossey et al. 2004). The Kirkbean
section is adjacent to a granite batholith that was unroofed in the Mississippian and could have
provided igneous detritus carrying a palaeomagnetic signal. Both sections contain numerous silty
and fine-sandy intervals and are continuously and well exposed, thereby providing good targets
for palaeomagnetic work.
The magnetostratigraphic work on the Carboniferous-Permian boundary (CPB) section at New
Well Peak, S.W. New Mexico (Hounslow, 2009; SCCS Newsletter, v. 23, p. 11-12) indicates that
section was remagnetised during the Late Cretaceous to early Tertiary. The targets for that work
were short normal polarity magnetozones lying both above and below the CPB and known from
sections in central Asia to lie within the Permian-Carboniferous reverse superchron. In contrast, a
review of Permian magnetostratigraphic data from Spitsbergen (Hounslow and Nawrocki, 2008)
has indicated that a normal polarity interval in the Tyrrellfjellet Member of the Gipsdalen Group
potentially validates one or other of the normal-polarity magnetozones from the latest Gzhelian
or earliest Asselian, thereby providing a useful additional proxy for the CPB interval in the arctic
sections.
92
All task-group members and chairs had an opportunity to present new data and accomplishments
in poster and oral sessions as well as discuss plans for future research.
Two informative and well-illustrated guidebooks were printed for the meeting (Alekseev
and Goreva, 2009; Puchkov et al., 2009) and provide considerable new data as well as syntheses
of previously published information.
References
Alekseev, A.S. and Goreva N.N. (eds.) 2009. Type and reference Carboniferous sections in the
south part of the Moscow Basin. Borissiak Paleontological Institute of Russian Academy of
Sciences, Moscow, August 11-12, 2009 Field Trip Guidebook, 147 p.
Puchkov, V.N., Kulagina, E.I., Nikolaeva, S.V. and Kochetova, N.N. (eds.) 2009. Carboniferous
type sections in Russia and potential global stratotypes; Proceedings of the International Field
Meeting Ufa-Sibai, 13-18 August, 2009; southern Urals Session; Design Polygraph Service
Ltd., 240 p.
93
specialists are finding those lineages are either no longer suitable for defining and correlating
boundaries or require intensive re-evaluation.
The project for upper Paleozoic boreal biota, stratigraphy and biogeography has collapsed
and both new leadership and a revised mandate are required. That project group's work was very
important for establishing Global Carboniferous correlations. It focused on establishing
biostratigraphic correlations between the well-known, warm-water, carbonate-dominant, tropical
belt and the less-studied cool- to temperate-water successions and those dominated by marine
and continental siliciclastics.
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Devonian-Carboniferous boundary Since the project's first meeting at the IGC in Oslo 2008,
Sandra Kaiser and Carlo Corradini have made considerable progress on re-evaluating the lineage
containing the current D-C boundary event marker, the FAD of the conodont Siphonodella
sulcata. Additional study of the lineage is required, however, and the task group plans to
complete that work as soon as possible. At a SCCS workshop (date and venue not determined)
94
that will be held after the May 30 to June 3, 2010 ICS Workshop (GSSP concept) in Prague, the
task-group's conodont specialists will give updates on work accomplished since the D-C
boundary workshop held on July 13th at the Second International Conodont Symposium in
Calgary, Canada. After the June ICS workshop, some SCCS members plan to visit the La Serre
section in the Montagne Noir of France, which contains the current GSSP for the D-C boundary.
At La Serre, the SCCS executive plans to resample parts of the section to confirm the conodont
results of Kaiser (2009) and Corradini and Kaiser (2009).
At La Serre, Corradini and Kaiser (2009) identified seven morphotypes in the transition
from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata. Unfortunately, the conodonts within the transition are reworked
and no apparent correlation exists between the stratigraphic level and individual morphotypes.
The task group plans to determine if any correlation between the morphotypes and stratigraphic
level exists in other D-C boundary sections, where reworking is not an issue. The morphotype
analysis is significant because of its bearing on whether or not the lineage actually comprises two
species that can be readily differentiated.
If the FAD of S. sulcata in the lineage S. praesulcata - S. sulcata is retained for boundary
definition, a suitable section for the GSSP will probably need to be located because work at La
Serre (Kaiser, 2009; Corradini and Kaiser, 2009) indicates the lack of the phylogenetic transition
from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata. In addition, the section may not be suitable because the first
occurrence of S. sulcata occurs immediately above an abrupt facies change (ooid grainstone on
sandy shale) that is probably erosional. Because of the potential break, the task group plans to
complete a sedimentologic assessment of that contact and the entire section.
Kaiser (2009) and Kaiser and Corradini (2009) have started to evaluate the potential of
using a protognathodid lineage to define the D-C boundary. Two lineages appear to have
considerable potential: derivation of Protognathodus kockeli from Protognathodus collinsoni
(FO of P. kockeli is in bed 84a slightly below current GSSP at La Serre), and derivation of P.
kunei from P. kockeli (at La Serre, the FO of P. kunei is in bed 93, slightly above the GSSP). The
SCCS executive plans to have the conodont specialists evaluate the utility of using the two
lineages for boundary definition by studying them in the best of their D-C boundary sections.
Tournaisian-Viséan boundary The task group plans to continue with its preparation of the final
manuscript for the project.
Viséan-Serpukhovian boundary Since determining that the first appearance of the conodont
Lochriea ziegleri in the lineage Lochriea nodosa—Lochriea ziegleri is the best event to define
the boundary, work has focused on correlating successions where it occurs in Eurasia with those
in North America (where it has not been found) by means of other fossil groups and
geochemistry, in order to bracket its appearance level in North America. This includes work on
the ammonoid localities of the southern Urals and in the Chainman Shale of Nevada and Utah,
and foraminiferal and coral work on the carbonate successions in Western Europe and western
Canada. During 2009-2010, the task-group chair intends to submit a proposal to use the Lochriea
lineage to the task group and SSCS membership for a vote on either accepting or rejecting that
lineage as a marker for GSSP definition.
In October 2008, Yuping Qi and Zhihao Wang met with Rich Lane at the Smithsonian
Institute in Washington DC to examine the extensive conodont collections extracted from the
upper Viséan and lower Serpukhovian of the Mississippi Valley region. During the next couple
of years, they plan to continue that work to document the conodonts from that interval and search
for conodonts diagnostic of the L. nodosa – L. ziegleri transition.
95
The deep-water (lower slope), carbonate-dominant Nashui section in southern Guizhou
Province, China is one of the two best candidates for the GSSP at the base of the Serpukhovian
because the L. nodosa—L. ziegleri lineage is well defined within it. During 2008,
sedimentologic, geochemical and foraminiferal studies were initiated at that locality and the task
group members plan to complete that work within the next couple of years. During 2008, the
nearby shallow-water, carbonate-dominant Yashui section in Guizhou Province was measured
and sampled for conodonts, foraminifers, and rugose corals. During the next couple of years,
task-group members plan to complete their biostratigraphic, sedimentologic, and geochemical
studies at that section.
The deep-water section near Verkhnyaya Kardailovka in the southern Urals with its
conodonts characteristic of the Lochriea nodosa—Lochriea ziegleri transition, abundant
ammonoids, and moderately common foraminifers remains the other strong candidate for a
GSSP. During the SCCS field meeting held in the Moscow region and southern Urals in August
2009, several SCCS members visited that section and discovered the interval below the proposed
GSSP level was insufficiently exposed (about 3 m exposed). During the spring and summer of
2010, the task group intends to excavate additional strata below the boundary and study its
conodonts.
Several task-group members and other SCCS members feel not enough is known about
the geographic distribution of the lineage and the degree of diachroneity of the FAD of L. ziegleri
to warrant a vote on accepting the FAD of the species for boundary definition. To address some
of these problems, Mark Dean and George Sevastopulo are investigating the magnitude of
diachroniety in the British Isles by correlating the first appearance of L. ziegleri with the
ammonoid zonations.
Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary The task group plans to continue its research in three main
areas: the southern Urals of Russia, southern Guizhou Province in south China, and northern
Spain.
In those regions, the principal short-term goal will be the search for a suitable event marker to
define the base of the Moscovian. The group has discovered three conodont evolutionary events
that have potential for defining that boundary: 1) derivation of Idiognathoides postsulcatus from
Id. sulcatus, 2) derivation of Declinognathodus donetzianus from D. marginodosus, and 3) the
appearance of the conodont Diplognathodus ellesmerensis, which appears in evolutionary
continuity from D. coloradoensis at the base of the Moscovian at the Nashui section in Guizhou
Province and has been widely recognized globally. If either D. donetzianus or I. postsulcatus are
chosen as the marker, the group's challenge will be to demonstrate how the base of the
Moscovian Stage might be identified in areas where these taxa do not occur because both have
limited geographic distributions.
The first appearance of the fusulinid Profusulinella prisca also has considerable merit for
boundary definition. Several members plan to further evaluate the utility of that taxon, searching
for more appearances near the boundary level in Spain, Turkey and the southern Urals.
At the Basu River section in the southern Urals, Russian workers plan to further evaluate
the Declinognathodus donetzianus - Declinognathodus marginodosus conodont lineage and a
distinctive fusulinid group that includes Profusulinella prisca to access the section a possible
candidate for a GSSP at the base of the Moscovian.
Chinese colleagues and Lance Lambert from the U.S.A. will continue with intensive
studies to provide more detailed information on the conodont succession across the Bashkirian-
Moscovian boundary in the Nashui section in southern Guizhou Province as another potential
GSSP. During the fall of 2010, the task group plans to hold a joint workshop in Nanjing with the
96
Moscovian-Kasimovian and Kasimovian-Gzhelian task groups and then visit the Nashui section.
Several key specialists working at the Nashui section are participants on all three groups. During
2008 foraminiferal, sedimentologic, and geochemical studies were initiated at the relatively deep-
water (slope) Nashui section and nearby shallow-water Yashui section. Task-group members plan
to continue that work within the 2009-2010 fiscal year.
In northwest Spain, Javier Sanz-López, Silvia Blanco-Ferrera and Elisa Villa plan to
continue their integrated foraminifera and conodont biostratigraphic analyses at the San Antolin-
La Huelga section along the Bay of Biscay in the Cuera area (Villa 1995; Villa et al. 1997). The
Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary is provisionally placed about 180 m above the base of the
section in lower- slope deposits.
Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundary Since 2007, when the Task Group voted overwhelmingly in
favor of using the first appearance of the conodont Idiognathodus simulator [sensu stricto] as the
boundary-defining event, the search for a suitable section for the GSSP became the main focus of
the task group. The event level is consistent with both the working ammonoid definition of the
boundary and with the first appearance of a cotype of the fusulinid Rauserites rossicus in the
Moscow region. The recent selection of the lectotype of the fusulinid R. rossicus at the first
appearance of I. simulator in Russia will expedite the recognition of this boundary in Eurasia.
For establishment of the GSSP, Russian colleagues are undertaking a detailed re-
description and recollection of the Usolka section in the southern Urals and have published a
comprehensive synthesis of their preliminary results (Davydov et al., 2008). On August 14 2009,
task-group members along with other representatives of the SCCS visited the Usolka section
during the SCCS Field Meeting, which was held in the Moscow Basin region and southern Urals.
The field-trip participants observed that only fragments of the section were exposed and they
were in small, partly filled to overgrown trenches. In response to that observation, the task group
plans to extensively excavate the site during its re-assessment.
97
Chinese colleagues and Lance Lambert are undertaking a detailed sampling across the
boundary in the well-exposed, carbonate-slope succession that constitutes the upper part of the
Carboniferous component of the Nashui section in Guizhou Province, south China for conodonts
and fusulinids. A sedimentological and geochemical analysis of that section at the appropriate
level is also in progress.
Much of the work that is ongoing in all task and project groups will be published in
Volume 28 of the Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy in July 2010.
No direct funding sources for SCCS exist beyond voluntary donations from some SCCS
members, which fluctuate from year to year and cannot accurately be predicted.
General. An initial 1997 ballot on the naming of the two subdivisions of the Carboniferous
System resulted in a close vote that rejected the names Lower and Upper, and approved the
names Mississippian and Pennsylvanian, but just short of the required 60% majority to be
declared final. After a long period of wrangling over procedure as well as nomenclatural issues,
98
the final ballot was ultimately taken at the mandate of former ICS Chair Jurgen Remane in late
1999. As reported in the 2000 Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 18, p. 3], this ballot
resulted in approval of the names Mississippian and Pennsylvanian by a 76% majority, along
with a reconfirmation of the previous decisions of the SCCS to regard their rank as subsystems,
by the same 76% majority. In 2003 the SCCS voted to classify the two subsystems into Lower,
Middle, and Upper Mississippian Series and Lower, Middle, and Upper Pennsylvanian Series, by
a 74% majority of those 90% of the total membership who voted. This vote with its implicit
acceptance of the stage names used in Russia as the global stage names for the Carboniferous
now provides the Carboniferous with all its official global series and stage names, and all effort is
now focused on selecting events and GSSPs for stage boundaries. Information on usage of the
new official scheme of Carboniferous subdivision was recently published by Heckel and Clayton
(2006a, 2006b).
Heckel, P.H., and Clayton, G., 2006a. Use of the new official names for the subsystems, series
and stages of the Carboniferous System in international journals: Proceedings of the
Geologists’ Association, v. 117, p. 1-4.
Heckel, P.H., and Clayton, G., 2006b. The Carboniferous System. Use of the new official names
for the subsystems, series, and stages: Geologica Acta, v. 4, p. 403-407.
99
evolutionary lineage from Protognathodus kockeli to Protognathodus kuehni could be used to
define the boundary and that other protognathodid lineages also show potential.
Carlo Corradini and Sandra Kaiser are studying the taxonomic and phylogenetic problems
within the S. Praesulcata - S. sulcata lineage and protognathodid lineages. They presented their
initial findings (Corradini and Kaiser, 2009) at the Second International Conodont Symposium
(ICOS 2009) in Calgary, Canada. Their work indicates several morphotypes occur in the
transition from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata and that the position of the current D-C boundary at
La Serre is based on subjective interpretations. During the workshop following the ICOS
conference session, no consensus was reached on whether or not the Siphonodella lineage could
be used for D-C boundary definition or even if S. praesulcata and S. sulcata should be considered
as two different species. Specialists attending the workshop agreed that the D-C boundary can not
remain at its present position and that a new GSSP must be selected. They also decided that the
initial problem to resolve was the selection of a suitable taxon for boundary definition. [see
Appendix B for references]
Work by the Tournaisian-Viséan boundary Task Group into 2003 progressed to the point that a
proposal for the GSSP in south China was published by Devuyst et al. (2003). Supplementary
information requested by the SCCS chair Philip Heckel on correlating this boundary into regions
where the defining taxa do not occur was published in the 2004 Carboniferous Newsletter [v. 22,
p. 8-11], and further updated and summarized in the full text of this task-group report in
Appendix B in the 2004 Annual Report. The task group voted unanimously to approve the
Pengchong GSSP in southern China in 2004, further refined correlation with the type
Mississippian in 2005, readjusted the boundary slightly in the GSSP section in 2007, and
presented the formal proposal to the SCCS for ballot in late November 2007. The proposal has
now been unanimously approved by the SCCS and ratified by the ICS and IUGS. The Secretary's
report for 2008 (Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, v. 26 p. 4) provides the details about
the proposal and SCCS ballot. The principal work of this task group has come to completion.
Task group members are preparing the final report. [see Appendix B for references]
100
Congress on the Carboniferous and Permian, several task-group members visited the Nashui
locality. Since 2007, the conodonts spanning the V-S boundary in the Nashui section have
undergone intensive study by Chinese colleagues and the section has become a strong potential
candidate for a GSSP at the base of the Serpukhovian. Qi Yuping has finished his detailed
analysis of the conodonts across the Viséan/Serpukhovian boundary at Nashui and incorporated
the results in his doctoral thesis (Qi, 2008). In the Nashui section, conodonts within the L. nodosa
- L. ziegleri lineage are well preserved and abundant. Elements transitional between L. nodosa
and L. ziegleri are plentiful at Nashui, occurring through several metres of section, and the oldest
representatives of L. ziegleri could be readily distinguished from the associated transitional forms
of L. nodosa.
Although the lineage along with associated faunas and strata are being studied in several
areas, the task group has recently concluded the Nashui section in China and the Verkhnyaya
Kardailovka section in the Russian Urals have the best potential as GSSP candidates. [see
Appendix B for references]
101
section to complete a detailed biostratigraphic/sedimentologic analysis across the boundary in
that carbonate section and a nearby shallow-water carbonate section by the city of Huishui that
also spanned the boundary. Since that trip, Qi Yuping finished his detailed analysis of the
conodonts across the Bashkirian/Moscovian boundary at Nashui and incorporated the results in
his doctoral thesis (Qi, 2008). During the 2009-2010 fiscal year, Groves completed a preliminary
analysis of foraminifers from the Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary at Nashui. The provisional
Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary recognized by Qi et al. (2007) on the lowest occurrence of
Diplognathodus ellesmerensis falls 173 m above the base of the Nashui section. That level
contains a foraminiferal association dominated by Profusulinella spp. and Pseudostaffella spp.
In northwest Spain, Javier Sanz-López, Silvia Blanco-Ferrera and Elisa Villa are
conducting integrated foraminifera and conodont biostratigraphic analyses at the San Antolin-La
Huelga section along the Bay of Biscay in the Cuera area. The Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary
is provisionally placed about 180 m above the base of the section. The boundary is marked by the
lowest occurrence of Idiognathoides postsulcatus, and this level is slightly higher than the lowest
occurrences of Declinognathodus marginodosus and Profusulinella ex gr. prisca. The San
Antolin-La Huelga section contains four conodont taxa identified as potential Bashkirian-
Moscovian boundary markers: Id. postsulcatus, Diplognathodus ellesmerensis, Neognathodus
nataliae and Declinognathodus donetzianus.
In Ukraine, Ueno and Nemyrovska continue their work on fusulinids and conodonts from
the Donets Basin. At the Malonikolaevka section, the proposed boundary marker
Declinognathodus donetzianus first occurs in Limestone K1 in evolutionary continuity with its
ancestor D. marginodosus (Ueno and Nemyrovska, 2008). [see Appendix B for references]
102
Task Group, 2008) to focus future work on two conodont species as the potential biostratigraphic
marker for the base of the Kasimovian Stage: 1) Idiognathodus sagittalis Kozitskaya 1978, based
on material from the Donets Basin (Ukraine) and also identified from the Moscow region and
southern Urals of Russia, and the Cantabrian Mountains (Spain), and 2) Idiognathodus turbatus
Rosscoe and Barrick 2008 (I. n. sp. A of Barrick et al., 2004), based on material from the
Midcontinent region of the U.S.A., and recognized also in the Moscow region, the southern Urals
and the Donets Basin. A potential ancestor-descendent lineage from I. aff. sagittalis n. sp. to I.
sagittalis may be present in the Moscow region and a lineage from Idiognathodus swadei
Rosscoe and Barrick 2008 to I. turbatus has been described from the Midcontinent region of the
U.S.A.
The use of either conodont would raise the boundary level one substage from the traditional
position at the base of the Krevyakinian Substage, to approximately the base of the
Khamovnikian but the move will facilitate global correlation. Using the new research direction,
the group has made substantial recent progress in northwest Spain, the Moscow Basin (Russia),
Donets Basin (Ukraine), Midcontinent Basin in the U.S.A. and at the Nashui section in southern
China (see section #5 of the 2008-2009 Annual Report).
Members of the task group have long favored use of the conodont lineage Idiognathodus
aff. Simulator-I. simulator [sensu stricto] to define the Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundary at the
first appearance of I. simulator [sensu stricto]. This event marker was unanimously approved by
a vote taken by the task group in April 2007, and has been unanimously approved by the SCCS in
a vote that passed the 60% required quorum. Preliminary description of a potential GSSP at
Usolka in the southern Urals was published by Chernykh et al. in the 2006 Newsletter on
Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 24, p. 23-29] and in a 2006 issue of Geologija [v. 49, p. 205-217].
