Cryptic Disc Structures Resembling Ediacaran Discoidal Fossils from the Lower Silurian Hellefjord Schist, Arctic Norway

PLoS One. 2016 Oct 26;11(10):e0164071. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164071. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

The Hellefjord Schist, a volcaniclastic psammite-pelite formation in the Caledonides of Arctic Norway contains discoidal impressions and apparent tube casts that share morphological and taphonomic similarities to Neoproterozoic stem-holdfast forms. U-Pb zircon geochronology on the host metasediment indicates it was deposited between 437 ± 2 and 439 ± 3 Ma, but also indicates that an inferred basal conglomerate to this formation must be part of an older stratigraphic element, as it is cross-cut by a 546 ± 4 Ma pegmatite. These results confirm that the Hellefjord Schist is separated from underlying older Proterozoic rocks by a thrust. It has previously been argued that the Cambrian Substrate Revolution destroyed the ecological niches that the Neoproterozoic frond-holdfasts organisms occupied. However, the discovery of these fossils in Silurian rocks demonstrates that the environment and substrate must have been similar enough to Neoproterozoic settings that frond-holdfast bodyplans were still ecologically viable some hundred million years later.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Fossils*
  • Norway
  • Paleontology
  • Radiometric Dating
  • Silicates / chemistry
  • Volcanic Eruptions
  • Zirconium / chemistry

Substances

  • Silicates
  • zircon
  • Zirconium

Grants and funding

Field and laboratory work was supported by an IRCSET Basic Research Grant (SC/2002/248) awarded to J.S.D. and a Government of Ireland (IRCSET) Embark Initiative Postgraduate Research Scholarship awarded to C.L.K. The Institute for Geoscience Research at Curtin is acknowledged for providing funding to C.L.K. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.