Published June 8, 2011
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Burgess Shale-type microfossils from the middle Cambrian Kaili Formation, Guizhou Province, China
Description
Harvey, Thomas H.P., Ortega-Hernández, Javier, Lin, Jih-Pai, Yuanlong, Zhao, Butterfield, Nicholas J. (2012): Burgess Shale-type microfossils from the middle Cambrian Kaili Formation, Guizhou Province, China. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 57 (2): 423-436, DOI: 10.4202/app.2011.0028, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.4202/app.2011.0028
Files
source.pdf
Files
(916.7 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:70b5e464cdbb944de553351a052de151
|
916.7 kB | Preview Download |
Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
- LSID
- urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FFB5E464FFBB944DE553351A052DE151
Related works
- Has part
- Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13278897 (DOI)
- Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13278899 (DOI)
- Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13278901 (DOI)
- Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13278903 (DOI)
- Figure: 10.5281/zenodo.13278905 (DOI)
References
- Adrianov, A.V. and Malakhov, V.V. 2001. Symmetry of priapulids (Priapulida). 1. Symmetry of adults. Journal of Morphology 247: 99-110.
- Balthasar, U. and Butterfield, N.J. 2009. Early Cambrian "soft-shelled" brachiopods as possible stem-group phoronids. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 54: 307-314.
- Banta, W.C. and Rice, M.E. 1976. A restudy of the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale fossil worm, Ottoia prolifica. In: M.E. Rice and M. Todorovic (eds.), Proceedings of the International Symposium on the Biology of the Sipuncula and the Echiura, Vol. 2, 79-90. Naucno Delo, Belgrade.
- Bartley, J.K. 1996. Actualistic taphonomy of cyanobacteria: implications for the Precambrian fossil record. Palaios 11: 571-586.
- Bengtson, S. 1983. The early history of the Conodonta. Fossils and Strata 15: 5-19.
- Bengtson, S. and Urbanek, A. 1986. Rhabdotubus, a Middle Cambrian rhabdopleurid hemichordate. Lethaia 19: 293-308.
- Butterfield, N.J. 1990a. Organic preservation of non-mineralizing organisms and the taphonomy of the Burgess Shale. Paleobiology 16: 272-286.
- Butterfield, N.J. 1990b. A reassessment of the enigmatic Burgess Shale fossil Wiwaxia corrugata (Matthew) and its relationship to the polychaete Canadia spinosa Walcott. Paleobiology 16: 287-303.
- Butterfield, N.J. 1994. Burgess Shale-type fossils from a Lower Cambrian shallow-shelf sequence in northwestern Canada.Nature 369:477-479.
- Butterfield, N.J. 1995. Secular distribution of Burgess-Shale-type preservation. Lethaia 28: 1-13.
- Butterfield, N.J. 1996. Fossil preservation in the Burgess Shale: reply. Lethaia 29: 109-112.
- Butterfield, N.J. 2008. An early Cambrian radula. Journal of Paleontology 82: 543-554.
- Butterfield, N.J. and Nicholas, C.J. 1996. Burgess Shale-type preservation of both non-mineralizing and 'shelly' Cambrian organisms from the Mackenzie Mountains, northwestern Canada. Journal of Paleontology 70: 893-899.
- Butterfield, N.J., Knoll, A.H., and Swett, K. 1994. Paleobiology of the Neoproterozoic Svanbergfjellet Formation, Spitsbergen. Fossils and Strata 34: 1-84.
- Butterfield, N.J., Balthasar, U. and Wilson, L.A. 2007. Fossil diagenesis in the Burgess Shale. Palaeontology 50: 537-543.
- Conway Morris, S. 1977. Fossil priapulid worms. Special Papers in Palaeontology 20: 1-95.
- Conway Morris, S. 1985. The Middle Cambrian metazoan Wiwaxia corrugata (Matthew) from the Burgess Shale and Ogygopsis Shale, British Columbia, Canada.Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 307: 507-582.
- Conway Morris, S. 1989. The persistence of Burgess Shale-type faunas: implications for the evolution of deeper-water faunas. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 80: 271-283.