Davydov et al. (2008) published a more detailed description of the potential GSSP at Usolka. The
appropriate interval in the Nashui section in south China is undergoing a thorough
biostratigraphic, sedimentologic and geochemical study as a potential GSSP. In Eurasia, the use
of the FAD of I. simulator [sensu stricto] for boundary definition is reinforced by the appearance
of the fusuline Rauserites rossicus at a level very close to first appearance of I. simulator. [see
Appendix B for references]
103
Radiometric dating Precise radiometric U-Pb zircon dating now being undertaken by
the Permian Research Group at Boise State University on ash beds from conodont-bearing
intervals in the Pennsylvanian-Permian succession in the south Urals has recently provided new
dates on the Carboniferous-Permian boundary and the late Moscovian with error bars of + 0.2
Ma, which Heckel used to more accurately calibrate the late Pennsylvanian time scale by means
of cyclothems in the 2006 Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy [v. 24, p. 35-39] and in a
chapter in the article on cyclostratigraphy published by Strasser, Hilgen, and Heckel in a 2007
issue of Newsletters in Stratigraphy [v. 42, p. 75-114].
Since ratification of the Tournaisian-Viséan boundary proposal in 2007, task-group chair
George Sevastopulo and his students have been attempting to bracket the absolute age of the
Tournaisian-Viséan boundary in Europe by using the ID-TIMS U-Pb method of dating zircons
from ash bands. They plan to continue with that work.
Devonian-Carboniferous boundary
The task group needs to continue with the restudy the conodont lineage containing the current
event marker for the D-C boundary, the FAD of Siphonodella sulcata. Considerable progress
with this research has already been made by Corradini and Kaiser (2009) but their work needs
confirmation by other specialists working on different sections. At La Serre, Corradini and Kaiser
identified seven morphotypes in the transition from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata. Unfortunately,
the conodonts within the transition there are reworked and no apparent correlation exists between
the stratigraphic level and individual morphotypes. The task group plans to determine if a
correlation exists between the morphotypes and stratigraphic level in other D-C boundary
sections, where reworking is not an issue. The morphotype analysis is significant because of its
bearing on whether or not the lineage actually comprises two species that can be readily
differentiated.
Three taxonomic problems identified by the task group at the 2008 IGC meeting in Oslo
require resolution: 1) the holotype of S. sulcata has been lost; 2) the locations of the paratypes are
uncertain; and 3) the holotype of S. sulcata was collected from the Siphonodella duplicata Zone
and may have been S. duplicata.
If the FAD of S. sulcata is retained for boundary definition, a suitable section for the
GSSP must be located because recent studies at La Serre (current location of GSSP) indicate the
104
lack of the phylogenetic transition from S. praesulcata to S. sulcata. Because the appearance of S.
sulcata may not be the best event to define the boundary, other lineages particularly within the
upper part of the praesulcata Zone will be evaluated.
Kaiser (2009) and Kaiser and Corradini (2009) have started evaluating the potential of
using a protognathodid lineage to define the D-C boundary. Two lineages have considerable
potential: derivation of Protognathodus kockeli from Protognathodus collinsoni. The SCCS
executive plans to have the conodont specialists evaluate the utility of using the two lineages for
boundary definition by studying them in their best D-C boundary sections.
Several sections, particularly those in south-central China, which had been proposed as
GSSP candidates prior to selection of the La Serre section, will be carefully re-examined.
Intensive biostratigraphic, geochronologic, sedimentologic and geochemical studies will be
initiated at all potential GGSP sections.
Some members of the task group plan to visit the La Serre section in June 2010 and hold a
subsequent workshop to discuss implications of progress made since the meeting at ICOS 2009 in
Calgary, Canada.
A formal ballot on the Tournaisian-Viséan Boundary Task Group's proposed GSSP for
the base of the Viséan was distributed to the voting members of the SCCS in late 2007and was
unanimously approved by the membership in December. The ballot was subsequently ratified in
early 2008 by the ICS and IUGS. Now that the boundary proposal has been ratified, the task
group is preparing their final report for the project and that needs to be completed as soon as
possible.
Since ratification of the boundary proposal, task-group chair George Sevastopulo and
some of his students have been attempting to bracket the absolute age of the Tournaisian-Viséan
boundary in Europe using the ID TIMS U-Pb radiometric dating method of zircons from ash
bands. They plan to continue with that work.
The Viséan-Serpukhovian Boundary Task Group will continue to focus study on the most
promising conodont lineage Lochriea nodosa-Lochriea ziegleri. During the 2009-2010 fiscal
year, Richards plans to prepare a proposal and submit it to the task group and SSCS membership
for a vote on either accepting or rejecting the FAD of L. ziegleri for GSSP definition. Given the
ballot is successful, two sections present substantial potential for the GSSP, and the ongoing
integrated biostratigraphic, sedimentological and geochemical studies of those sections will
continue. Identification of the L. nodosa-L. ziegleri lineage and recognition of associated
conodont, ammonoid, ostracode, and foraminiferal zones in the richly fossiliferous section near
Verkhnyaya Kardailovka in the southern Urals establishes that section as a strong candidate for a
GSSP. The other main candidate is the Nashui section near Naqing in southern Guizhou
Province, China. In the Nashui section, the Lochriea lineage has been recognized and intensively
studied across the boundary interval by Chinese colleagues, and intensive sedimentological and
geochemical studies initiated.
The Lochriea lineage has not yet been found North America. In order to identify
correlatable faunal zones that can closely bracket the boundary interval on that continent, a
Global study of conodonts, ammonoids, foraminifers, and corals across the boundary interval will
continue. All this suggests selection of the GSSP is possible in the near future.
The Bashkirian-Moscovian Boundary Task Group has been evaluating two conodont lineages
that have potential for defining the base of the Moscovian: 1) derivation of Idiognathoides
postsulcatus from Id. Sulcatus, and 2) derivation of Declinognathodus donetzianus from D.
105
marginodosus. Both lineages have short comings and if either D. donetzianus or I. postsulcatus
are chosen as the marker, the group's challenge will be to demonstrate how the base of the
Moscovian Stage might be identified in areas where these taxa do not occur because both have
limited geographic distributions. Nevertheless, the D. marginonodosus-D. donetzianus lineage
remains a candidate for the event level, and further work on it and a distinctive fusulinid group
that accompanies it is being carried out by Russian workers at the Basu River section in the
southern Urals, a well-exposed potential GSSP candidate comprising carbonate-slope lithofacies.
After further investigation of the Idiognathoides sulcatus-Id. postsulcatus lineage resulted
in discovery that the event taxon was misidentified in cratonic North America, and may occur in
strata well below the boundary in Japan, some attention has turned to reassessing the identity of
the older specimens from Japan. Pending reassessment of the identity of the Bashkirian
specimens reported from Japan, the Id. sulcatus-Id. postsulcatus lineage will be under further
consideration for boundary definition.
A third potential boundary marker the task group plans to evaluate is the appearance of
the conodont Diplognathodus ellesmerensis, which appears in evolutionary continuity from D.
coloradoensis at the base of the Moscovian in the Nashui section by Naqing in Guizhou
Province, China, and has been widely recognized globally. Chinese colleagues have selected the
interval spanning the Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary at Nashui for intensive biostratigraphic
and sedimentologic study as a potential GSSP for the B-M boundary and are currently working at
the locality. In the fall of 2010, the task group intends to hold a joint workshop other SCCS task
groups in Nanjing to study specimens from the locality.
The appearance of the fusulinid Profusulinella prisca has considerable merit for boundary
definition and several members plan to further evaluate the utility of this taxon, searching for
more appearances near the boundary level in Spain, Turkey and the southern Urals.
Because substantial work still is still required before a GSSP can be selected, 2011-2012
is the earliest likely completion date.
106
The task group will continue to evaluate the utility of the two lineages in the slope-
deposits of the Nashui section; and in fall 2010, they will hold a joint workshop with other SCCS
task groups at Nanjing, China to study specimens from the locality.
Members of the Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundary Task Group have long favored use of
the conodont lineage Idiognathodus aff. simulator-I. simulator [sensu stricto] to define the
boundary at the first appearance of I. simulator [sensu stricto]. I. aff. simulator is now named I.
eudoraensis by Barrick et al. (2008). This event marker was unanimously approved by a vote
taken by the task group in April 2007, and has been unanimously approved by the SCCS. Now
that the event maker has been selected, task-group members will focus on the selection of a
suitable section for the GSSP. Further taxonomic work is in progress on the morphotypes of the
fusulinid Rauserites, which accompanies I. simulator in Eurasia.
The existence of widespread disconformities within the Kasimovian-Gzhelian transition
across nearly all of the well-known shelf regions presents a substantial problem for selecting a
section for the GSSP, but work on the essentially complete carbonate-slope sections in the
southern Urals (Usolka River section) and on the slope deposits in the Nashui section, are
providing more appropriate sections for a potential GSSP. Therefore, 2011 is probably the
earliest likelihood for GSSP selections.
107
the workshop will be to study specimens and lineages relevant to defining GSSPs for the
boundaries and present the most recent results of ongoing stage-boundary studies. After the
workshop, there will be a field trip to the important Nashui section by the village of Naqing in
southern Guizhou Province and to some other key Pennsylvanian sections in Guizhou and
Guangxi provinces.
Members of the Tournaisian-Viséan task group may also attend the Nanjing meeting.
Hongfe Hou is trying to organize an official ceremony for the placement of the "golden spike" in
the GSSP section for the Tournaisian/Viséan boundary at Pengchong in Guangxi Province.
Several task-group members and SCCS officials plan to attend the historic ceremony and it
would be logistically practical to coordinate the ceremony with the fall Nanjing workshop.
APPENDIX A. [Names and Full Addresses of Current Officers and list of Voting Members]
Subcommission officers (with addresses)
108
Email: demir@metu.edu.tr
109
Email: ypqi@nigpas.ac.cn
110
During the SCCS workshop following the ICOS 2009 conference session, no consensus
was reached on whether or not the Siphonodella lineage could be used for D-C boundary
definition or even if S. praesulcata and S. sulcata should be considered as two different species.
Specialists attending the workshop agreed that the D-C boundary can not remain at its present
position at La Serre (base of bed 89) and that a new GSSP must be selected either lower in the
section or in another section. They also decided that the initial problem to resolve was the
selection of a suitable taxon for boundary definition. Three options were presented: continue use
of the S. praesulcata-S. sulcata lineage but find a better way to speciate it, select a different
lineage (protognathodids), and use the first occurrence of another taxon.
On August 14th, during the southern Uralian component of the SCCS field meeting in
Russia, several SCCS members visited two sections that spanned the D-C boundary and
contained the S. praesulcata-S. sulcata lineage (see Pazukhin et al., 2009). At the related
technical session, the conclusions reached about the GSSP at La Serre were similar to those made
at the Calgary ICOS 2009 meeting, but the Russian conodont specialists thought the current event
marker, the FAD of S. sulcata, could be used for boundary definition.
References
Corradini C. and Kaiser S.I. 2009. Morphotypes in the early Siphonodella lineage: implications
for the definition of the Devonian/Carboniferous boundary. In: ICOS 2009 Calgary, July 12-
17; Permophiles, Abstracts, 53: (Supplement 1), p. 13.
Heckel, P.H. 2008. Joint task group for reappraisal of the Devonian-Carboniferous Boundary
GSSP. Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, 26: 3-4.
Kaiser, S.I. 2005. Mass extinction, climatic change and oceanographic changes at the Devonian-
Carboniferous boundary. Ph. D. Thesis, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany, 156 p.
Kaiser, S.I. and Becker R.T. 2007. The required revision of the Devonian-Carboniferous
boundary: XVI International Congress on the Carboniferous and Permian, Abstracts; Journal
of Stratigraphy, 31: (Supplement 1), p. 95.
Kaiser, S.I. 2009. The Devonian/Carboniferous boundary stratotype section (La Serre, France)
revisited. Newsletters on Stratigraphy, 43: 195-205.
Paproth, E., Feist, R. and Flajs G. 1991. Decision on the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary
stratotype. Episodes, 14: 331-336.
Pazukhin, V.N., Kulagina, E.I. and Sedaeva, K.M. 2009. Devonian and Carboniferous boundary
on the western slope of the southern Urals. In: V.N. Puchkov, E.I. Kulagina, S.V. Nikolaeva
and N.N. Kochetova (eds.), Carboniferous type sections in Russia and potential global
stratotypes; Proceedings of the International Field Meeting Ufa-Sibai, 13-18 August, 2009;
southern Urals Session; Design Polygraph Service Ltd., p. 22-33
References
111
Devuyst, F.-X., Hance, L., Hou, H., Wu, X., Tian, S., Coen, M., and Sevastopulo G. 2003. A
proposed Global Stratotype Section and Point for the base of the Viséan Stage
(Carboniferous): the Pengchong section, Guangxi, south China. Episodes, 26: 105-115.
The Task Group to establish the Viséan-Serpukhovian boundary considers the first
evolutionary appearance of the conodont Lochriea ziegleri in the lineage Lochriea nodosa-
Lochriea ziegleri to be the best event for boundary definition. The lineage along with associated
faunas and strata are being studied in several areas but the Nashui section in south China and the
Verkhnyaya Kardailovka section in Russia have the best potential as GSSP candidates and are
receiving the most intensive study.
Task-group member Yuping Qi and associates at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and
Palaeontology recognized the L. nodosa – L. ziegleri lineage in the Nashui section in southern
Guizhou province, People’s Republic of China (Qi and Wang 2005). Qi has finished his detailed
analysis of the conodonts across the Viséan/Serpukhovian boundary in the Nashui section and
incorporated the results in his doctoral thesis (Qi, 2008). In the Nashui section, conodonts within
the L. nodosa - L. ziegleri lineage are well preserved and abundant. Elements transitional
between L. nodosa and L. ziegleri are plentiful at Nashui, occurring through several metres of
section, and the oldest representatives of L. ziegleri could be readily distinguished from the
associated transitional forms of L. nodosa.
Several task-group members and John Groves are continuing a detailed analysis of the
foraminifers, stable-isotope geochemistry and sedimentology of the Nashui section and a nearby
shallow-water limestone-dominant section at Yashui (by city of Huishui) in Guizhou province
that spans the Viséan/Serpukhovian boundary. The goal of studying the Yashui section is to
establish the relationship of the coral and foraminiferal zones to the L. nodosa - L. ziegleri
lineage.
Nikolaeva et al. (2005) recognized the L. nodosa – L. ziegleri lineage in a, deep-water,
carbonate section along the Ural River opposite the village of Verkhnyaya Kardailovka in the
southeastern Urals, Russia. During the SCCS field meeting, held in Russia in August 2009, task-
group and other SCCS members visited the Kardailovka section to determine how it compared
with Nashui in terms of its suitability as a GSSP candidate. They concluded the boundary interval
was well exposed but noted only three to five metres of well exposed strata lay below it, whereas
at Nashui many metres of conodont-bearing strata are exposed. More of the section below the
boundary interval at Kardailovka can be excavated and the section has the advantage of
containing abundant ammonoids. Nikolaeva and her colleagues have thoroughly examined the
section and published a synthesis of their studies on the ammonoids, conodonts, and ostracodes
(Nikolaeva et al., 2009). The synthesis indicates conodonts that are transitional between L.
nodosa and L. ziegleri occur in the Kardailovka section immediately below the FAD of L.
ziegleri.
The task group and SCCS have not voted on either rejecting or accepting the first
evolutionary appearance of L. ziegleri for boundary definition.
References
Qi, Y. 2008. Conodont biostratigraphy of the candidate GSSPs for the base of the Serpukhovian
Stage and Moscovian Stage in the Naqing (Nashui) section, Luosu, Luodian, Guizhou, South
China. Doctorial thesis of Chinese Academy of Sciences, p.1-157, 25 pls.
Qi, Y. and Wang, Z. 2005. Serpukhovian conodont sequence and the Viséan-Serpukhovian
boundary in South China. Rivista Italiana di Paleontologica e Stratigrafia, 3: 3-10.
Nikolaeva, S.V., Kulagina, E.I., Pazukhin, V.N., Kochetova, N.N. and V.A. Konovalova 2009.
Paleontology and microfacies of the Serpukhovian in the Verkhnyaya Kardailovka section,
112
south Urals, Russia: potential candidate for the GSSP for the Viséan-Serpukhovian boundary.
Newsletters on Stratigraphy, 43: 165-193.
Nikolaeva, S.V., Kulagina, E.I., Pazukhin, V.I., Kucheva, N.A., Stepanova, T.I., Kochetova,
N.N., Gibshman, N.B., Amon, E.O., Konovalova, V.A., and Zainakaeva, G.F. 2005.
Advances in understanding of the Viséan-Serpukhovian boundary in the South Urals and its
correlation. Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, 23: 27-30.
The Task Group to establish the Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary, chaired by John Groves, is
conducting research at several locations in Europe and Asia and continues to evaluate three
conodont evolutionary events that have potential for defining the base of the Moscovian: 1)
derivation of Idiognathoides postsulcatus from Id. sulcatus, 2) derivation of Declinognathodus
donetzianus from D. marginodosus, and 3) the appearance of Diplognathodus ellesmerensis. The
fusulinids Eofusulina ex gr. triangula and Profusulinella [= Depratina] prisca recently emerged
as additional taxa with considerable potential for boundary characterization.
South China. Specialists with the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology organized an
excursion in May 2008 to Guizhou Province to collect conodont and foraminifer samples from
slope carbonates spanning the Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary interval at the Nashui section.
Sampling was also conducted across the boundary at the nearby Yashui section, a shallow-water
carbonate succession containing abundant micro- and macrofossils. Thin sections have been
made from the samples and Groves has completed a preliminary analysis of foraminifers from the
Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary at Nashui. The provisional Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary
recognized by Qi et al. (2007) on the lowest occurrence of Diplognathodus ellesmerensis falls
173 m above the base of the Nashui section. That level contains a foraminiferal association
dominated by Profusulinella spp. and Pseudostaffella spp. The lowest occurrence of a
demonstrably Moscovian fusulinid is at 183.45 m, where a specimen of Eofusulina sp. was
recovered.
Donets Basin, Ukraine. Katsumi Ueno and Tamara Nemyrovska continue their work on
fusulinids and conodonts from the Donets Basin. The Malonikolaevka section has yielded
interesting results that were summarized by Ueno and Nemyrovska (2008). At Malonikolaevka,
the proposed boundary marker Declinognathodus donetzianus first occurs in Limestone K1 in
evolutionary continuity with its ancestor D. marginodosus. Limestone K1 also contains
unquestioned occurrences of the Moscovian fusulinid Eofusulina.
Northwest Spain. Javier Sanz-López, Silvia Blanco-Ferrera and Elisa Villa are conducting
integrated foraminifera and conodont biostratigraphic analyses at the San Antolin-La Huelga
section along the Bay of Biscay in the Cuera area (Villa 1995; Villa et al. 1997). The Bashkirian-
Moscovian boundary is provisionally placed about 180 m above the base of the section in lower-
slope deposits. The boundary is marked by the lowest occurrence of Idiognathoides postsulcatus,
and this level is slightly higher than the lowest occurrences of Declinognathodus marginodosus
and Profusulinella ex gr. prisca. The San Antolin-La Huelga section contains four conodont taxa
identified as potential Bashkirian-Moscovian boundary markers: Id. postsulcatus,
Diplognathodus ellesmerensis, Neognathodus nataliae and Declinognathodus donetzianus. The
lowest occurrences of these conodonts are in the order listed, spanning a stratigraphic interval of
over 300 m.
South Urals, Russia - Elena Kulagina has completed a study of Depratina prisca in which she
documented its evolutionary origin and showed its first occurrence in the south Urals can be used
to identify the base of the Moscovian (Kulagina 2009). [Many western specialists regard
Depratina as a junior synonym of Profusulinella.] Kulagina showed that D. prisca was derived
from Staffellaeformes staffellaeformis via the intermediates Staffellaeformes eoprisca and
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Depratina praeprisca. Occurrences of D. prisca have been examined at the Askyn, Basu and
Uklykaya sections. The well-exposed Basu section, visited during the August 2009 SCCS field
meeting, contains the fist appearance of Depratina prisca a few metres below that of D.
donetzianus (Kulagina et al., 2009). The discovery of the Declinognathodus lineage at the Basu
River section along with a rich fusulinid fauna including the P. prisca group make it a good
potential candidate section for a GSSP.
References
Kulagina, E. I. 2009. Evolution of the fusulinid Depratina in the Bashkirian-Moscovian interval.
Palaeoworld, 18: 94-101.
Kulagina, E.I., Pazukhin, V.N, and Davydov, V.I. 2009. Pennsylvanian biostratigraphy of the
Basu River section, with emphasis on the Bashkirian-Moscovian transition. In: V.N. Puchkov,
E.I. Kulagina, S.V. Nikolaeva and N.N. Kochetova (eds.), Carboniferous type sections in
Russia and potential global stratotypes; Proceedings of the International Field Meeting Ufa-
Sibai, 13-18 August, 2009; southern Urals Session; Design Polygraph Service Ltd., p. 64-68.
Qi, Y. 2008. Conodont biostratigraphy of the candidate GSSP's for the base of the Serpukhovian
Stage and Moscovian Stage in the Naqing (Nashui) section, Luosu, Luodian, Guizhou, South
China. Doctorial thesis of Chinese Academy of Sciences, p.1-157, 25 pls.
Qi, Y., Wang, Z., Wang Y., Ueno, K. and Wang, X. 2007. Stop 1: Nashui section. In:
Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian carbonate successions from shallow marine to slope in
southern Guizhou. XVI International Congress on the Carboniferous and Permian, June 21-
24, 2007 Nanjing China; Guide Book for Field Excursion C3 p. 8 – 16.
Ueno, K. and Nemyrovska T. 2008. Bashkirian-Moscovian (Pennsylvanian/ Upper
Carboniferous) boundary in the Donets Basin, Ukraine. Journal of Geography, 117: 919–932.
Villa, E. 1995. Fusulinaceos Carboniferos del Este de Asturias (N de España). Université Claude
Bernard-Lyon I, Biostratigraphie du Paléozoique, 13:1–261.
Villa, E., Bahamonde, J.R., Martínez Chacón, M.L., Martínez García, E., Méndez, C. and
Sánchez de Posada, L. C. 1997. The Carboniferous of eastern Asturias (Cantabrian Zone,
northern Spain). Guidebook. Field Trip of the Working Group of the SCCS Project 5, Oviedo,
62 p.
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ancestor I. n. sp. 1 of Goreva et al. (2009), allowing correlation with the Moscow Basin and the
North American Midcontinent.
Moscow Basin, Russia. The section in the Afanasievo quarry (Kasimovian neostratotype in
Moscow Basin) is a potential GSSP candidate for the lower boundary of the Kasimovian. The
section has diverse macrofaunas and microfaunas and offers potential for precise correlation with
Eurasian sections. The best-recognized and most-correlated levels are the base of the Montiparus
montiparus fusulinid zone, defined by the first occurrence of the genus Montiparus, and base of
the Idiognathodus sagittalis conodont zone. In the quarry, Idiognathodus sagittalis first appears
at the base of the middle member of the Neverovo Formation along with I. turbatus. The position
is close to the FAD of the fusulinid Montiparus (M. paramontiparus) at the base of the Neverovo.
Goreva et al. (2009) recognized Idiognathodus n. sp. 1 as the possible ancestor of I. sagittalis.
The form appears in the lower Suvorovo Formation, but becomes more advanced and abundant in
the overlying Voskresensk Formation. The first appearance of I. sagittalis in the lineage is a
potential marker for the base of the Kasimovian.
Donets Basin, Ukraine. Davydov and his student Rimma R. Khodjanyazova recently studied
the taxonomy and biostratigraphy of fusulinids within the Moscovian-Kasimovian transition in
the Kalinovo section of the Donets Basin, examining fusulinids from limestone units of the C31
(N) and C32 (O) suites and correlated them into the Moscow Basin. They concluded that within
the Kalinovo succession the base of the Krevyakinian (traditional base of the Kasimovian) can be
placed at the N3 limestone, based on the occurrence of Protriticites with thick walls penetrated
by coarse pores. Age-diagnostic fusulinids are less abundant in the N5-N5/1 interval but it is
probably equivalent to the Voskresensk Formation in the upper part of the Krevyakinian
Substage because of the potential Ratmirovo age of O1. The O1-O1/1 interval is correlated with
the Ratmirovo and the lower part of the Neverovo Formation because O1 contains abundant
Obsoletes but also yields Montiparus montiparus and M. paramontiparus. The O2-O3 interval is
correlated with the middle to upper part of the Neverovo as O2 contains M. subcrassulus, which
occurs in the middle member of the Neverovo in the Moscow Basin (Goreva et al., 2007). The
correlations that Davydov and Khodjanyazova propose differ substantially from those of Heckel
et al. (2007), which are based on integrated cyclothem and conodont correlations. To cross-check
the results with those of Heckel et al. (2007), Nemyrovska and Ueno have initiated an analysis of
the conodont and fusulinid biostratigraphy in the Kalinovo section.
Midcontinent Basin, U.S.A. Rosscoe and Barrick recently carried out a more detailed study of
Idiognathodus turbatus (established by Rosscoe and Barrick, 2009) and related forms using
specimens from several sections in the Midcontinent Basin. They restricted the species concept to
include only elements with expanded, well-developed rostral lobes and a distinctive medial
nodosity. The revision placed the FAD of (revised) I. turbatus at the base of the Hertha
Cyclothem, two cycles higher than it was originally recognized in Rosscoe and Barrick (2009).
Nashui section, south China. The Nashui section (Qi et al., 2007) in southern Guizhou Province
is one of the most-continuous and best-exposed sections embracing the Moscovian-Kasimovian
boundary. It consists of carbonate-slope deposits that are rich in conodonts and contains some
fusulinids. Qi and Wang Zhihao investigated the conodont succession across the boundary at
Nashui and recognized the Idiognathodus podolskensis, Swadelina subexcelsa, Swadelina
makhlinae - Sw. nodocarinata, Idiognathodus sagittalis, Streptognathodus cancellosus, and
Streptognathodus gracilis zones, in ascending order. The first occurrence of I. sagittalis occurs
225 m above the base of the section. Ueno systematically sampled the boundary interval for
fusulinids and the conodont-fusulinid biostratigraphy is being investigated.
References
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Goreva, N.V., and Alekseev, A.S., 2006. New conodont species from the Kasimovian Stage
(Upper Carboniferous) of Moscow and Moscow Basin. Paleontological Journal, 40: 193-197.
Goreva, N.V., Alekseev, A.S., Isakova, T.N., and Kossovaya, O.L., 2007. Afanasievo Section –
neostratotype of Kasimovian Stage (Upper Pennsylvanian Series), Moscow Basin, central
Russia. Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, 25: 8-14.
Goreva, N.V., Alekseev, A.S., Isakova, T.I. and Kossovaya, O. 2009. Biostratigraphical analysis
of the Moscovian-Kasimovian transition at the neostratotype of Kasimovian Stage
(Afanasievo section, Moscow Basin, Russia). Palaeoworld, 18: 102-113.
Heckel, P. H., Alekseev, A.S., Barrick, J.E., Boardman, D.R., Goreva, N.V., Nemyrosvka, T.I.,
Ueno, K., Villa, E., and Work, D.M., 2007. Cyclothem [“digital”] correlation and
biostratigraphy across global Moscovian-Kasimovian-Gzhelian Stage boundary interval
(Middle-Upper Pennsylvanian Series) in North America and Eastern Europe. Geology, 35:
607-610.
Qi, Y., Wang, Z., Wang Y., Ueno, K. and Wang, X. 2007. Stop 1: Nashui section. In:
Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian carbonate successions from shallow marine to slope in
southern Guizhou. XVI International Congress on the Carboniferous and Permian, June 21-
24, 2007 Nanjing China; Guide Book for Field Excursion C3 p. 8 – 16.
Rosscoe, S.J. and Barrick, J.E. 2009. Revision of Idiognathodus species from the Desmoinesian-
Missourian (~Moscovian-Kasimovian) boundary interval in the Midcontinent Basin, North
America. Palaeontographica Americana, 62: 115-147.
Villa, E., and Task Group, 2008. Progress report of the Task Group to establish the Moscovian-
Kasimovian and Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundaries. Newsletter on Carboniferous
Stratigraphy, 26: 12-13.
The Task Group to establish the Kasimovian-Gzhelian boundary has selected the conodont
Idiognathodus simulator (s.s.) as the event marker for defining the base of the Gzhelian Stage
(Heckel et al., 2008) and is directing its research toward selecting a suitable section for the GSSP
in three main areas.
Moscow Basin, Russia. The Russian task-group members have completed a comprehensive
study of the lithostratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the stratotype of the Gzhelian Stage in the
Gzhel quarry in the Moscow Basin near Moscow. In the quarry only the lower part of the stage is
exposed, occurring in the Rusavkino Formation. The section comprises bed 1 of member 4
(middle Rusavkino) and beds 2-9 of member 5 (upper Rusavkino). Two ecological assemblages
of fusulinids are recognized, replacing each other upwards in the section. The lower one occurs in
beds 4 and 5 and includes Quasifusulina longissima, Q. ultima, Q. eleganta, Rauserites
postarcticus, R. paraarcticus, and others. The upper assemblage is preserved in bed 8 and
consists of a rich population of Rauserites, including dominant R. rossicus and minor R.
postarcticus and R. paraarcticus. Three morphological groups are distinguished in the R. rossicus
population from bed 8. It is, therefore, necessary to consider the polymorphic status of R.
rossicus for regional correlation.
The Gzhel section contains abundant conodonts. A single juvenile specimen of
Idiognathodus simulator was extracted in the top of bed 3, but typical I. simulator first appear in
bed 4 along with Streptognathodus pawhuskaensis and Idiognathodus tersus. Alekseev and
others also re-examined conodonts from the stratotype of the Rusavkino Formation situated near
Rusavkino east of Moscow and in borehole 6k, drilled at Konyashino village north of Gzhel.
They showed that I. aff. simulator (= Idiognathodus eudoraensis Barrick, Heckel and Boardman,
2008), a potential ancestor of I. simulator, appears in the late Kasimovian Troshkovo Formation
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and also in the lower and middle members of the overlying Rusavkino Formation. The FAD of I.
simulator in the Moscow Basin is close to that of Rauserites rossicus.
In the Moscow Basin, a specific and well recognizable assemblage characterizes the I.
simulator Zone (Barskov et al., 1982, 1984; Alekseev and Goreva, 2007). In addition to I.
simulator, it includes Streptognathodus pawhuskaensis, Idiognathodus tersus, I. toretzianus, I.
luganicus, I. sinistrum, and Gondolella bella. Based on the first appearance of I. simulator, the
lower boundary of the Gzhelian lies within the Rusavkino Formation near the base of its upper
member. Although the proposed stage boundary is somewhat above the formation's base, the
regional and interregional correlations will not be significantly impacted.
Nashui section, South China. Qi (2008) established a detailed conodont biostratigraphy across
the Kasimovian-Gzhelian transition in the Nashui section. In ascending order, he recognized the
Streptognathodus gracilis, Streprognathodus guizhouensis, Streptognathodus simulator
(=Idiognathodus simulator sensu Barrick et al., 2008), Streptognathodus nashuiensis, and
Streptognathodus firmus zones. According to Qi, the first occurrence of S. simulator is 265 m
above the base of the section. Last December, Ueno and Wang Yue measured the Kasimovian-
Gzhelian boundary interval in the section, and collected samples for fusulinid study. The work
suggests that a composite conodonts/fusulinid biostratigraphy can be developed for the section.
Because the Nashui section is a completely exposed carbonate-slope succession containing a rich
conodont record throughout, it has great potential as a GSSP candidate for the Kasimovian-
Gzhelian boundary.
Usolka section southern Urals, Russia
For establishment of the GSSP, Russian colleagues are undertaking a detailed re-description
and recollection of the Usolka section in the southern Urals and have published a comprehensive
synthesis of their preliminary results (Davydov et al., 2008).
References
Alekseev, A.S., and Goreva, N.V., 2007. Conodont zonation for the type Kasimovian and
Gzhelian stages in the Moscow Basin, Russia. In: Th. Wong (ed.), Proceedings of the XVth
International Congress on Carboniferous and Permian Stratigraphy. Royal Netherlands
Academy of Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, p. 229-248.
Barskov, I.S., Alekseev, A.S. and Goreva, N.V. 1982. Puti razvitiya platformennykh konodontov
v srednem i pozdnem karbone Moskovskoi sineklizy i ikh znachenie dlya razrabotki zonalnoi
shkaly. In: Zakonomernosti Istoricheskogo Razvitiya Iskopae-mykh Organizom. Moscow
University Press, p. 15-34.
Barskov, I.S., Alekseev, A.S., Goreva, N.V., Knonova, L.I. and Migdisova, A.V. 1984.
Zonalnaya shkala karbona Vostochno-Evropeiskoi platformy po konodontam. In:
Paleontologicheskaya Kharakteristika Stratotipi-cheskikh i Opornykh Razrezov Karbona
Moskovskoi Sineklizy. Moscow University Press, p. 143-150.
Davydov, V.I., Chernykh, V.V., Schmitz, M., Snyder, W.S., and Chuvashov, B.I., 2008. Faunal
assemblage and correlation of Kasimovian-Gzhelian transition at Usolka Section, Southern
Urals, Russia (a potential candidate for GSSP to define base of Gzhelian Stage). Stratigraphy,
5(2): 113-136.
Heckel, P.H., Alekseev, A.S., Barrick, J.E., Boardman, D.R., Goreva, N.V., Isakova, T.I.,
Nemyrovska, T.I., Ueno, K., Villa, E. and Work, D.M. 2008. Choice of conodont
Idiognathodus simulator (sensu stricto) as the event marker for the base of the global Gzhelian
Stage (Upper Pennsylvanian Series, Carboniferous System). Episodes, 31: 319-325.
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Qi, Y. 2008. Conodont biostratigraphy of the candidate GSSP's for the base of the Serpukhovian
Stage and Moscovian Stage in the Naqing (Nashui) section, Luosu, Luodian, Guizhou, South
China. Doctorial thesis of Chinese Academy of Sciences, p.1-157, 25 pls.
118
Hounslow, M. 2009. Report for the project group "Carboniferous Magnetostratigraphy".
Newsletter on Carboniferous Stratigraphy, 27: 18-19.
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SUBCOMMISSION ON DEVONIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
R. Thomas BECKER, Chair of SDS
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Institut für Geologie and Paläontologie, Corrensstr.
24, D-48149 Münster, Tel. –49-251-83 339 51, fax – 49-251-83 339 68; rbecker@uni-
muenster.de
Since SDS has formally defined all its series and stage boundaries since many years, it has
worked in the last years on the formal definition of substages, on the revision of GSSPs (after 10
years of moratorium), on the improvement of multidisciplinary international correlation, on the
organisation of Devonian stratigraphic symposia, and on the publication of monographic
books/volumes. SDS objectives for 2009 can be summarized as:
3. ORGANIZATION
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Officers for 2008-2012
Chair: Prof. Dr. R. Thomas BECKER, WWU Münster, Germany
Vice-Chair: Prof. Dr. Ahmed EL HASSANI, Institute Scientifique, Rabat, Morocco
Secretary: Dr. John E. MARSHALL, University of Southampton, U. K.
The Subcommission has currently further 18 Voting Members that cover many major
Devonian outcrop areas and many stratigraphical disciplines (see Appendix).
The SDS Membership covers currently the following 29 countries (in alphabetical order):
Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Czechia, Estonia, France,
Germany, Great Britain, Iran, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Morocco, Myanmar, New Zealand,
Pakistan, Poland, South Africa, Spain, USA, Uzbekistan, Tadzhikistan, Turkey, Vietnam. There
is still a lack of active workers from other countries with important Devonian outcrop, especially
from Brazil, Argentine, Chile, Algeria, Libya, Kazakhstan, Kyrgisia, Caucasian countries, and
Thailand.
At national level several Devonian Subcommissions exist in various countries, partly under
different organisational names (e.g., Germany, Russia, “Friends of the Devonian” at GSA
meetings).
Website: http://www.unica.it/sds/
SDS is traditionally strongly tied with IGCP projects that have a Devonian focus. This is
currently IGCP 499 on “Devonian land-sea interaction: evolution of ecosystems and climate”
(DEVEC), led by P. KÖNIGSHOF and colleagues from the Senckenberg Institute, Frankfurt a. M.,
Germany. IGCP 499 runs out in 2009 but there a plans for a new successor project. Its meetings
have been advertised on the official SDS Homepage. In 2009 two joint symposia were organized
during the 9th NAPC in Cincinnati, Symposium S3 on “Rapid Evolution of Terrestrial
Ecosystems and their Influence on Marine Realms – Land-Sea Interactions in the Devonian”
(Convenors P. KÖNIGSHOF and SDS Secretary J.E.A. MARSHALL: 9 talks) and Symposium S19
on “Biological Response to Devonian Sea-Level and Paleoclimate Changes” (Convenors: SDS
Chairman R.T. BECKER and TM C.E. BRETT: 10 talks, 3 posters). Further presentations with a
focus on Devonian stratigraphy were given in other Topical Sessions and Symposia.
Chronostratigraphic definitions: The SDS Report to ICS for 2008 summarized the main
arguments for and the importance of formally defined substages, which is not repeated here (see
also SDS Newsletter 18, p. 13-14).
PRAGIAN SUBSTAGES
With respect to the huge amount of work already done in the Zinzilban Gorge and since it has
been proposed to use the well documented current basal Emsian GSSP to define in future the
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base of an Upper Pragian or Zinzilbanian substage, only specific further research on the Pragian
subdivision into two substages is needed. Current work in progress includes a refined correlation
of the Zinzilban GSSP into the neritic brachiopod succession of the classical Emsian type region
of Germany, utilizing the conodont-brachiopod co-occurrences in Celtiberia (Spain). An outline
was published, right after the last SDS report, by CARLS et al. (2008, 2009) in Bulletin of
Geosciences (vol. 83/4) and in SDS Newsletter 24. At the Annual Business Meeting in 2009,
VALENZUELA-RIOS & CARLS provided a correlation of the “kitabicus boundary” into the Iberian
Chains and outlined the problems of correlation of European successions with the fine
eognathodid zonation of western North America.
EMSIAN SUBSTAGES
SDS has decided to delay the subdivision of the Emsian into two formal substages until its basal
GSSP has been revised. In spring 2009 the transition from typical lower Emsian limestones (with
typical dacryoconarid, conodont and ammonoid faunas) into overlying Daleje Shale equivalents
(with rich ammonoids) has been re-sampled in the Tafilalt of southern Morocco.
GIVETIAN SUBSTAGES
The formal submissions to ICS concerning the definitions of formal Middle and Upper Givetian
substages (voted on by SDS in 2007) are still in preparation. The Middle Givetian shall start with
the base of the varcus-rhenanus, the Upper Givetian with the base of the hermanni conodont
zones. New important data on the Middle/Upper Givetian transition and on the Taghanic
Biocrisis, including conodont, goniatite, sequence and magnetostratigraphy, were published after
the last report by BAIRD & BRETT (2008) or are currently in press by SDS members in the Middle
Devonian thematic volume to be published in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology,
Palaeoecology (ELLWOOD et al. in press; ABOUSSALAM & BECKER, in press; MARSHALL et al. in
press). BOCKWINKEL et al. (2009, Berliner Paläobiologische Abhandlungen, vol. 10) started to
document in detail the extraordinary Upper Givetian ammonoid radiation that gives a strong
difference to the much simpler Middle Givetian goniatites. The Guidebook to Field Trip No. 10
of the 9th NAPC (TM BRETT et al., 2009) includes many new data on the Givetian of Kentucky,
Ohio, and Michigan, especially concerning sequence stratigraphic correlations; these are useful
for the correlation of the substage levels into the Appalachian foreland. A corresponding
publication by TM BRETT et al. is in print in the mentioned Middle Devonian volume.