- Conway Morris, S. and Robison, R.A. 1988. More soft-bodied animals and algae from the Middle Cambrian of Utah and British Columbia.University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions 112: 1-48.
- Dong, X.-P., Bengtson, S., Gostling, N.J., Cunningham, J.A., Harvey, T.H.P., Kouchinsky, A., Val'kov, A.K., Repetski, J.E., Stampanoni, M., Marone, F., and Donoghue, P.C.J. 2010. The anatomy, taphonomy, taxonomy and systematic affinity of Markuelia: Early Cambrian to Early Ordovician scalidophorans. Palaeontology 53: 1291-1314.
- Durman, P.N. and Sennikov, N.V. 1993. A new rhabdopleurid hemichordate from the Middle Cambrian of Siberia. Palaeontology 36: 283-296.
- Gaines, R.R., Briggs, D.E.G., and Zhao, Y. 2008. Cambrian Burgess Shale-type deposits share a common mode of fossilization. Geology 36: 755-758.
- Gostlin, K.E. 2006. Sedimentology and Palynology of the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale. 245 pp. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Department of Geology, University of Toronto.
- Han, J., Yang, Y., Zhifei, Z., Liu, J., and Shu, D. 2007. New observations on the palaeoscolecid work Tylotites petiolaris from the Cambrian Chengjiang Lagerstatte, south China. Paleontological Research 11: 59-69.
- Harvey, T.H.P. 2010.Carbonaceous preservation of Cambrian hexactinellid sponge spicules. Biology Letters 6: 834-837.
- Harvey, T.H.P. and Butterfield, N.J. 2008. Sophisticated particle-feeding in a large Early Cambrian crustacean. Nature 452: 868-871.
- Harvey, T.H.P., Dong, X., and Donoghue, P.C.J. 2010. Are palaeoscolecids ancestral ecdysozoans? Evolution and Development 12: 177-200.
- Holmer, L.E. and Caron, J.-B. 2006. A spinose stem group brachiopod with pedicle from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale. Acta Zoologica 87: 273-290.
- Horodyski, R.J. and Donaldson, J.A. 1980. Microfossils from the Middle Proterozoic Dismal Lakes Group, Arctic Canada. Precambrian Research 11: 125-159.
- Huang, Y.-Z., Wang, H.-Y., Zhao, Y.-L., and Dai, X.-C. 1994. Brachiopods from Early-Middle Cambrian Kaili Formation in Taijiang, Guizhou [in Chinese, with English summary]. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 33: 335-344.
- Huang, D.-Y., Vannier, J., and Chen, J.-Y. 2004a. Anatomy and lifestyles of Early Cambrian priapulid worms exemplified by Corynetis and Anningvermis from the Maotianshan Shale (SW China). Lethaia 37: 21-33.
- Huang, D.-Y., Chen, J.-Y., Vannier, J., and Saiz Salinas, J.I. 2004b. Early Cambrian sipunculan worms from southwest China. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 271: 1671-1676.
- Knoll, A.H., Swett, K., and Mark, J. 1991. Paleobiology of a Neoproterozoic tidal flat/lagoonal complex: the Draken Conglomerate Formation, Spitzbergen. Journal of Paleontology 65: 531-570.
- Kozlowski, R. 1947. Les affinites des graptolithes. Biological Reviews 22: 93-108.
- Lin, J.-P. 2009. Review of the depositional environment of the Kaili Formation (Cambrian Series 2-3 boundary interval: China). Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 37: 131-149.
- Lin, J.-P. and Briggs, D.E.G. 2010. Burgess Shale-type preservation: a comparison of naraoiids (Arthropoda) from three Cambrian localities. Palaios 25: 463-467.
- Maas, A., Waloszek, D., Haug, J.T., and Muller, K.J. 2007.A possible larval roundworm from the Cambrian 'Orsten' and its bearing on the phylogeny of Cycloneuralia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 34: 499-519.
- Maas, A., Waloszek, D., Haug, J.T., and Muller, K.J. 2009. Loricate larvae (Scalidophora) from the Middle Cambrian of Australia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 37: 281-302.
- Maletz, J., Steiner, M., and Fatka, O. 2005. Middle Cambrian pterobranchs and the question: what is a graptolite? Lethaia 38: 73-85.