FRASNIAN SUBSTAGES
As in the case of the Givetian, the formal submissions to ICS concerning the definition of Middle
and Upper Frasnian substages, voted on by SDS in 2007, are still in progress. The Middle
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Frasnian shall start with the base of MN Zone 5 (= base of punctata Zone), the Upper Frasnian
with the transgressive spread of Pa. semichatovae low in MN Zone 11. An important new
monograph on conodonts of the Russian Platform by CM N.S. OVNATANOVA and L.I.
KONONOVA (2008, Paleontological Journal, vol. 42/10) helps to correlate into more shallow self
settings.
FAMENNIAN SUBSTAGES
A formal vote on Famennian substage levels was held up by the fact that important new data are
still not published. These (HARTENFELS & BECKER in press, KAISER et al. in press) are included in
the joint IGCP 499/SDS volume that is just being printed in the Palaeontographica Americana
series. The volume should be out still in 2009. The important update of the conodont-miospore
correlation was published by STREEL (2009) in the new IGCP 499 volume on “Devonian
Change”. The new data underline the proposal to place the Upper Famennian base at the base of
the Upper expansa Zone, which can be recognized by four different conodonts of four different
lineages (genera) that enter simultaneously: Palmatolepis gonioclymeniae, Bispathodus ultimus,
Pseudopolygnathus trigonicus, and Branmehla suprema. HARTENFELS & BECKER (2009)
reviewed in SDS Newsletter 24 the conodont succession across potential levels for a
Middle/Upper Famennian substage boundary and proposed to use the base of the global Lower
Annulata Event for definition. A publication on Australian faunas by BECKER & HOUSE (2009,
Bulletin of the Geological Survey of Western Australia, vol. 145) clarified the conodont-goniatite
correlations in the Famennian, which is of importance for the potential Lower/Middle Famennian
substage boundary. The base of the globally widespread and easily identifiable (Lower)
marginifera Zone correlates with the Prototethys (Australia to Europe/North Africa) spread of
advanced paratornoceratines (Acrimeroceras).
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association with the 9th NAPC (ETTENSOHN et al., 2009) includes two important contributions in
relation to the D/C boundary: Dropstones from Kentucky as evidence for Appalachian mountain
glaciers during the peak of regression and new data on the palynology across the boundary in
Kentucky by HEAL et al. BAIRD et al. (2009) presented in the Guide to Field Trip 10 of the 9th
NAPC a proposal to correlate formations around the D/C boundary of Ohio into previously
poorly studied successions of Pennsylvania, however so far with poor conodont control.
These data together document the current and parallel research efforts by several working groups
that should lead to a revised conodont stratigraphy and improved regional correlations using
isotope and sequence stratigraphy. The amount of progress is encouraging.
Publications: SDS has been very active concerning publications in Devonian thematic issues, in
its Newsletter, and in numerous journal contributions that are not listed here:
• BECKER, R. T. (Ed.) 2009. SDS Newsletter 24. - 127 pp., Westfälische Wilhelms-
Universität Münster.
[The SDS Newsletter has left the status of “grey literature” It is now a formal publication,
with ISSN No. 2074-7268, that can be quoted in all publications/journals.]
• BRETT, C.E., BARTHOLOMEW, A.J. & DESANTIS, M.K. (Eds.) 2009. Middle and Upper
Devonian Sequences, Sea Level, Climatic and Biotic Events in East-Central Laurentia:
Kentucky, Ohio, and Michigan. – North American Paleontological Convention – 2009.
Field trip No. 10, 186 pp.
• KAISER, S.I. 2009. The Devonian/Carboniferous boundary stratotype section (La Serre,
France) revisited. – Newsletters on Stratigraphy, 43 (2): 195-205.
• OVER, D.J. (Ed.) 2009 (just in print). Studies in Devonian Stratigraphy: Proceedings of
the 2007 International Meeting of the Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy and
IGCP 499. – Paleontographica America, 63, ca. 205 pp.
A special issue on Middle Devonian stratigraphy, with guest editors TM C.E. BRETT and TM E.
SCHINDLER, is in press with Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology and should be
published in the first half of 2010. Another Devonian volume is in preparation in the Memoirs
series of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists.
The Devonian chapter for the GTS 2010 volume has been significantly revised and is close to
completion.
Meetings:
• SDS Annual Business Meeting at the 9th North American Paleontological Convention,
Cincinatti, 26th June
• Paleozoic Seas Symposium, Graz 14-18th September 2009 [with formal SDS support]
Membership:
A very experienced new corresponding members from the USA (B. WITZKE) was elected.
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6. CHIEF PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN 2008
The wide array of activities, carried forward by a highly active core of SDS Members, especially
the high numbers of papers and thematic volumes, did not leave the time to finalize the formal
submissions for the ratification of Givetian and Frasnian substages. The delayed publication of
important new Famennian data caused a delay of formal voting on Famennian substages; the
levels for the base of the Middle and Upper Famennian require a new discussion in the light of
the now (end of 2009) available new rich conodont data. The program in 2009 was too full for
members of the D/C Boundary Working Group to organize a special conodont workshop and
field work in China but conodont specialists of the WG met at the ICOS in Calgary.
SDS is stick lacking formal members from a range of countries with extensive and important
Devonian outcrop, such as Algeria, Libya, Brazil, Bolivia, Argentine, Turkey, and Caucasian
countries. However, there are promising contacts with Devonian stratigraphers from some of
these, especially in the frame of IGCP 499, which resulted in important publications on the
Devonian of Algeria, Argentine, and Bolivia.
INCOME
carried over from 2008 206 $
IUGS subvention 2009 1600 $
Sum 1806 $
EXPENSES
SDS Newsletter 25, due 01/2010
printing/mailing 450 $
Support to members to attend the
9th NAPC and SDS Symposia 1000 $
• Finalize and submit proposals for the formal definition of Givetian and Frasnian substages
to ICS for ratification
• Publication of volume on Middle Devonian stratigraphy and multi-disciplinary correlation
in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (TMs C.E. BRETT & E.
SCHINDLER, Eds.)
• Publication of SDS Newsletter 25 in early 2009
• Compilation of results from the various specialists groups that re-sampled the interval for
a revised basal Emsian GSSP in the Zinzilban Gorge
• Publication of Devonian chapter (BECKER, HOUSE & GRADSTEIN) in GTS 2010
(GRADSTEIN et al.)
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• Annual Meeting at 3rd International Paleontological Congress, London, 28th June – 3rd July
2010, with SDS Symposium (formally approved by organizers) on “Devonian Bioevents
– timing, ecological and evolutionary patterns”
• SDS Field trip in relation with IPC3 to the terrestrial Devonian of the Old Red Continent
(Scotland), organized and led by SDS Secretary J.E.A. MARSHALL
• Initiate special volume on Devonian Bioevents in high-level journal, based on
contributions to London symposium
• Update of SDS homepage
• Formal vote on Uppermost Famennian substage (end of 2009/early 2010) - discussion of
the definition of Middle and Upper Famennian substages at London Business Meeting
• Participation in ICS Workshop in Prague, spring 2010, as part of intense cooperation with
ICS and its bodies (e.g., SCS, ISSC)
• Formal support and participation in the 4ème Congrés Francais de Stratigraphie, 30th
August to 2nd September 2010, Université Pierre et Marie Currie, Paris, with a field trip to
the Devonian of the Ardennes (northern France-Belgium)
INCOME
balance from 2008 356 $
EXPENSES
SDS Newsletter 26 500 $
support for SDS member from Uzbekistan (´Chairman
of Working Group on Emsian revision) to attend
Annual Business Meeting and SDS Symposium
at IPC3, London 1500 $
SUM 2000 $
APPENDIX A
Subcomission officers
VICE-CHAIRMAN
Ahmed EL HASSANI, Département de Géologie, Institut Scientifique, B.P. 703-Rabat-
Agdal, Marokko; elhassani@israbat.ac.ma
SECRETARY
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John E. MARSHALL, School of Ocean and Earth Science, University Southampton,
Southampton Oceanography Centre, European Way, Southampton SO14 3 ZH, U. K.,
jeam@soc.soton.ac. uk
WEBMASTER
Carlo CORRADINI, Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Cagliari, Via
Trentino 51, I-09127 Cagliari, Italy; corradin@unica.it
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SUBCOMMISSION ON SILURIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
Michael J. Melchin, Chairman, ISSS
Department of Earth Sciences
St. Francis Xavier University
Antigonish, Nova Scotia B2G 2W5, Canada
Phone: 902-867-5177; Fax: 902-867-2414
E-mail: mmelchin@stfx.ca
Goals
5. Rationalization of global chronostratigraphical classification.
6. Intercalibration of fossil biostratigraphies, integrated zonations, and recognition of global
datums.
7. Establishment of magneto- and chemo-stratigraphic scales.
8. Definition of Stage boundaries and restudy of global stratotype sections.
9. Correlation of Silurian rock successions and events, including marine to non-marine.
3. ORGANIZATION
The ISSS is a Subcommission of the Commission on Stratigraphy. The Subcommission is
organized by an Executive consisting of Chairman, Vice-Chairman and Secretary, who are all
Voting Members of the Subcommission. In the new Subcommission elected for 2008-2012 there
are twelve other Voting Members. The network of Corresponding Members have first of all a
responsibility for communication in both directions between the Subcommission and researchers
on Silurian topics in their region. Secondly they represent a broad spectrum of specialized
stratigraphical disciplines from those countries or regions where Silurian rocks are extensively
studied in relation to fundamental and/or applied geological research.
128
Officers for 2008-2012:
Chair: Michael Melchin, Antigonish, Canada.
Vice-Chair: Peep Mannik, Tallinn, Estonia
Secretary: J. Verniers, Ghent, Belgium
Current research activities and future plans are communicated through publication of an
annual ISSS newsletter, Silurian Times, distibuted by both email attachment and as a web release.
129
shown to be in need of refinement. As part of this the ISSS Chair and several other members
attended a Ludlow Research Group field trip to the type Llandovery area, where the GSSPs for
the Aeronian and Telychian occur. New research by the BGS has resulted in considerable
refinement of the stratigraphic and structural framework for this region and this will form an
important basis for future deliberations regarding the merits of these GSSPs and their possible
need for reconsideration.
At the same LRG meeting it was resolved that the Ludlow Research Group, a primarily
British group of geologists interested in the Silurian System, should strengthen its relationship
with the ISSS, particularly in terms of communication of research activities.
The ISSS Chair sent a letter to the director of the BGS expressing the strong interest of the
ISSS and the international stratigraphic community in the work of restuding the sedimentary
basins that host the Silurian GSSPs. The letter also expressed the hope that funding could be
continued for this stratigraphic research.
ISSS members were involved in several other conferences in 2009 including a symposium on
Paleozoic Seas, held in Graz, Austria, in September, 2009, the European Geosciences Union in
Vienna, Austria, April, 2009, and the final conference of IGCP 503, in Copenhagen in
September, 2009. In addition, the North American Paleontological Conference had a special
session sponsored by the ISSS and a field trip spanning the Silurian succession in the vicinity of
the Cincinnati Arch.
Expenditure
ISSS field meeting expenses for Chair US$1000
ISSS field meeting expenses Secretary US$1400
Balance US$0
Regular updating the website for Silurian Subcommission. We gratefully acknowledge the support
of the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology Academia Sinica for this work.
130
Planning for International Symposium on the Silurian System in St. Petersburg, Russia, July,
2011.
Publication of the conference proceedings of the 2009 ISSS Field Meeting in Sardinia. This
volume will be a special volume of the well-respected, refereed journal Bollettino della Società
Paleontologica Italiana.
Participation in the publication of the research results of IGCP 503 and planning for followup
IGCP project proposal.
Active participation in the ICS Workshop “The GSSP Concept”, Prague, May 30-June 3, 2010.
The ISSS chair and some collaborators plan to make visits to Llandovery-Wenlock boundary
sections in China and Czech Republic for preliminary assessment of their potential as a
replacement for the current GSSP for this boundary (see restudy of the Wenlock Series GSSP
below).
Focus of ISSS members on continued collaboration on the process of full integration of the
various regional and global biostratigraphic, lithostratigraphic, sequence stratigraphic, and
chemostratigraphic scales. This integration is essential for refinement of the Silurian time scale
and high-resolution correlation of Silurian events. In addition, some ISSS members plan to focus
on generation of new, high-resolution radiometric dates that are well constrained within the
Silurian time scale. This is essential to achieve better calibration of this scale, which is currently a
serious weakness for the Silurian System.
Since the ISSS has done pioneering work in the area of restudy of previously ratified GSSPs (see
below), it is particularly important that members of the ISSS executive participate in this
workshop, whose focus is The GSSP Concept.
131
Potential funding sources outside IUGS
Most of the costs of Working Group newsletter, meetings and other activities will be met by local
support from host institutions and participation by individuals by national research and travel
grants from their own authorities.
1) The Silurian Field Meeting of the SSS was held in Gotland, Sweden between August 15 and
22, 2005. A three day symposium followed by five days excursion was organized by M.E.
Eriksson, M. Calner, and L. Jeppsson (Lund University and support of the Swedish Geological
Survey). The field guide and the abstract book were published in the volume “The Dynamic
Silurian Earth”. In: Eriksson, M.E., Calner, M. (Eds.), Field Meeting of the Subcommission on
Silurian Stratigraphy 2005, Gotland, Rapporter och meddelanden-Sveriges Geologiska
Undersökning vol. 121, pp.1-99.
2) The restudy of the base of the Silurian System. A restudy of the GSSP for the Base of Silurian
was prepared in 2002 by a working group under the leadership of Michael Melchin. After three
years work, the working group has unanimously agreed that the current GSSP, at 1.6 m above the
base of the Birkhill Shale, at Dob’s Linn, Scotland, should be maintained as the GSSP, but the
biostratigraphical definition of the boundary needs to be revised. The GSSP should be regarded
as coinciding with the first appearance of Akidograptus ascensus, defining the base of the A.
ascensus Biozone at that GSSP section. By the middle of March 2006 all titular members have
voted in favour of the proposal of Mike Melchin for the base of the Silurian at Dob's Linn. It has
now been ratified by ICS and IUGS and a final report has been published in the September, 2008
issue of Episodes.
3) Regarding the restudy of the base of the Wenlock Series. The working group to restudy the
Base of the Wenlock Series (base of Sheinwoodian Stage) was led by David Loydell, looked at
potential GSSP sections in the Czech Republic and Wales, as possible alternatives to the current
GSSP in England. The primary marker for the base-Wenlock was a graptolite, but the GSSP in
England is notably poor in allowing exact determination of their ranges. Recent evidence has
shown that the current GSSP does not coincide with the base of the Cyrtograptus centrifugus
Biozone, as was supposed when the GSSP was defined. It has been suggested to retain the GSSP
location in England but revise the level of the GSSP to coincide with a conodont event -- the
Ireviken conodont datum 2. The correlation between this level and the graptolite biozonation is a
matter of some controversy. It is either approximately correlative with the base of the lower
murchisoni graptolite Biozone (instead of the current centrifugus graptolite zone), or else a level
high within the murchisoni graptolite Biozone. Alternatively, another GSSP locality with a
precise base of the Cyrtograptus centrifugus Biozone could be chosen (e.g., potential sections in
Great Britain or the Czech Republic), but this process would be quite lengthy. The report of this
work at the Silurian Field Meeting in Gotland, in August, 2005, was discussed over the winter
and spring, 2006. Most voting members appreciated very much the amount of work by the
working group and especcially the leader of the group. But most felt that for the moment that no
good alternative for the previous GSSP can be proposed. It was decided not to propose a new
132
GSSP and stick for the time being to the old GSSP, although it had many short comings, until
new studies can propose a better alternative. This time consuming study could however not be
completed before the deadline of the ISC, ending at the International Geological Congress in
Oslo summer 2008.
At the 2009 Silurian Field Meeting many of the ISSS members expressed their desire to continue
to search for a new GSSP for the Base of Wenlock to replace the current one. Those members felt
that it would be in the best interest of stability to find a new GSSP whose level coincides with the
base of the Cyrtograptus centrifugus Biozone. Other members expressed the view that, with
additional study, it may be that the current GSSP can be shown to provide a high level of
biostratigraphic resolution based on its conodont faunas and that it would be in the best interest of
stability to keep the current location and level. This is a matter of ongoing research and
discussion for the Subcommission.
4) An International Conference on the Silurian System was held in Nanjing, China, in June-July
2007, hosted by the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology. 22 talks and posters were
presented on the Silurian and three excursions to the extensive Silurian outcrop areas of South
China with more than 70 participants impressed the participants by the good exposures and the
extensive work that was done in these sections. Conference proceedings were published in a
special issue of Acta Palaeontological Sinica.
5) ISSS members participated in 19 conferences in which IGCP 503 held sessions or symposia
and began collaboration on planning of a followup IGCP project proposal.
As also noted above, we plan to collaborate with the British Geological Survey in the remapping
and stratigraphic reinvestigation of the GSSPs and surrounding type regions for the bases of the
Aeronian, Telychian, Wenlock (Sheinwoodian), Homerian, Ludlow (Gorstian), and Ludfordian.
It is our objective to complete integrated biostratigraphic, chemostratigaphic, and sequence
stratigraphic of each of the GSSPs. At the present time, each of these GSSPs has a significant
level of imprecision in its definition for the purposes of high resolution stratigraphic correlation.
It is our hope that these restudies will increase the precision with which the GSSPs can be
defined and correlated, as has been the case with the restudy of the Base of the Silurian. If not,
this work may provide a compelling rationale for seeking a replacement section and point for one
or more of the current GSSPs.
We will investigate the establishment of data-bases which would bring together and make
available information from all sources associated with the Silurian researchers. Associated with
this will be the development and expansion of the Thematic Working Groups: for example,
searching for and interpreting data from all sources relevant to reconstructing the
palaeobiogeography or the climate of one or more specific time-intervals.
133
Other related activities include participation in the production of a new volume synthesizing our
current understanding of Palaeozoic Palaeobiography. This volume is being edited by D.A.T.
Harper and T. Servais.
APPENDIX [Names and Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members, 2008-2012]
SUBCOMMISSION ON SILURIAN STRATIGRAPHY
Subcommission officers
Chairman: Michael J. Melchin, Department of Earth Sciences, St. Francis Xavier University,
Antigonish, NS, Canada, B2G 2W5; mmelchin@stfx.ca.
Vice Chairman: Peep Mannik, Institute of Geology at Tallinn University of Technology
Ehitajate tee 5, 19086 Tallinn, Estonia; mannik@gi.ee.
Secretary: Jacques Verniers, Research Unit Palaeontology, Department of Geology and Soil
Science, Ghent University, Krijgslaan 281 building S8, B-9000, Gent, Belgium,:
Jacques.Verniers@ugent.be.
134
SUBCOMMISSION ON ORDOVICIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
David A.T. Harper
Chairman, ISOS
Natural History Museum of Denmark (Geological Museum)
University of Copenhagen
Øster Voldgade 5-7
DK-1350 Copenhagen K
Denmark
J. C. Gutiérrez-Marco
Vice-Chairman, SOS
Instituto de Geología Económica (CSIC-UCM)
Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas
28040 Madrid
Spain
Tel.: +34 915 44 54 59
Fax: +34 913 94 48 74
E-mail: jcgrapto@geo.ucm.es
URL: http://www.ucm.es/info/paleo/ personal/gutierrez.htm
I.G. Percival
Secretary, SOS
Geological Survey of NSW
NSW Department of Primary Industries
W.B. Clarke Geoscience Centre
47-953 Londonderry Road
Londonderry
New South Wales 2753
Australia
E-mail: ian.percival@industry.nsw.gov.au
135
Specific objectives are:
a. To delimit and subdivide the Ordovician System (and Period) as a part of the overall ICS
mission to elaborate the standard global stratigraphic scale. This work aims to establish the
boundaries (GSSPs), the correlation of the subdivisions (Stages and Series), the nomenclature of
the subdivisions and periodically review the effectiveness and utility of these decisions.
b. To promote regular international meetings on all aspects of Ordovician geology, especially
those devoted to clarifying stratigraphic procedures, nomenclature and methods for use in
establishing a unified global time scale and to prepare correlation charts with explanatory notes
(the main phase of this latter task is now completed).
c. To encourage, promote, and support research on all aspects of Ordovician geology worldwide
and to provide outlets, Ordovician News, international meetings, and a web page, for promoting
discussions and reporting results of this research.
d. To encourage, promote, and support interdisciplinary research on the Ordovician global Earth
system, addressing topics that require high-resolution, global correlation.
d. The ultimate goal of the Subcommission is to provide a high-resolution geological time scale
that will be a critical foundation for interdisciplinary research on the global Earth system during
the Ordovician Period. The work is broad based and must include specialists in palaeontology, all
subdisciplines of stratigraphy (bio-, litho-, chemo-, and magneto-), sedimentology, geochemistry,
and tectonics. With a large network including active participants from more than 25 countries,
the Subcommission thus involves much of the global geological community.
136
4. Organization
IGCP Project 503: Arguably the most sustained rise in marine biodiversity took place
during the Ordovician, and the second largest mass extinction event took place close to the end of
that Period, coincident with an episode of major climate fluctuation. The results of the very
successful IGCP project n° 410 "The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event" not only
included the development of an improved globally-integrated biozonation for graptolites,
137
conodonts and chitinozoans, but also generated biodiversity curves that have been constructed for
all Ordovician fossil groups.
Following the work of the numerous regional teams and of the clade teams, that were
established for each fossil group in IGCP project n° 410, a new successor project (IGCP project
n° 503) was approved in order to develop a better understanding of the environmental changes
that influenced the biodiversity trends in the Ordovician and Early Silurian. In this project, the
major objectives are thus to attempt to find the possible physical and/or chemical causes (e.g.,
related to changes in climate, sea level, volcanism, plate movements, extraterrestrial influences,
etc.) for the Ordovician biodiversification, the end-Ordovician extinction, and the subsequent
Silurian radiation.
a. The next International Symposium on the Ordovician System will take place in Spain during
May, 2011. The conference itself and associated business meetings and workshops will be held in
the environs of Madrid with field excursions to various parts of the Iberian Peninsula including
the Iberian Chains and northern Portugal. A major post-conference excursion to Morocco will
also be offered.
IGCP 503 formally concluded its 5-year program with an International Congress on
Palaeozoic Climates in Lille, France during August, 2008. An extension of this successful project
was agreed and a further meeting on ‘Early Palaeozoic Palaeogeography’ was held in
Copenhagen during late August and early September 2009.
b. The Subcommission completed its GSSP research programme in 2008 and all 7 Stage GSSPs
were established and approved by the IUGS before the Ordovician Yangtze Conference (June
2007). Bergström, Chen Xu, Gutiérrez-Marco, and Dronov have compiled a new
chronostratigraphic classification of the Ordovician System and its relations to the main regional
series and stages. The English version has been published in Lethaia and the Chinese version was
published in the Journal of Stratigraphy in China prior to the 33rd IGC in Oslo during August
2008. Discussion, however, at the business meeting in Copenhagen included the wish to routinely
evaluate the efficacy of the current stages. A colour reprint of the Global Ordovician
Chronostratigraphy (The Ordovician Time Table) chart is still planned dependent on funding and
will be distributed to colleagues in different countries if funding permits.
c. Ordovician News No. 26 was produced and posted on the Subcommission website and is
available for download.
138
8. Summary of expenditure for 2009
The new Subcommission came into force during the 33rd IGC in Oslo. Plans for the
Subcommission’s future work were initially stated as follows.
a. Will open debate on the formal definition of chronozones within the Ordovician System. This
possibility arises from the time-slice concept of Webby (2004) and the finer subdivision of the
system presented by Bergström et al. (2008).
b. Will establish a forum to assess the efficacy and utility of the newly-established international
stages.
c. Will stimulate where relevant the production of revised regional correlation charts on the basis
of new regional stratigraphic data and their relationship to the newly-established international
stages.
d. Will open debate on the applicability of non-biologic methods of correlation of Ordovician
strata.
d. Production and internet distribution of Ordovician News No. 26 in 2009.
e. Management of Subcommission website will remain based in Nanjing. Following discussions
with the webmaster, Fan Junxuan, the site will be remodelled following the general format of the
attractive and effective main ICS site. A number of redundant features will be removed and a
number of more relevant additions will appear during the next few months.
During the business meeting at the final meeting of IGCP 503 the plans were formalized with the
agreement to form a number of working groups in the following areas:
1. There may be a requirement to evaluate the efficacy and utility of our stages and stage
boundaries. Where appropriate and/or necessary we will have to move to establish some
small advisory groups.
2. Clearly the Subcommission can now move with some confidence towards confirming
and establishing finer divisions of Ordovician time. In this respect Bergström et al.
(2009: Lethaia) have divided our international stages into stage slices based mainly on
existing biozones. Finer time slices were also proposed by Webby (2004: The Great
Ordovician Biodiversification Event, Columbia University Press) and used effectively in
developing data for the GOBE. As these time divisions are more widely adopted, it would
be useful to confirm their definition and status.
139
3. Over the last few years we have neglected somewhat the role of the regional groups and
the many important regional and diverse stratigraphies that make our system so exciting.
A number of the key regional successions were included in the correlation charts provided
by Bergström et al. (2009), but there more that require calibration with our new stages.
Moreover a few regions such as Baltoscandia and SE Asia were never formally published.
This is a priority for our system and work that can involve all our colleagues.
4. Work is now far advanced on a Carbon stable isotope curve for the Ordovician.
Consistent results have been already achieved for parts of the column. There are of
course other stable isotopes and it will be appropriate and useful to evaluate if we can
help develop these curves not least as one of our nonbiologic means of correlation. There
are other nonbiologic techniques that we could also consider.
5. A more difficult area is sea-level or water-depth curves for the period. There have been a
number of curves for the Ordovician and many more for particular parts of the period. It
would be useful to examine these curves more carefully and the criteria upon which they
are based with a move towards developing more standardised curves for the Ordovician.
6. We now have a number of accurate palaeogeographic maps for our period. Not everyone
agrees with all the reconstructions and perhaps they never will. But it is possible to
engage in cooperation with some of the groups to develop a more standard set of base
maps for the period.
7. We already have a number of robust absolute dates for parts of the system but it would
useful to develop more, not least to be able to calibrate the true rates of biological and
geological process occurring during the period.
8. We have tended as a group to ignore the economic potential of our system. But, for
example in New South Wales, nearly all the gold and copper mines are hosted in
Ordovician volcanics of the Macquarie Arc and in China considerable funding is being
made available through SINOPEC (the Chinese petroleum company) to support research
into Ordovician biostratigraphy.
140
10. Budget and ICS component for 2010
a. Support for publication of Geological Society Memoir on Early Palaeozoic Biogeography and
Geography, arising out of the Copenhagen Conference, edited by Harper and Servais (accepted in
principle by the Geological Society). This will be a substantial volume with chapters on the main
fossil groups, new interactive palaeogeographic base maps provided by Trond Torsvik
(BugPlates), and introductory chapters on nomenclature and terminology. The ICS will be
credited as a main sponsor. 5000 USD
c. Preparation of an Ordovician Time Table, carried over from last year: 1000USD
d. Support for attendance of ICS workshop in May 2010 in Prague: 2000USD
e. Support for attendance of SOS workshop in June 2010 in London as part of the IPC3: 2000
USD
e. Support for production of revised regional correlation charts: 2500 USD
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g. Publication of Ordovician News nos. 17-26 and their posting on the Subcommission’s web
site.
h. Development of the web site “Ordovician Stratigraphy Discussion Group” to facilitate
discussions on selection of the GSSPs. This site has evolved into the Subcommission's web site
and also includes postings of Ordovician News.
i. Sponsorship of a technical session and field excursion on the GSSP for the base of the
Middle Ordovician Series at the Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America in
November 2000.
j. Sponsorship at the 31st International Geological Congress, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2000, of
the symposium “Paleontological, stratigraphical, and paleogeographical relations among South
America, Laurentia, Avalonia, and Baltica during the Ordovician.”
k. Sponsorship at the 32nd International Geological Congress, Florence, Italy, 2004, of the
symposium “The global Ordovician Earth system”.
l. Launched GOES (Global Ordovician Earth System) Program to stimulate integrated multi-
disciplinary studies of global events (mass extinction, sea-level changes, greenhouse conditions,
tectonics) during the Ordovician Period.
m. Sponsorship of a special symposium on the Ordovician System at the Geological Society
of America Annual Meeting in 2000, of WOGOGOB 2001 in Copenhagen, and the meeting and
field excursion “The Gondwanan Platform in Ordovician times: Climatic, eustatic and
geodynamic evolution”, in Morocco in February 2001.
o. Selection of names for 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th and 7th stages of the Ordovician System.
p. Sponsorship of the 2006 IGCP 503 Glasgow meeting on “Changing palaeogeographical
and palaeobiogeographical patterns in the Ordovician and Silurian”.
q. Sponsorship of the 2007 Yangtze Conference (the 10th Ordovician Conference) that was
combined with the 3rd Silurian Conference and the IGCP 503 annual meeting in Nanjing. The
combined conference was attended by 140 scientists from 24 countries; 66 papers and 22 posters
were presented, with publication of these in a Proceedings volume of 566 pages. Two field
guides were also printed.
r. Publication of ‘The new chronostratigraphic classification of the Ordovician System and its
relations to major series and stages and to δ13C chemostratigraphy’ Lethaia 2008.
s. Support and participation in the following major conferences during 2008: 7th Baltic
Stratigraphic Conference, Tallinn, and associated field excursions, May 2008 and ‘Development
of Early Paleozoic Biodiversity: The role of biotic and abiotic factors, and event correlation’
Moscow, June 2008 and the subsequent field excursion to the Altai Mountains; 33rd IGC in Oslo
during August 2008 and the IGCP 503 ‘International Congress on Palaeozoic Climates’ in Lille,
France during August, 2008.
t. Support, participation and sponsorship of the following major conferences during 2009.
NAPC Cincinnati 21-26 June and IGCP 503 Copenhagen 31 August – 4 September.
u. Agreement in principle to establish a new range of working groups tackling a wide
spectrum of areas of Ordovician with a view to developing new products for the community.
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SUBCOMMISSION ON CAMBRIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
Prof. Loren E. BABCOCK, Secretary
School of Earth Sciences
125 South Oval Mall
The Ohio State University
Columbus, OH 43210
USA
Tel. 01 614-292-2721
Email babcock.5@osu.edu
Mission Statement
The Subcommission is the primary body for facilitation of international communication and
scientific cooperation in Cambrian stratigraphy.
Goals
The goals of the Subcommission fall into two main areas:
(1) To develop a global stage-level and series-level chronostratigraphic classification of the
Cambrian System.
(2) To complete and publish regional and global correlation charts for the Cambrian System.
3. ORGANIZATION
The Subcommission is organized by an Executive consisting of Chairman, two Vice-Chairs, and
Secretary, who are all Voting Members of the Subcommission. There are currently 17 other
Voting Members. The Voting Members are elected for their expertise and experience, but also
represent a diversity of countries and regions.
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The objectives of the Subcommission are pursued by Working Groups, both stratigraphic and
thematic. Each Working Group is organized by a Chair who is a Voting or Corresponding
Member.
Website: www.uni-wuerzburg.de/palaeontologie/ISCS/index.htm
Proposals for a GSSP of provisional Cambrian Stage 5 (and Series 3) are being prepared and are
expected to be submitted to Linda McCollum, Chair of the Working Group on the base of Stage 5
(and Series 3) by the end of 2009. A discussion on the key levels defining the base of the stage
has been organized in early 2009 by Fred Sundberg who made a trip to E. Guizhou in June, 2009
to examine the Wuliu-Zhenjiayan section in Jianhe. After sufficient proposals have been
144
received, and after review of all the proposals by Working Group members, the best options will
be put forward to the VMs of the Cambrian Subcommission for a vote.
The Subcommission is working toward establishing GSSPs of the remaining undefined series and
stages. Discussion on futher work on the Siberian sections of lower half of Cambrian has been
outlined during the Kazakhstan meeting. Significant progress is being made towards the
definition of Stage 10, as well as divisions in the lower half of the system.
INCOME
Carried forward from 2008 $ 553.12
ICS Allocation $ 3000.00
SUBTOTAL 2009 income $ 3553.12
8a. GSSP proposals and names for lowermost series and stage.
Planning is underway for meetings of the Cambrian Stage Subdivision Working Group in 2010.
In 2010, the Subcommission expects to vote on at least one proposal for a stage-level GSSP
(Stage 5).
8b. Newsletter
An annual newsletter, highlighting activities of the Subcommission, is expected to be issued by
email in 2010.
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9. BUDGET AND ICS COMPONENT FOR 2010.
In order to accelerate the pace of work in establishing GSSPs within the Cambrian, we request a
modest increase in funds as compared to previous years. The proposed increased funding is
targeted at field research on key sections by Working Group members and travel by Voting
Members to international meetings where much of the decision-making takes place.
INCOME
Carry-over from 2008 $ 53.12
In a seminal paper, John Shergold and Gerd Geyer (Episodes, 2000) reviewed widely
recognizable biohorizons having intercontinental correlation value (ones that could potentially
serve as stage-level or series-level boundaries for chronostratigraphic units). This work led to a
focusing of subsequent effort on the issue of better characterizing potential chronostratigraphic
boundary horizons using available stratigraphic tools. A protocol for identifying GSSPs within
the Cambrian has been established: 1, selection of a horizon suitable for intercontinental
correlation (followed by balloting by the Voting Members); then 2, search for the best sections
from which to select a GSSP (followed by balloting by the Voting Members).
A plan has been devised for subdivision of the Cambrian System into four series, each
representing roughly equal time intervals. The lowermost two series, which approximately
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correspond to the traditional lower Cambrian, are each expected to be divided into two nearly
equal stages. The uppermost two stages are each expected to be divided into three nearly equal
stages. The plan received overwhelming support from ISCS Voting Members.
With the objectives now better focused, and a procedure in place for selecting the best horizons
and locations for GSSPs, work has proceeded toward the establishment of stage-level or series-
level GSSPs. Successful GSSP proposals arising from the Cambrian Subcommission were for the
bases of the Paibian Stage and Furongian Series (2004), the Drumian Stage (2006), and the
Guzhangian Stage (2007). Proposals for Stage 9 were voted within the Working Group of the
stage with a single candidate section been selected. A decision on a GSSP for the base of the
stage is expected near the end of this year. In addition, names have been ratified for the
Terreneuvian Series (2007) and Fortunian Stage (2007).
The primary objective for the immediate future for the Cambrian Subcommission remains the
completion of definition of the stages by GSSPs. It is hoped that all stages of the upper half of the
Cambrian will be defined by GSSPs by 2012. Stages of the lower half of the Cambrian are
expected to be defined by GSSPs by around 2014.
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APPENDIX [Names and Addresses of Current Officers and Voting Members, 2008-2012]
INTERNATIONAL SUBCOMMISSION ON CAMBRIAN STRATIGRAPHY
Subcommission officers
Chairman: Shanchi Peng, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, The Chinese
Academy of Sciences, 39 East Beijing Street, Nanjing 210008, China, Email:
scpeng@nigpas.ac.cn
First Vice Chair: Malgorzata Moczydlowska-Vidal, Department of Earth Sciences,
Palaeobiology, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 22, Box 558, 752 36 Uppsala, Sweden,
Email: malgo.vidal@pal.uu.se
Second Vice-Chair: Gerd Geyer, Institut für Paläontologie, Universität Würzburg, Pleicherwall
1, 97070, Würzburg, Germany, Email: gerd.geyer@mail.uni-wuerzburg.de.
Secretary: Loren E. Babcock, School of Earth Sciences, 125 South Oval Mall, The Ohio State
University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA, babcock.5@osu.edu
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Per Ahlberg, Lund, Sweden per.ahlberg@geol.lu.se
José-Javier Álvaro, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France Jose-Javier.Alvaro@uni-lille1.fr
Duck K. Choi, Seoul, Korea dkchoi@snu.ac.kr
Gappar Kh. Ergaliev, Almaty, Kazakhstan ergaliev@nursat.kz
R. Gozalo, Valencia, Spain (replaces Eladio Liñán) rodolfo.gozalo@uv.es
James B. Jago, Mawson Lakes, Australia jim.jago@unisa.edu.au
Pierre D. Kruse, Darwin, Australia pierre.kruse@dme.nt.gov.au
Ed Landing, Albany, New York, USA elanding@mail.nysed.gov
Elena Naimark, Moscow, Russia naimark@paleo.ru
Tatyana V. Pegel, Novosibirsk, Russia pegel@mail.ru
Brian Pratt, Sascatchewan, Canada brian.pratt@usask.ca
Matthew R. Saltzman, Columbus, Ohio, USA saltzman.11@osu.edu
Michael Steiner, Berlin Germany Michael.Steiner@FU-Berlin.de
Stephen R. Westrop, Norman, Oklahoma, USA swest@hoth.gcn.ou.edu
Xingliang Zhang, Xi'an, China xizhang69@126.com
Maoyan Zhu, Nanjing, China myzhu@nigpas.ac.cn
Andrey Yu. Zhuravlev, Valencia, Spain ayzhur@mail.ru
Preparer information:
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SUBCOMMISSION ON NEOPROTEROZOIC (EDIACARAN AND
CRYOGENIAN) STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
Dr James GEHLING, Chairman
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, 5000, Australia
Tel. +61-8-8207-7441, Fax. +61-8-8207-7222
Email jgehling@ozemail.com
Mission statement
The Subcommission is the primary body for facilitation of international communication
and scientific cooperation in Neoproterozoic stratigraphy, defined in the broad sense of
multidisciplinary activities directed towards better understanding of the evolution of the Earth
and life during the Ediacaran Period and more generally during the late Neoproterozoic (circa
800 – 542 Ma). Its first priority is the unambiguous definition, by means of agreed GSSPs, of a
hierarchy of chronostratigraphic units that provide the framework for global correlation.
Goals
These fall into three main areas:
(a) The definition of basal boundary stratotypes (GSSPs) and the refinement of standard
chronostratigraphic scales, through the establishment of multidisciplinary Working
Groups;
(b) International coordination of and collaboration in research on late Neoproterozoic
environments, through the establishment of thematic Working Groups, for example on
Neoproterozoic glaciations.
(c) International coordination of efforts to establish consensus global stratigraphic calibration
schemes for the late Neoproterozoic using alternative methods of stratigraphy, such as
chemostratigraphy.
149
(2) Proceed with a program of workshops and symposia to select criteria, boundary stratotype
section, and GSSP for a “Cryogenian” period and system, immediately below the
Ediacaran;
(3) Establishment of frameworks and systems to encourage international collaboration in
understanding the evolution of the Earth during the late Neoproterozoic interval, in
particular, cooperating with the Precambrian Subcommission (M. Van Kranendonk,
chair) to subdivide the late Precambrian. The Neoproterozoic (Ediacaran and
Cryogenian) Subcommission will concentrate on the Neoproterozic, while the
Precambrian Subcommission will work on Archean and older eras of the Proterozoic.
Both subcommissions seek to established “natural” or rock-based boundaries that will
enable global correlation.
(4) Working towards an international policy concerning conservation of geologically and
paleontologically important sites such as GSSPs. This relates to, inter alia, the IUGS
Geosites Programme.