- Mankiewicz, C. 1992. Obruchevella and other microfossils in the Burgess Shale: preservation and affinity.Journal of Paleontology 66: 717-729.
- Mao, J.-R., Zhao, Y.-L., and Yu, P. 1994. Noncalcareous algae of Kaili Fauna in Taijiang, Guizhou [in Chinese, with English summary]. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 33: 345-349.
- Marti Mus, M. and Bergstrom, J. 2007. Skeletal microstructure of helens, lateral spines of hyolithids. Palaeontology 50: 1231-1243.
- Morse, M.P. 1981. Meiopriapulus fijiensis n. gen., n. sp.: an interstitial priapulid from coarse sand in Fiji. Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 100: 239-252.
- Page, A., Gabbott, S.E., Wilby, P.R., and Zalasiewicz, J.A. 2008. Ubiquitous Burgess Shale-style "clay templates" in low-grade metamorphic mudrocks. Geology 36: 855-858.
- Porter, S.M. 2008. Skeletal microstructure indicates chancelloriids and halkieriids are closely related. Palaeontology 51: 865-879.
- Powell, W. 2003. Greenschist-facies metamorphism of the Burgess Shale and its implications for models of fossil formation and preservation. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 40: 13-25.
- Qian, Y. and Bengtson, S. 1989. Palaeontology and biostratigraphy of the Early Cambrian Meishucunian Stage in Yunnan Province, South China. Fossils and Strata 24: 1-156.
- Rice, M.E. 1993. Sipuncula. In: F.W. Harrison and M.E. Rice (eds.), Microscopic anatomy of invertebrates, Volume 12: Onychophora, Chilopoda, and Lesser Protostomata, 237-325. Wiley-Liss, New York.
- Saiz Salinas, J.I. 1995. Sipuncula of the southeastern Weddell Sea (Antarctica). Polar Biology 15: 307-317.
- Schmidt-Rhaesa, A. 1998.Phylogenetic relationships of the Nematomorpha -a discussion of current hypotheses. Zoologischer Anzeiger 236: 203-216.
- Sergeev, V.N., Knoll, A.H., and Grotzinger, J.P. 1995. Paleobiology of the Mesoproterozoic Billyakh Group, Anabar Uplift, Northern Siberia. Paleontological Society Memoir 39. Journal of Paleontology 69 (Supplement to No. 1): 1-37.
- Shirley, T.C. and Storch, V. 1999. Halicryptus higginsi n.sp. (Priapulida): a giant new species from Barrow, Alaska. Invertebrate Biology 118: 404-413.
- Skovsted, C.B. and Peel, J.S. 2001. The problematic fossil Mongolitubulus from the Lower Cambrian of Greenland. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark 48: 135-147.
- Stephen, A.C. and Edmonds, S.J. 1972. The Phyla Sipuncula and Echiura. 528 pp. Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History), London.
- Steiner, M. and Fatka, O. 1996. Lower Cambrian tubular micro- to macrofossils from the Paseky Shale of the Barrandian area (Czech Republic). Palaontologische Zeitschrift 70: 275-299.
- Storch, V., Higgins, R.P., and Morse, M.P. 1989. Ultrastructure of the body wall of Meiopriapulus fijiensis (Priapulida). Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 108: 319-331.
- Theel, H. 1911. Priapulids and sipunculids dredged by the Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1901-1903 and the phenomenon of bipolarity. Kungliga Svenska Vetenskaps Akademiens Handlingar 47: 1-36.
- Topper, T.P., Skovsted, C.B., Brock, G.A., and Paterson, J.R. 2007. New bradoriids from the lower Cambrian Mernmerna Formation, South Australia: systematics, biostratigraphy and biogeography. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 33: 67-100.
- Van der Land, J. 1970. Systematics, zoogeography, and ecology of the Priapulida. Zoologische Verhandelingen 112: 1-118.
- Walcott, C.D. 1919. Cambrian geology and paleontology IV, No. 5-Middle Cambrian algae. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 67: 217-260.
- Wills, M.A. 1998.Cambrian and Recent disparity: the picture from priapulids. Paleobiology 24: 177-199.