3. ORGANIZATION
Officers for 2004-2012:
Chair: Dr. James Gehling, Australia
Vice-Chair: Dr. Shuhai Xiao, USA
Secretary: Dr. Graham Shields, UK
The Subcommission is organized by an Executive consisting of Chairman, Vice-
Chairman and Secretary, who are all Voting Members of the Subcommission. These officers
were nominated and elected by voting members of the now terminated Terminal Proterozoic
Subcommission during late 2003. There are currently 33 other Voting Members, making a total
of 36 voting members (see appendix), of whom only 32 responded to emails during 2009. There
are currently over 30 additional corresponding members, about half of whom participate actively
in online discussions. The Voting Members have been specifically selected for their international
reputations, recognized expertise in an area of geoscience relevant to the subcommission, and
their willingness to take an active role in the subcommission’s activities. Four voting members
are required to be officers of the Cambrian and Precambrian Subcommissions.
• Decision on criteria to define the base of the Cryogenian Period (17.08.2009): "The base
of the Cryogenian should be placed within an outcrop section at a precisely defined
stratigraphic level (GSSP) beneath the oldest clearly glacigenic deposits in a
Neoproterozoic succession. The chosen section should demonstrate proven potential for
150
global C- and Sr-isotope stratigraphic correlation and preferably be amenable to
microfossil biostratigraphy, isotope geochronology and other forms of global correlation
such as magnetostratigraphy" (see Appendix 2).
5. Discussions were ongoing throughout 2009 with regard to the possible subdivision of the
Ediacaran Period (see Appendix 3). On the basis of answers to questionnaires, it will be
possible to vote at the end of 2009 on criteria to subdivide the Ediacaran Period.
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7. SUMMARY OF EXPENDITURES IN 2009:
INCOME
To be carried forward to 2009 US$ 500
ICS US$ 3500
TOTAL US$ 4000
(a) Newsletter:
An end-of-year circular is to be distributed during November 2009 to remind all corresponding
members of the results of questionnaires distributed during 2009 as well as to solicit interest in
2010 field workshops in India and Russia.
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A meeting in Svalbard to discuss the base of the Cryogenian GSSP is being organized for 2011
with an exploratory field excursion planned for Summer 2010 (chief organizer: Ian Fairchild).
(g) Voting:
• Request for informal proposals for Cryogenian basal GSSP (end 2009).
• Voting on criteria for the subdivision of Ediacaran Period (from end 2009).
• Request for informal proposals for Ediacaran Period subdivision (late 2009).
Projected Budget for 2010 (details are pending – Nov. 26, 2009):
Carried over from 2009 US $3000
General office expenses US $250
Preparation and production of Newsletter/web support US $250
Advance to India workshop JG SX GS US$ 3000
Advance to Novosibirsk workshop JG SX GS, etc. US$ 4000
2004: On February 16th, 2004, the ICS voted 14:1 in favor (with one abstention) on the GSSP
and name for the “Ediacaran System”. The results were submitted to IUGS, which ratified the
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GSSP and name for the Ediacaran System and Period on March 19th (IUGS E-Bulletin, March
2004).
2005: Interpretive signs and a marker or “golden spike” were dedicated by the South Australian
Premier at the Ediacaran GSSP on April 16 at the Ediacaran GSSP site in the Flinders ranges
National Park.
Ediacaran paleobiology: paleontological, molecular, embryological, and ecological
constraints) NAPC meeting in Halifax Nova Scotia (June 19-26, 2005) and a 5-day pre-
conference excursion to the Ediacaran succession of SE Newfoundland.
2006: 2nd International Palaeontological Congress held in China from June 17-24, 2006, Chinese
voting members Zhu Maoyan, Yin Chongyu and Shuhai Xiao and a team of colleagues and their
students organized a Neoproterozoic field workshop from June 6-16, to study the Cryogenian and
Ediacaran successions of South China of the Neoproterozoic Subcommission. At the 2nd
International Palaeontological Congress held on the Beijing University campus, (June 17-21), the
Neoproterozoic Subcommission organized a very-well attended symposium and poster session on
Neoproterozoic Palaeontology and Geobiology, that extended over two days. “Snowball Earth
2006 appraisal conference” was held at the Centro Stefano Franscini, Ascona, Switzerland, July
16-21, 2006. The conference brought together many of the world’s experts in Neoproterozoic
Earth System Science.
2008: IGCP 512-sponsored field meeting: Neoproterozoic glacial and associated facies in the
Varanger (ex-type) area Excursion 42 at IGC 2008 (July 29 – Aug. 5, 2008).
Subcommission business meeting at IGC 2008, Oslo, Norway following the IGCP 512-
sponsored symposium Stratigraphic correlation of Neoproterozoic strata and IGCP493 sponsored
symposium Rise and fall of the Ediacaran (Vendian) biota (Aug. 6-14, 2008). Approximately two
thirds of the voting membership attended the IGC.
Swedish Workshop for Ediacaran Acritarch Taxonomy (SWEATshop), Uppsala, Sweden
(Aug. 18-21, 2008) attended by 12 scientists from six countries represented the first of a series of
attempts to unravel taphonomic hindrances to biostratigraphic subdivision of the Ediacaran
period (see App. 2).
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12. OBJECTIVES AND WORK PLAN FOR NEXT 4 YEARS (2009-2012)
The Neoproterozoic (Ediacaran and Cryogenian) Subcommission aims to encourage research that
will facilitate a consensus subdivision of the late Neoproterozoic (circa 800 – 542 Ma) by end-
2012.
End-2009
• Voting on consensus criteria for the subdivision of the Ediacaran Period.
2010
• Lucknow, India February 2010; Field and lab workshops, conference and atlas of
Neoproterozoic acritarch biostratigraphy.
• Submission of informal proposals for Cryogenian Period basal GSSP.
• Novosibirsk, Russia, August 2010; Field and acritarch workshops and conference.
• Submission of informal proposals for subdivision of the Ediacaran Period.
2011
• Field excursions to key GSSP candidates in 2011.
• Submission of full GSSP proposals.
2012
• Voting and ratification of subcommission decisions on base of Cryogenian Period and on
Ediacaran Period subdivision.
*********************************************************
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APPENDIX 1: NEOPROTEROZOIC (EDIACARAN AND CRYOGENIAN)
SUBCOMMISSION
Voting Members 2008-2010
Subcommission officers
Chairman: James Gehling, South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, 5000
Australia; Tel. +61-8-8207-7441, email: jgehling@ozemail.com
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APPENDIX 2
Cryogenian Period Questionnaire
The Neoproterozoic Subcommission officers received 87% overall response following the
request to vote on a working definition for the Cryogenian Period. 79% of replies were positive,
which gives us a mandate to move forward on this issue. The vote and the lengthy discussion
preceding that vote establish a clear priority order with regard to the criteria likely to be used in
the future definition and correlation of the Cryogenian Period. After voting, Dr Gerard Germs
asked to step down as a voting member of the subcommission.
Six members offered criticisms or suggestions for changes to the proposed definition (see
appended results). The officers have considered these suggestions at length and have
decidedupon some minor changes to the definition as a result. We hope these changes have
clarified the job at hand and will not prove controversial. I have included the original definition
below for comparison. In making the slight amendments we considered that:
2. The word “preferably” could be removed to avoid ambiguity (Weiguo Sun, Nick Christie Blick,
Nikolay Cumakov). However, we have kept this word in the definition to avoid the need for
another vote in the understanding that the demonstrated potential for microfossil biostratigraphy,
direct dating and any additional methods of global correlation will strengthen the case for a GSSP
to be placed in any given section.
3. “Truly widespread” caused a problem for FOUR members (Weiguo Sun, Nick Christie Blick,
Nikolay Cumakov, Hans Hofmann), which led to a simplification of the first sentence.
4. Magnetostratigraphy has now been given a lower priority in the definition in order to reflect
earlier questionnaire results and two new comments (Weiguo Sun, Nick Christie Blick).
Final definition:
"The base of the Cryogenian should be placed within an outcrop section at a precisely defined
stratigraphic level (GSSP) beneath the oldest clearly glacigenic deposits in a Neoproterozoic
succession. The chosen section should demonstrate proven potential for global C- and Sr-isotope
stratigraphic correlation and preferably be amenable to microfossil biostratigraphy, isotope
geochronology and other forms of global correlation such as magnetostratigraphy".
157
APPENDIX 3
Results of Ediacaran Period Questionnaire:
2. There is very clear consensus that stable carbon isotopes, acritarchs, and Ediacara fossils are
the most practical correlation tools. Ediacaran glaciations and oxidation events may be useful.
There is very little support for stromatolites or the Acraman impact events as interregional
correlation tools.
3. Consistent with results #1, most people believe that we should focus on successions with
mixed lithologies, geochronological constraints, and chemostratigraphic and biostratigraphic
potential.
4. We should proceed from Series to Stages, rather than from Stages to Series (as practiced in
Phanerozoic stratigraphy). The Ediacaran System can be divided into two or more Series.
5. Although the Series boundary should be unambiguously defined (e.g., using fossil FAD or
LAD, or isotopic features), at the present it is perhaps unrealistic to use the FAD or LAD of an
Ediacaran species (with possible exception of Cloudina hartmannae) for global correlation. Thus,
we should aim at characterizing the Series using a combination of bio- and chemostratigraphic
features (e.g., one or two Series in the lower Ediacaran System characterized by Ediacaran
acanthomorphs; one or two Series in the upper Ediacaran System characterized by macroscopic
Ediacara fossils; alternatively, three Series each characterized with a carbon isotope cycle).
6. The broad congruency between evolutionary and physical events in the Ediacaran Period is
encouraging, but the uncertainties about each individual criterion demand that we should adopt a
holistic approach (i.e., using multiple criteria in order to maximize the usefulness of the GSSP).
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APPENDIX 4
International Conference, Biostratigraphy Workshop & Field Meeting on
“PRECAMBRIAN LIFE, TIME AND ENVIRONMENT :
EVOLVING CONCEPTS AND MODERN ANALOGUES”
The conference and workshop will be followed by a 5 day Field Work in the Lesser
Himalayan Krol Belt in which Cryogenian sections of Pre-Blaini to Tal formations as a
post-Conference event. Since a number of International experts are keen to visit India to look
at these exceptionally well developed sections, the event would provide an opportunity to the
participants to evaluate these crucial sections of the Indian sub-continents for global
correlation of successions.
Schedule
(February 2 - 9, 2010)
The entire schedule has been drawn considering the interest of different groups of participants who
want to visit Lesser Himalayan Neoproterozoic successions.
The participants would be assembling at Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh, a city well
connected by Air and Train from Delhi. The first part of the event incorporates the International
Conference & Symposim cum Workshop on Acritarchs between February 2nd to February 4th,
2010. The Field Meeting in Lesser Himalaya begins on February 5th at Dehradun and ends on
February 9th at Chandigarh from where participants can fly or travel by train to Delhi, Kolkata,
Agra etc. and return back to their respective places. Due to logistic requirement, a maximum number
of 25 participants can be accommodated in the Field excursion.
(Costs: US $ 900 per person for both the Conference + Himalayan Excursion, that includes the
Registration Fee for conference of US $ 100); The costs include expenses related to lodging,
boarding at Lucknow/ Dehradun and Chandigarh besides train/bus/taxi travel between Lucknow
to Chandigarh. Conference Fee - US $ 400 (Includes Registration, lodging/ boarding at Lucknow),
Field-Work Fee – US$ 500 (Includes Lodging/boarding & Travel).
159
5a. (1) The Geological and Paleontological Institutes of RAS organized field investigations of
key sections of the Vendian in the North Part of Patom Highland, Siberia. Fossils of
Beltanelloides sorichevae were found closely overlying the glacial Bolshoy Patom Formation
and below the Shuram-Zhuya negative δ13C anomaly. Numerous samples were collected for the
study of acritarch and other microfossils, ages of detrital zircons and structures of cap-dolomite
(2) M.A. Fedonkin gave a lecture and there was related discussion in Geological Institute
of RAS on Vendian and Proterozoic biotas. (3) N.M. Chumakov gave a lecture on "Problem of
Total glaciation of the Earth in Late Precambrian" and there was related discussion in Geological
Institute of RAS
5c. On April 2, 2009 a workshop on Neoproterozoic stratigraphy was organized by the NSFC in
Beijing. Participants were active colleagues from four institutes who are working on the
Neoproterozoic in China, including voting members, Dr. Yin Chongyu, Dr. Sun Weiguo, Dr.
Peng Shanchi, and Dr. Zhu Maoyan. During the workshop, the following issues have been
discussed: 1. current definition for defining the base of Cyrogenian, possible definitions for series
and stages of Ediacaran. 2. Whether is it possible to look for a section in Guizhou and Guangxi
provinces which can be a potential candidate for GSSP of the base of the Cryogenian 3. An
integrated working team should be organized to work on the Ediacaran sections in the Yangtze
Gorges, particularly focusing on the middle and upper Doushantuo Formation, key question
including the LAD of large acanthomorphs and its startigraphic relation with the DOUNCE
(equivalent to the Shuram or Wonoka excurion).
During the workshop, a Chinese working group on the Neoproterozoic stratigraphy was
set up. The working group, led by Dr. Zhu Maoyan and Dr. Yin Chongyu, aims to coordinate
works of all Chinese colleagues in the field and communicate with subcommission.
During April 19-21, 2009 the working group investigated a Cryogenian section in
Guizhou (see attached photo). A transitional interval from non-glacial to glacial deposition is
well exposed in the section. Further detailed investigation is planned for 2009-2010.
submitted by Maoyan Zhu (23.10.2009)
160
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APPENDIX 6
International Conference “Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins: stratigraphy, geodynamics
and petroleum potential” combined with the Russian Workshop on Ediacaran Acritarch
Taxonomy and IGCP 512 Field Trip to the East Sayan Mountain Ranges will be held in
Novosibirsk in August 2010. It aims to foster international exchange of ideas in the fields of
Neoproterozoic stratigraphy, sedimentology and sedimentary basins to facilitate progress in
establishing intercontinental correlation of Neoproterozoic strata. Discussions will include
problems in biostratigraphic definition and subdivision of Cryogenian and Ediacaran. They will
primarily focus on Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins of Siberian Platform in relation of
subsidence regime, climate glacial depositional systems, timing of magmatism and tectonic
deformations.
Invitation
Dear colleagues:
The Trofimuk Institute of Petroleum Geology and Geophysics of Siberian Branch of Russian
Academy of Sciences in collaboration with the Subcommission on Neoproterozoic Stratigraphy
cordially invite you to participate in the International Conference “Neoproterozoic sedimentary
basins: stratigraphy, geodynamics and petroleum potential” to be held in August 2010 in
Novosibirsk, Russia. The conference offers a unique opportunity for discussions and exchange of
ideas between geologists and paleontologists on a wide range of topics related to paleoclimatic,
geochemical, tectonic and sedimentological aspects of correlation of Neoproterozoic depositional
systems with special emphasis on Russia. We look forward to seeing you in Novosibirsk next
August!
Sincerely,
Organizing Committee (November, 2009)
Preliminary Program:
August 2 Registration
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August 3 Russian Workshop on Ediacaran Acritarch Taxonomy
August 4–6 International Conference on “Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins: stratigraphy,
geodynamics and petroleum potential” August 7–20 IGCP 512 Working Group Field Trip to the
East Sayan Ranges
IGCP 512 Working Group Field Trip to Nizhneudinsk area (Irkutsk region) in the foothills of
the East Sayan Ranges will take place on August 7–20, 2010. The number of participants is
restricted to 15–17 persons. The logistics includes transportation by train from Novosibirsk to
Nizhneudinsk and then by other vehicles from Nizhneudinsk to field area. During the field trip
the participants will examine Neoproterozoic Karagassy and Oselok Groups that unconformably
overlie the basement of the Siberian Platform (ca. 1.8 Gy old). Dolerite dykes and sills intruding
the non-marine and marine strata of the Karagassy Group yielded a Cryogenian age. Among the
excursion highlights are the shoreface and shelf deposits from the middle and upper parts of
Karagassy Group, glacigenic facies in Marnya Formation and a succession of marine and
continental deposits in Marnya, Uda and Aisa formations as well as contacts between (1)
Ulyakha
tillite and the tidal flat deposits of Tagul Fm, (2) between the Plity tillite and the shelf deposits of
Ipsit Fm., (3) between the Ozerki cap dolomite and the Ulyakha tillites; and (4) between the
Upper Ediacaran continental molasse deposit of the Aisa Fm and the overlying Lower Cambrian
Ust’-4 Tagul Fm; as well the lower boundary of the Ipsit Formation of the Karagassy Group
representing lowstand marine deposits. Estimated cost of the field trip is 32,300 Russian rubles
(equivalent to 1,120 USD) per person and includes travel expenses, accommodation costs and
meals, transportations, and printed guidebook. More information on geology will be provided in
the guidebook. You’ll find more details and recommendations for participation in the field
excursion in the Second Circular. The field trip fees are expected to be paid in Novosibirsk, on
August 2, 2010. The Second circular will be provided in April, 2010 for those who will respond
to the First circular.
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SUBCOMMISSION ON PRECAMBRIAN STRATIGRAPHY
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Submitted by:
Martin Van Kranendonk, Chair
Geological Survey of Western Australia, Mineral House, 100 Plain Street, East Perth, Western Australia
6004, Australia, e-mail: martin.vankranendonk@dmp.wa.gov.au
3. ORGANIZATION
164
5. CHIEF ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND PRODUCTS IN 2009
• Analysis of samples collected last year from the Australian Archean-Proterozic transition
section was undertaken. Results have been obtained for S isotopes of pyrite from shales, C
and O isotopes of carbonates, O isotopes of chert, Pb-Pb dating of carbonate, and Re-Os
dating of pyrite. Results will be written up for publication in 2010.
• A fieldtrip was made by Van Kranendonk, together with Prof. W. Altermann, to South
Africa, to investigate the contact relationships between Neorchean-Paleoproterozoic banded
iron-formation and Paleoproterozoic glacial diamictites near the town of Prieska. Samples
were collected for O and C isotope studies and one sample of quartz sandstone was collected
for U-Pb SHRIMP detrital zircon geochronology at Geoscience Australia.
• A second fieldtrip was made by Van Kranendonk, Prof. P. Philippot and Dr. A. Lepland
(FARDEEP) in July to the contact between the top of thick banded iron-formations of the
2.63-2.45 Ga Hamersley Group and the basal glacial diamictites of the Turee Creek Group (c.
2.4-2.2 Ga), Western Australia, in order to undertake further measurements and sampling as
to its suitablility as a potential GSSP site for the Archean-Proterozoic boundary. A suite of
samples was collected for geochemistry and analysis of Mo isotopes. An additional sample
was collected of the glacial diamictite for U-Pb SHRIMP zircon geochronology at
Geoscience Australia. These studies are underway, with some results already obtained.
• Together with several co-authors, writing of the new chapter on the Precambrian time scale
for the new time scale book “GTS2010” has continued, with significant progress. This is a
large review of the whole of the geotectonic and geobiological evolution of the whole of the
Precambrian, which will act as the basis for future timescale revisions.
The busy regular job of Chair, Martin Van Kranendonk, has meant that the establishment of
working groups for the Hadean and Archean-Proterozoic boundary, as well as writing of the
book chapter for GTS 2010 has been delayed.
$2000 was granted to Van Kranendonk to help him to travel to South Africa in 2009 and $1000
was granted to support other work in relation to the Precambrian timescale.
• Completion of the chapter on the Precambrian time scale for the new time scale book
“GTS2010”
• Establishment of a working group to formalize the Hadean Eon and write a formal proposal
for voting by the Precambrian Subcommission and whole of the ICS.
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• Continued research into the potential GSSP site for the Archean-Proterozoic boundary in
Western Australia, and commencement of writing a paper on the results for publication in an
international research journal.
• Host a workshop at the 5th International Archean Symposium (5IAS: Perth, Australia) on the
Precambrian timescale, including a possible vote for the Hadean Eon and establishment of a
working group for the Archean-Proterozoic boundary
• Lead a fieldtrip to visit the potential GSSP site for the Archean-Proterozoic boundary in
Western Australia, as part of the 5IAS.
• Support is requested for the proposed workshop of the 5IAS: $500 (US$), to cover venue
hire, lunch for participants and printing costs of flyers.
• Support is requested for Van Kranendonk to attend the Prague 2010 ICS workshop in the
Czech Republic; $3000, to cover flights and accommodation
• A complete Precambrian time scale in place, based on the rock record and adhering to
stratigraphic principles, with formalized Hadean and Archean Eons.
• Formal GSSP for the Archean-Proterozoic boundary.
• Natural subdivisions of the Archean Eon, with GSSPs for each era-rank subdivision, where
possible (Eo-, Paleo-, Meso-, and Neoarchean).
• In cooperation with the Neoproterozoic Subcommission, an advanced plan on how to
naturalize the time scale for the Proterozoic.
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• Full incorporation of latest insights from planetary science in the earliest part of the terrestrial
Precambrian time scale.
• Prepare appropriate chapter on the Precambrian timescale for the 2010 version of the
Geological Time Scale.
• Submit an ICDP project proposal to investigate the Archean-Proterozoic boundary in
Western Australia, through drilling.
• In 2010, we aim to advance the idea of a formalized Hadean Eon and lead a fieldtrip to the
Archean-Proterozoic boundary in Western Australia.
***************************
November 2009,
Perth, Western Australia
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APPENDIX
Subcommission officers:
Chair: Dr. Martin Van Kranendonk, Geological Survey of Western Australia, Mineral House,
100 Plain Street, East Perth, Western Australia 6004, Australia, e-mail:
martin.vankranendonk@doir.wa.gov.au
Vice-Chair: Dr. Wouter Bleeker, Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa,
Canada, K1A0E8, e-mail: wbleeker@nrcan.gc.ca
Secretary: Dr. Robert Rainbird, Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa,
Canada, K1A0E8, e-mail: rrainbir@nrcan.gc.ca
Australia:
David Nelson, Curtin University, D.Nelson@curtin.edu.au
Ian Tyler, Geological Survey of Western Australia, ian.tyler@doir.wa.gov.au
Brasil:
Reinhardt Fuck, Universidade de Brasília, rfuck@unb.br
Benjamim Bley Brito Neves, Institute of Geosciences, University of Sao Paulo, bbleybn@usp.br
Cameroon:
Sadrack Félix Toteu, Centre for Geological and Mining Research, sftoteu@yahoo.fr
Canada:
Andrey Bekker, University of Manitoba, bekker@cc.umanitoba.ca
Donald W. Davis, University of Toronto, dond@geology.utoronto.ca
Mike Hamilton (c), University of Toronto, mahamilton@geology.utoronto.ca
Sandra Kamo (c), University of Toronto, skamo@geology.utoronto.ca
Guy Narbonne, Queen’s University, narbonne@geol.queensu.ca
China:
Huaikun Li, Chinese Geological Survey, tjlhuaikun@cgs.gov.cn
Songnian Lu, Chinese Geological Survey, tjlsongnian@cgs.gov.cn
Yusheng Wan, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, wanyusheng@bjshrimp.cn
Huichu Wang, Chinese Geological Survey, tjwhuichu@cgs.gov.cn
Allen Nutman, Beijing SHRIMP centre, nutman@bjshrimp.cn
Finland:
Petri Peltonen, Geological Survey of Finland, petri.peltonen@gtk.fi
Germany:
Alfred Kröner, University of Mainz, kroener@mail.uni-mainz.de
Russia:
Andrei Khudoley, St. Petersburg State University, khudoley@ah3549.spb.edu
Sweden:
Martin Whitehouse, Swedish Museum of Natural History, martin.whitehouse@nrm.se
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United Kingdom:
Stephen Moorbath, Oxford University, United Kingdom, stephenm@earth.ox.ac.uk
Euan Nisbet, Royal Holloway University of London, nisbet@gl.rhul.ac.uk
Graham Shields, University College London, g.shields@ucl.ac.uk
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SUBCOMMISSION ON STRATIGRAPHIC CLASSIFICATION
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
submitted by:
The Subcommission represents a core business for the International Commission on Stratigraphy,
the primary body for creating, discussing, publishing and disseminating an internationally
agreed-upon guide to stratigraphic terminology and classification, in other words, standardization
of the nomenclature of stratigraphic units. Its immediate priorities are to advertise new
developments in stratigraphic methods, check that the procedures are carefully followed, monitor
the application of the accepted rules, and encourage the teaching of basic stratigraphic principles
and concepts to new generations of students and professionals.
These priorities fall into two categories: (1) the worldwide acceptance of the basic rules of
stratigraphy, without which no time-scale is meaningful; and (2) coordination of international
application of stratigraphic principles and concepts, with special reference to the “users” of
stratigraphy, that is, stratigraphers and mappers in geological surveys, graduate and
undergraduate students and their professors, geologists and geophysicists in oil companies,
Quaternary geologists and geomorphologists, engineering geologists, archeologists, as well as
other professionals who deal with the Earth Sciences plus those interested in the information
locked in Earth’s historical record in general.
The objectives of the Subcommission are relevant to IUGS policy because standardization of
stratigraphic terminology is essential to any and all attempts for global correlation, and requires a
large and active international cooperation.
3. ORGANIZATION
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Vice-Chairs: Dr. Jan Zalasiewicz, United Kingdom; Jaz1@leicester.ac.uk
Prof. Helmut Weissert, Switzerland; helmut.weissert@erdw.ethz.ch
Secretary: Dr. Maria Rose Petrizzo, Italy; mrose.petrizzo@unimi.it
ISSC has always been directly or indirectly linked to big international projects such as ODP-
IODP and IGCP. It has close ties to national stratigraphic commissions which increasingly look
beyond the borders of the parent countries. This is especially true with the North American
Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature which embraces the USA, Canada and Mexico, and
tacitly much of the Caribbean area. ISSC encourages other national bodies to harmonize their
codes with each other and the International Stratigraphic Guide.
ISSC Newsletter no. 15 was distributed in September 2009 (later than expected because of
conflicting summer commitments). It advertised the status of review papers on the subdisciplines
of Stratigraphy. It also described the results of ICS votes on the base of the Jurassic (Hettangian)
and the Quaternary-Pleistocene-Neogene situation. It chronicled a current controversy about
formalized abbreviations for units of geological time, be they measured dates or spans of time.
Newsletters and other documents are available on the ISSC website: http://users.unimi.it/issc
The final goal of ISSC is to update, upgrade and implement the International Stratigraphic Guide
(Hedberg, 1976 [1st edition]; Salvador, 1994 [2nd edition]; Murphy and Salvador, 1999 [abridged
edition]). The ISG is a most important official document with a large distribution which requires
revisiting because of the fundamental advances of stratigraphy in the last 30 years. A project was
developed by ISSC following a workshop organized during the 32nd IGC in Florence, entitled
“Post-Hedberg Developments in Stratigraphic Classification”. A ‘bottom-up’ or ‘grass-roots’
approach was initiated with the distinction of seven stratigraphic subdisciplines to be developed
by different groups of scientists mostly but not necessarily existing ISSC members. The project is
not funded, and is uniquely based on voluntary participation of dedicated scientists with a
teamwork approach.
The target audience includes undergraduate and graduate students, and professionals of all
stripes, including field geologists, petroleum geologists and so forth.
Each chapter starts with a summary of the historical development of that peculiar branch of
stratigraphy. Basic concepts are clearly presented, followed by precise definitions. Then real
examples (case studies) are presented and discussed. Finally recommendations and the
terminology to be adopted and problems in the application of the methods are suggested.
Background and motivation of this ambitious project are clearly expressed in the introductory
article (Cita, 2007) printed in Newletters on Stratigraphy where the various review articles are
being published. This series of review articles falls under the umbrella of “New Developments on
171
Stratigraphic Classification”. A workshop with the same title took place during the 33nd IGC in
Oslo in 2008.
After the Oslo workshop and the publication of the various review articles in the coordinated
series, the reprinting of the various articles in a textbook is foreseen, after passing the prescribed
check points for approval in order to obtain the permission to use the ICS and IUGS logos. A
planned publication date of 2011 will coincide with the 50th anniversary of IUGS, and this would
be a fitting tribute to the fine achievements made by IUGS in so many stratigraphic matters.
Task Group leaders have been appointed for the following categories of stratigraphic units not
included in previous ISG:
- Chemostratigraphy
- Cyclostratigraphy
- Sequence stratigraphy
Working Group leaders have been appointed for categories that were already considered in the
ISG:
- Biostratigraphy
- Chronostratigraphy.
- Lithostratigraphy
- Magnetostratigraphy
Each Task Group or Working Group consists of a limited number of scientists with broad
international experience. Overall, more than two dozen scientists are presently involved in this
project. The products of their efforts are circulated through ISSC newsletters, first among
members, then within the larger community through corresponding members of ICS and the
national liaisons.
Participation of our large and variegated membership to the project proceeds in two steps:
Step 1 - is the distribution of a detailed outline of each chapter (review paper). ISSC members
have a one month on-line review time to send comments or additions to the ISSC Chair.
Comments are then sent to the group leader, who modifies the text accordingly, while at the same
time archived by the Secretary.
Step 2 –When the text and illustrations are ready, they are circulated to ISSC members for
another one month on-line review. Additional comments received by the ISSC Chair are
assembled and sent to the group leader for revision of the text prior to its finalization.
Step 3 – Once the papers are published in Newsletters on Stratigraphy, there will be reactions
from the stratigraphic community at large as well as reconsiderations by the authors and other
members of ISSC. Revised versions will serve as chapters of the planned textbook, and as the
foundation for a revised International Stratigraphic Guide.
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Papers published:
CYCLOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Andreas Strasser, Switzerland, andreas.strasser@unifr.ch
Fritz Hilgen, Netherlands, fhilgen@geo.uu.nl
Philip Heckel, USA, philip-heckel@uiowa.edu
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 7 (June 2005).
Comments forwarded to the leader; available in the ISSC archive
Full text distributed in January 2006, comments received.
Paper published: Strasser A., Hilgen F. and Heckel P., 2007.
CHEMOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Helmut Weissert, Switzerland, helmut.weissert@erdw.ethz.ch
M. Joachimski, Germany, joachimski@geol.uni-erlangen.de
M. Sarnthein, Germany, ms@gpi.uni-kiel.de
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 9 (June 2006).
Comments received and distributed in ISSC Newsletter 10 (November 2006)
Full text distributed in appendix to ISSC Newsletter 11 (June 2007), comments received
Paper published: Weissert, H., Joachimski, M. and Sarthein, M., 2008.
SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY
Current task group:
Leader: Octavian Catuneanu, Canada, octavian@ualberta.ca
Andreas Strasser, Switzerland, andreas.strasser@unifr.ch
Andrew Miall, Canada, miall@geology.utoronto.ca
William Galloway, USA, galloway@mail.utexas.edu
Maurice Tucker, UK, m.e.tucker@durham.ac.uk
Christopher Kendall, kendall@geol.sc.edu
Outline will be distributed in late 2009.
Comments will be forwarded to the leader, and made available in the ISSC archive.
Full text will be distributed in March 2010, and comments will be incorporated.
173
Erik Johannessen, Norway, EPJ@statoil.com
Piero Gianolla, Italy, piero.gianolla@unife.it
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 8 (October 2005).
Comments received and forwarded to the leader; available in the ISSC archive.
Full text distributed in February 2007, comments received and followed by a heated on-line
debate (see http://strata.geol.sc.edu/SeqStratForm.html). Rejected in its first version. Revised
version rejected by an ad-hoc international review committee of five experts chaired by Chris
Kendall. Gianolla did not contribute to this version. Task group was disbanded and the current
group appointed during the sequence stratigraphy discussion session at 33rd IGC in Oslo. Vitor
Abreu, USA (ExxonMobil) was invited onto the new task group but resigned in August 2009.
BIOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Jacques Thierry, France, jthierry@mail.u-bourgogne.fr; jacques-thierry2@wanadoo.fr
Stan Finney, USA, scfinney@csulb.edu
Yuri Gladenkov, Russia, gladenkov@ginras.ru
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 9 (June 2006).
Comments received and distributed in ISSC Newsletter 10 (November 2006).
Full text in progress; a fourth member of the group is being contemplated
CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Maria Bianca Cita, Italy, maria.bianca@unimi.it
Fritz Hilgen, The Netherlands, fhilgen@geo.uu.nl
Jacques Thierry, France, jthierry@mail.u-bourgogne.fr
Jan Zalasiewicz, U.K., jaz1@le.ac.uk
Stan Finney, USA, scfinney@csulb.edu
Brian Pratt, Canada, brian.pratt@usask.ca
Outline distributed in January 2007.
Comments received and distributed in ISSC Newsletter 11 (June 2007).
Full text in progress, half done, five case studies well selected.
LITHOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Brian Pratt, Canada, brian.pratt@usask.ca
Stan Finney, USA, scfinney@csulb.edu
Werner Piller, Austria, werner.piller@uni-graz.at
Mike Easton, Canada, mike.easton@ndm.gov.on.ca
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 11 (June 2007).
Comments received and forwarded to the leader; available in the ISSC archive.
Full text in progress, half done.
MAGNETOSTRATIGRAPHY
Leader: Cor Langereis, The Netherlands, langer@geo.uu.nl
Wout Krijgsman, The Netherlands, krijgsma@geo.uu.nl
Giovanni Muttoni, Italy, giovanni.muttoni1@unimi.it
Manfred Menning, Germany, menne@gfz-potsdam.de
Outline distributed in ISSC Newsletter 12 (December 2007).
Comments received and forwarded to the leader; available in the ISSC archive.
174
Full text distributed in January 2009, comments received
Paper in review: Langereis, C., Krijgsman, W., Muttoni, G. and Menning, M., 2010.
The ICS subvention allocated to ISSC was rather low and disproportionate to the overall
importance and significance attributed to this subcommission at the IUGS Ad-hoc Review
Committee (ARC) meeting in Paris (November 7–8 2005). The entire allocation for 2008 ($500)
was devoted to maintaining the website and assembling the two newsletters. ICS was able with
the 2009 allotment to continue to subsidize the website and newsletter preparation ($500) plus
offset some of the expenses incurred by the incoming Chair to attend the 33rd IGC in Oslo in
2008 ($1000).
In the meantime, progress slow but sure is being made in the preparation of the four remaining
chapters on facets of Stratigraphy.
I. INCOME
2008 ICS travel support for Pratt to attend IGC in Oslo
$1000
2009 ICS subvention
$ 500
II. EXPENDITURES
Newsletter preparation and website maintenance € 340
Publication expected:
- Magnetostratigraphy
Newsletters:
- December 2009
- June 2010
- December 2010
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Rationale—The remaining manuscripts should be prepared in 2010. It would be desirable that as
many authors as possible of individual working and task groups should have a face-to-face
meeting along with other ISSC members who can contribute with their special expertise. The
most obvious venues for this are the AAPG–SEPM, EGU and GSA annual meetings. Some
members of ISSC plan to attend the ICS workshop in Prague, May 2010.
Potential funding sources outside IUGS—The Subcommission does not envisage being able, as an
organization, to obtain significant funding from outside IUGS/ICS sources. As in previous years,
some financial support is obtained by individual members from their host institutions and/or their
personal research funds. In-kind support is provided to the Secretary by the Department of Earth
Sciences, University of Milan for equipment including computer, e-mail access and telephone.
(1) All the various review papers on the various branches of Stratigraphy will have been
submitted and printed over this period.
(2) The series of papers will form the core of a textbook. Publication details, including
arrangements with Nägeli & Obermiller, Stuttgart (the publishers of Newsletters on
Stratigraphy) remain to be worked out, and will be done so under the general auspices of
IUGS and ICS and timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of IUGS.
(3) ISSC will take the initiative to encourage special sessions and symposia at conferences that
advance stratigraphic principles, in collaboration with other ICS subcommissions.
(4) ISSC will make a recommendation on time-rock versus rock nomenclature (e.g. Early versus
Lower).
(5) ISSC will take the initiative to contact journal editors and scholarly book publishers to remind
them of the basic tenets in the existing International Stratigraphic Guide as well as relevant
national codes, as well as the background in the review papers.
(6) The ULTIMATE GOAL of ISSC is the publication of a new, multi-authored, really
multinational International Stratigraphic Guide—a guide not a code, simple, clear, concise,
user-friendly, for world wide distribution and acceptance.
***************************
Subcommission officers:
Chair:
Prof. Brian R. Pratt Department of Geological Sciences, University of Saskatchewan,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5E2, Canada; Tel.: +1-306-966-5725; Fax: +1-306-966-8593;
E-mail: brian.pratt@usask.ca
Vice-Chairs:
176
Dr. Jan Zalasiewicz, Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road,
Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK; Tel.: +44 (0)116 252 3928; Fax: +44 (0)116 252 3918; E-mail:
jaz1@leicester.ac.uk
Prof. Helmut Weissert, Geologisches Institut, Eidgenössiche Technische Hochschule
Zürich, Universitätstrasse, 168092 Zürich, Switzerland; Tel.: +41 44 632 37 15; Fax: +41 44
632 10 30; E-mail: helmut.weissert@erdw.ethz.ch
Secretary:
Dr. Maria Rose Petrizzo, University of Milan, Department of Earth Sciences “Ardito
Desio”, via Mangiagalli 34, 20133, Milano, Italy; Tel. +39-02-503 15531; Fax: +39-02-503
15494; e-mail: mrose.petrizzo@unimi.it
List of Members:
177
Menning Manfred, Potsdam, GERMANY menne@gfz-potsdam.de
Miall Andrew D., Canada, miall@geology.utoronto.ca
Muttoni Giovanni, Milano, ITALY, giovanni.muttoni1@unimi.it
Odin G.S., Paris, FRANCE gilodin@ccr.jussieu.fr
Owen Donald E., Beaumont, USA owende@hal.lamar.edu
Palmer Julie, Palmerston North, NEW ZEALAND J.A.Palmer@massey.ac.nz
Petri Setembrino, Sao Paulo, BRAZIL spetri@usp.br
Petrizzo Maria Rose, Milano, ITALY mrose.petrizzo@unimi.it
Piller Werner E., Graz, AUSTRIA werner.piller@uni-graz.at
Pratt Brian R., Saskatoon, CANADA brian.pratt@usask.ca
Reguant Salvador, Barcelona, SPAIN reguant@geo.ub.es
Riccardi Alberto C., La Plata, ARGENTINA riccardi@museo.fcnym.unlp.edu.ar (Chair –
IUGS)
Sarnthein M., Kiel, GERMANY, ms@gpi.uni-kiel.de
Shouxin Zhang, Beijing, CHINA shouxinzh@yahoo.com.cn
Steininger Fritz F., Frankfurt-am-Main, GERMANY fritz.steininger@senckenberg.de
Strasser André, Fribourg, SWITZERLAND andreas.strasser@unifr.ch
Takayanagi Yokichi, Sendai, JAPAN ytaka@cat-v.ne.jp
Thierry Jacques, Dijon, FRANCE jthierry@mail.u-bourgogne.fr
Tucker Maurice E., Durham, UK m.e.tucker@durham.ac.uk
Waterhouse J. Bruce, Oamaru, NEW ZEALAND Loris@xtra.co.nz
Weissert Helmut, Zürich, SWITZERLAND helmut.weissert@erdw.ethz.ch (Vice-Chair – ISSC)
Winter Henk de la R., Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA winterh@xconnect.co.za
Zalasiewicz Jan, Leicester, UK jaz1@leicester.ac.uk (Vice-Chair – ISSC)
178
Premoli Silva Isabella, Milano, ITALY isabella.premoli@unimi.it, Chair – Cretaceous
Subcommission
Rawson P., London, GREAT BRITAIN p.rawson@ucl.ac.uk
Robb Laurence, Witwatersrand, SOUTH AFRICA 065LJR@cosmos.wits.ac.za
Rong Jiayu, Nanjing, CHINA jyrong@nigpas.ac.cn, Chair – Silurian Subcommission
Zachariasse W.J., Utrecht, NETHERLANDS, jwzach@geo.uu.nl
Zhamoida A.I., St. Petersburg, RUSSIA MSK@vsegei.ru
179
SUBCOMMISSION ON STRATIGRAPHIC INFORMATION
ANNUAL REPORT 2009
Mission Statement
The Subcommission for Stratigraphic Information promotes and coordinates the gathering
of selected stratigraphic information worldwide and organizes logically its presentation through
the ICS website. The Subcommission first priority is to enable the world geoscience community
to have quick and free access to a vast amount of stratigraphic information, thus helping to spread
the knowledge and foster the advancement of the science globally.
Goals
The Subcommission was established in 2000, and assigned an extensive set of goals
(Appendix 1). A streamlined version was adopted in 2003, with a simplified task set
(diagrammed in Appendix 1)
SIS goal is to gather selected stratigraphic information (such as databases, compilation of
biozonal schemes, regional time scales, stratigraphic standards, and geohistory teaching modules)
and develop a method of classification to organize, logically, the databases and related links, and
make easy search and use of the contents through its website to the world scientific community.
The Subcommission primarily aims to promote scientific cooperation and the advancement of the
science worldwide, and to maintain the leading role of ICS in the stratigraphic information
network. The four-fold set of tasks are:
(1) Geologic time scale information (from posters and cards to multi-author
compilations)
(2) Stratigraphic database center and links (with visualizations; links to lexicons, etc.)
(3) Stratigraphic standards (GSSP information, stratigraphic code in different languages)
(4) Geohistory education and links
2. Organization
During 2009, the Subcommission strove to attain an extended international and thematic
membership. It must be emphasized that this subcommission is task-oriented, and it is expected
that the membership will be active in undertaking those tasks. A detailed current and pending list
with addresses and expertise is in Section 10 of this report.
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Chair; TS-Creator database and
Ogg, James G. USA (Purdue University)
visualization
Secretary/Webmaster; graphics,
Ogg, Gabi M. USA (Purdue University)
GSSP tables
Vice-Chair, Global Change
Crampton, James NEW ZEALAND (Inst. Geol.
Through Time Programme of
S. Nucl. Sci.)
GNS
Asch, Kristine OneGeology Europe GERMANY (BGR)
We are currently recruiting voting members from Africa, South America, an additional
international programs.
181
(biostratigraphy compiled by All Russian Geological Institute). Details of these projects and new
ones initiated in late 2009 with China, Canadian Geological Survey, USGS and India are given
later.
182
(c) STRATIGRAPHIC GUIDE – a concise version of the official manual.
(d) RESOURCES – including diagrams of inter-regional correlations, links to lexicons
(national rock formations), “GeoWhen” database of historic and regional stage names
(contributed by R. Rohde; Univ. Calif. Berkeley), and selected links to other Earth
history sites.
(e) Link to our TS-CREATOR public site (see next section).
(2) TS-CREATOR – our Time Scale Creator visualization package is a free JAVA program for
all platforms to explore Earth history. Details are given in section “c” below. The
TimeScale Creator site, http://www.tscreator.org/, was completely redesigned and
became active in January, 2009:
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In addition to providing the free software and on-line and PDF manuals, the site provides
an array of datapacks ranging from British Isles geology to New Zealand fossil ranges (see
below).
(3) RSS-Feed:
The ICS was requested by the IUGS and One-Geology Geoinformatics groups to provide
a web-based authoritative digital dataport for basic GSSP parameters (stage, ratification status,
location, definition, main correlation methods, approximate age, color of stage, etc.). This RSS-
feed (or ATOM output) could be automatically queried by other applications; rather than
individuals having to search through the ICS sites to see if a GSSP had been defined, revised, etc.
A dynamic feed was created by the Purdue University “VIP” undergraduate engineering
project under a ”contract” to SSI. In addition, this project provided a dynamic-generation for all
GSSP tables and individual stage-level pages on the SSI website, including Google-Earth display
of each location.
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Mousepad “International Divisions of Geologic Time”. This was a joint production with
the UNESCO Commission for the Geologic Map of the World. The first printing with
was sold out at the International Geological Congress (Oslo, August, 2008). The
second printing is available through the CGMW website.
Detailed Charts for each geologic period. These poster-sized summaries of major
biostratigraphic, sea-level and geochemical trends can be downloaded from the SSI
website.
“TimeScale Creator” (Version 4.2 released in August, 2009 – Free JAVA suite). This is
our continuously-expanding “flagship” database-visualization system with hyperlinks to our
stratigraphic-information website (www.stratigraphy.org). The major “versions” are a new
software package, but database updates/enhancements are mounted approximately every three
months. This free JAVA-based visualization application has a built-in database of approximately
25,000 biologic, magnetic and other major events in Earth’s history (status in Nov’09), plus an
extensive set of geochemical and sea-level curves. The user selects the interval of time, chooses
the type of data to be displayed, and this windows into Earth’s history appears on the screen, or
can be downloaded as an SVG or PDF file for use in popular graphics programs. On-line “quick-
start”, tutorials, exercises and a manual (courtesy of ExxonMobil) provide independent training
in usage and developing one’s own datasets for insertion.
Public Version 4.2 (August 2009) has capabilities for lithologic columns, images of
paleogeographic maps, range charts, URL-hotlinks, and other valuable features. The extension to
regional geology has produced joint public products in coordination with Geoscience Australia,
New Zealand geologic survey, British Geologic Survey, Austria Stratigraphy Commission, etc.;
as summarized below.
Software enhancements added in 2009 (selected):
Basin transect capability with floating labels and pop-ups (and a colorful user manual for
self-entry of transects), revised pop-up window system that no longer has 256 character
limitations, internal “standard” image set for oil-gas occurrences – impacts - large-igneous
provinces, capability for superimposed curves of different colors.
Global datapack enhancements added in 2009 (selected):
Paleozoic Sequence Stratigraphy and Onlap Curve. This includes the recent (October
2008) Science paper of Haq and Schutter, plus their on-line supporting
documentation tables and charts.
Onlap Curves for Phanerozoic. This is based on SEPM 1998 sequence-stratigraphy
and eustacy charts, plus the above paper by Haq-Schutter for Paleozoic; but
applying a mathematical model to generate a synthetic onlap curve for margins.
Global Impact, and Large-Igneous-Province Records, plus icons for impacts and
eruptions of varying magnitudes. These are sub-grouped into “global” and
individual regional events. The events are provided by the International
Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior, and to PASSC
at Planetary and Space Science Centre, Univ. New Brunswick.
Mars, Moon, and Venus geologic history and stratigraphic units
Dinoflagellate events were enhanced and linked to Dinoflaj2 database; and Paleogene
foraminifers linked to the CHRONOS page for each species from the different
Paleogene working groups.
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Astronomical Solutions for Earth Paleoclimates for past 3 myr and past 100 myr
based on calculations provided by Jacques Laskar. These curves of eccentricity,
obliquity and precession indicate the variations in solar radiation; of which
Pleistocene ice ages are the most dramatic results. These sets have over 10,000
points; therefore were mounted as separate datapacks.
Cenozoic Oxygen Isotope Trends (and high-resolution marine isotope stages). This
includes digital versions of the compilation by Zachos et al (2008, with conversion
and interpolations to GTS2004 time scale) and by Raffi et al (2006; for past 25
myr), plus labeled “oxygen-isotope episodes”. A detailed Plio-Pleistocene curve
includes labels for all marine isotope stages. These sets have nearly 15,000
points; therefore were mounted as a separate datapack.
Past 10,000 years – Greenland ice core and preliminary “human culture” compilation;
provided courtesy of Grace Conyers, Purdue University. This popular datapack
will be enhanced during the coming year.
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datapack for visualization in TimeScale Creator has a comprehensive array of
lithologic columns (about 200) of all Australian Proterozoic and Phanerozoic basins
and subbasins (and even finer detail in some regions), with each formation hot-linked
into the GA Oracle database. Images of paleogeographic maps, tectonic maps and
facies maps (about 50 of each) provide visual columns on Australian history, and are
also hot-linked to additional on-line summaries. The suite also includes reference
wells for all major oil-gas reservoirs (hot-linked to appropriate databases). There are
over 9000 events/datums/formations. This extensive system is intended to be a
model to put the geology of other continents “on-line”.
Russian Biostratigraphy. An extensive (7000 entries) array for visualization in TimeScale
Creator. This includes most biostratigraphic zones and major bioevents for all
regions of Russia through the entire Phanerozoic,. The suite is based on a book and
extensive charts by T. Koren’ et al (2006).
British Isles Lithostratigraphy. An extensive (ca. 2000 entries) array for visualization in
TimeScale Creator. This includes the Phanerozoic of all British basins, and has been
vetted by the British Geological Survey. All formations are tied to the Lexicon of
BGS.
New Zealand Biostratigraphy– An extensive (ca. 3000 entries) array for visualization in
TimeScale Creator. This includes the main and all secondary biostratigraphic events
and ranges for this region. Palynology events are linked to the NZ-hosted pollen-
spore database. In 2010, we will add lithostratigraphy and transects for most NZ
basins.
Gulf of Mexico Biostratigraphy and Lithostratigraphy– An extensive (ca. 2000 entries)
array for visualization in TimeScale Creator. This suite integrates
biostratigraphy/sequence stratigraphy charts of Shell (provided by Mike Styzen), of
Dick Fillon (formerly at Chevron), of PaleoData, of the USA MMS, and
lithostratigraphy columns from the Gulf of Mexico DNAG volume (in turn, linked to
he USGS Lexicon).
Lithostratigraphy of Russian Hydrocarbon Basins. For visualization in TimeScale
Creator. This set was mainly compiled from Siberian, Caspian and other regional
reports of the U.S. Geological Survey.
Lithostratigraphy of Svalbard and Norwegian Sea. For visualization in TimeScale
Creator. All formations are tied to entries in Norlex.
Lithostratigraphy of Alaskan and other Arctic Hydrocarbon Basins. For visualization
in TimeScale Creator. This includes conversions of many regional reports of the
U.S. Geological Survey.
Marine Genera ranges. For visualization in TimeScale Creator. This is based on the
Sepkoski (2002) compilation, as revised and updated by Leif Tapanila. A user
selects from 30,000 genera according to phylum and orders. We will enhance this in
2010 by adding major land vertebrates and linking the orders to explanatory websites
with images.
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actively involved in a coordinated suite of tasks.
The Geoscience Australia team was the only one that made extensive in-house datasets
for distribution by the Subcommission as TS-Creator datapacks. We think that the benefits of
providing a central and organized source of authoritative information and visualization on Earth
history and its regional manifestations will provide such volunteers a sense of fulfillment, albeit
with low monetary compensation for their devoted time. To this end, in 2010, we will investigate
the possibility of “wiki” systems for public contributions of datasets. As the Subcommission
products, especially the TS-Creator visualization suite, become more widely used and volunteer
contributions are promoted, it is anticipated that a larger audience will begin to directly provide
packages and enhancements.
NOTE: The majority of the TimeScale Creator software development and datapack preparation
during 2009 was mainly funded through US National Science Foundation, donations by and to
Purdue University (especially by Geoscience Australia), and other grants to James Ogg and Felix
Gradstein. These funds supported 3 full-time students during summer 2009, 3 half-time students
during Spring of academic year 2009, and 5 half-time students during Fall 2009; plus ~$20,000
paid for programming assistance, and costs of travel to England to work with British Geological
Survey, to Australia (Geoscience Australia), to New Zealand (their geological survey), to Calgary
(Canadian Geological Survey) and to Portland (GSA annual meeting, to coordinate with
OneGeology geoinformatics and USGS). We anticipate similar external donations or
contributions during 2010 as we work with the different geological surveys and authoritative
teams.
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available for mailing-cost-only. We will continue to provide updated reference cards for
the geologic time scale for all audiences.
11. Plastic cards – for the 2010 EGU (May in Vienna), the Neftex company will fund printing a
revised set of time-scale cards.
12. Coordinate a comprehensive “Geologic Time Scale 2012” volume. This book, originally
planned for 2010 but delayed to take advantage of major new radiometric standards and
cycle-stratigraphy developments during 2009-2010, will be similar (and even expanded)
in scope to GTS2004; but in full color. In addition to the new GSSPs, it is important to
summarize the major advances in bio-mag-sealevel-geochem stratigraphy of the past
decade. There are about 30 authors, including the officers of several ICS
subcommissions.
13. Coordinate a comprehensive summary of all GSSPs. We are providing standardized
descriptions and graphics as these are formally published. A colorful photo-filled booklet
would be ideal for reference; and we will work with Stan Finney on a prototype.
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Stratigraphic Commission to Vienna for a thorough review before deployment in
May 2010. Simultaneously, they will complete the on-line Lexicon for inter-linking.
Europe Lithostratigraphy. Having completed British Isles, Norway offshore, Austria and
Germany; we will work in May 2010 with OneGeology Europe to prepare a seamless
European suite and visualization.
Russia Lithostratigraphy. This project has already been discussed with Tanya Koren,
who will coordinate the difficult task of assembling the information as part of state-
supported project; and we will provide the digitization/visualization.
India and Adjacent Regions Lithostratigraphy. This datapack has already been
completed; but requires vetting by stratigraphic experts. It includes the Phanerozoic
of all onshore and offshore basins and mountain belts of the Indian subcontinent, and
is based on charts produced by Rao et al (2007). Details on formations (and links)
are from publications and the Indian directorate for hydrocarbons.
New Zealand Lithostratigraphy – We will enhance the current biostratigraphy datapack
with transects for most NZ basins. This is in conjunction the GNS (N.Z. geological
survey), who will contribute to student labor for the transects.
China lithostratigraphy. This project has been discussed with the stratigraphic database
team hosted in Nanjing; and a Purdue University student went to Nanjing for
presentations and discussions in Dec, 2009. In July, 2010, Jim Ogg will go to
Nanjing for a prototype development.
Middle East Lithostratigraphy – This is based on charts produced by GeoArabia and
includes the Phanerozoic of basins and mountain belts. The initial data entry was
completed in Summer 2009; but requires a thorough review before deployment in
May 2010. ExxonMobil and Qatar Petroleum will aid in reviewing this public
database.
Human Time Scale (Creator) – This is for an entirely different audience than normal
geoscientists (but potentially more numerous!). The initial compilation was
completed in 2009, but needs to be reviewed by other archeologists. We plan to
develop some “lab modules” around this database (one was already tested in March
2009). John Van Couvering will aid in portions of this review; and we will produce
associated on-line summaries for the SSI website on Late Pleistocene and early
Holocene “Human-stratigraphy”.
Summary set of Phanerozoic time scales with GTS2012 calibrations. A suite of poster-
sized figures for each geologic period will be made with major biostratigraphic
zonations, sea-level trends, relevant geochemical events, etc. These could be
downloaded from the SSI website after Geologic Time Scale 2012 goes to press. In
addition, all the TimeScale Creator datapacks would require updating to the new age
scales developed from cycle stratigraphy (Cenozoic-Cretaceous), revised radiometric
ages, and new interpolation methods.
21. Enhance TimeScale Creator capabilities:
Geographic interface for visualization software. The growing suites of regional
lithostratigraphy and transect datasets of Earth history require a map-based selection
system (and, potentially, a map-based display one). Such a software enhancement is
currently being developed by Purdue University (Engineering department) under
contract to SSI through its undergraduate research-project “VIP” program.
Evolutionary tree visualization software. In order to dynamically display “evolutionary
trees” for public and research usage that include images, we must develop an
intelligent display method with appropriate user-menus. The initial “test bed” will be
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Paleogene foraminifers (courtesy of biostratigraphers at ExxonMobil); but we mainly
desire to present an overview of evolution of all major organisms at the family level;
and selected ones at the genera level. This “family tree” project will involve
collaborations with the Paleobiology database and other geobiodiversity groups.
NOTE: Some of the above projects will require continuation into 2011.
191
However, unlike in 2009, we can not count on the extensive support from Purdue
University, Cambridge University Press, NSF and Geoscience Australia. Therefore, we are
submitting a budget that optimistically presumes that nearly three-quarters of our costs will
covered by external donations/grants and internal support; but one-quarter will need ICS/IUGS
budgeting:
COUNTRY/Organiz
NAME Specialty Mail address
ation
Bundesanstalt für
GERMANY Compiled "interactive Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe
Asch,
(OneGeology Geological web map of Europe (BGR), Geozentrum Hannover,
Kristine and adjacent areas" Stilleweg 2; D-30655 Hannover,
Europe; BGR)
GERMANY
192
Nanjing Institute of Geology and
Palaeontology, Chinese Academy
Fan, CHINA (Nanjing Coordinator of Geobiodiversity
of Sciences, 39 East Beijing
Junxuan Inst.) database (web)
Road, Nanjing 210008, P.R.
China
Department of Geology, Babes-
Filipescu, ROMANIA (Babes- Webmaster; microfossils Bolyai University, Str.
Sorin Bolyai Univ.) (Ceno-Mesoz.) Kogalniceanu 1, 3400, Cluj-
Napoca, ROMANIA
Istituto di Geologia, Università
Microfossils (Ceno-Mesoz.) ;
Galeotti, ITALY (Univ. degli Studi di Urbino, Campus
co-founder of 2002
Simone Urbino) subcommission
Scientifico, Località Crocicchia,
61029 Urbino, ITALY
CHEVRON Energy Technology
Howe, Co., Biostratigraphy Team , 1500
USA (Chevron) Global stratigraphy
Richard Louisiana St., Houston, TX
77002
193
2010-Sept, 2012 – invited; not yet formally accepted
COUNTRY/Organiz
NAME Specialty Mail address
ation
WAS: CSIRO Exploration &
Mining, 26 Dick Perry Avenue,
AUSTRALIA OneGeology; Geologic mark-
Cox, Simon Kensington WA 6151 [PO Box
(CSIRO) up language (GeoSciML)
1130, Bentley WA 6102]
AUSTRALIA
Menning, Chair of German Strat. Comm.;
GERMANY (GFZ)
Manfred Devon-Tri paleo database
Rossi,
Philippe, or FRANCE (Comm. UNESCO Commission for the CCGM/CGMW; 77, rue Claude-
Jean-Paul Geol. Map World) Geological Map of the World Bernard, 75005 Paris, FRANCE
Cadet
194
Appendix:
195
ostracodes, radiolarians, calcareous nannofossils, palynomorphs), to be accompanied by
biostratigraphic frameworks for the various basins worldwide.
34. Biostratigraphy in thin-sections. Atlas of index fossil species (e.g., foraminifers,
radiolarians, pithonellid calcispheres, calpionellids, roveacrinids) examined in thin
sections, illustrating the diagnostic features.
Biostratigraphic and paleoecological data are indispensable to establish an integrated
stratigraphy for interbasinal correlation. While an enormous amount of data exist based mainly
on outcrop sections and on thousands of oil exploration boreholes, surprisingly few recent
synthetic biostratigraphic and paleogeographic studies have actually been published. In addition,
many of the published data are in need to be brought up to date.
To be able to acquire these, it would be necessary to determine and illustrate (with good
SEM photographs), if not all, at least the index species and these illustrations along with the
stratigraphic distribution of these species. Simply giving stratigraphic charts without illustrations
is not sufficient, as diverse forms are often used as index species under the same name.
The final aim would be, among others, the publishing of iconographic atlases of index
fossils for the various sedimentary basins around the globe.
In some offshore basins, with well established stratigraphic scales, the solution would be
simple, if oil companies active in the area allow the release of existing data and make possible to
present these in published format through the ICS/SIS website. The first step could be to
approach individually prospective authors, who could accept to collaborate and, if necessary,
contact officially their company.
To maximize application, the biostratigraphic frameworks, to be included as part of the
Taxonomic, Iconographic and Biostratigraphic Atlases of Index Fossil Species, have to be
presented per study basin, thus reflecting differences in regional tectono-sedimentary
characteristics and biogeographic differentiation.
196