Middle Permian (middle + permian)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Earth and Environmental Science


Selected Abstracts


Recognition of southern Gondwanan palynomorphs at Gondwana's northern margin,and biostratigraphic correlation of Permian strata from SE Turkey and Australia

GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Issue 2-3 2010
Ellen Stolle
Abstract This study focuses on the palynology of Guadalupian (Middle Permian) strata of SE Turkey, especially on late Wordian and earliest Capitanian deposits, which are dated by foraminifers and can be chronostratigraphically related to the geological timescale. Herein, palynological species, such as Altitriletes densus, Cymatiosphaera gondwanensis and Praecolpatites sinuosus, previously characteristic for Pakistan, Australia and Antarctica are recorded. Therefore, the Permian biozones of marine fauna and the palynology of SE Turkey and the rest of the Arabian area and Australia are compared and correlated. This long-distance, eastern Gondwana-wide biostratigraphical correlation, conducted for the first time in the Guadalupian epoch in this study, showed that Corisaccites alutas has a similar Last Occurrence Datum in SE Turkey and in Australia. The correlation also showed that in the late Wordian a number of species were present throughout eastern Gondwana, whereas the distribution of other certain species was influenced by provincialism. Hence, it may be concluded that certain species of parent plants probably co-occurred Gondwana-wide, while the distribution of others was dependant on climate. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Structure of Sumatra and its implications for the tectonic assembly of Southeast Asia and the destruction of Paleotethys

ISLAND ARC, Issue 1 2009
Anthony J. Barber
Abstract It is now generally accepted that Southeast Asia is composed of continental blocks which separated from Gondwana with the formation of oceanic crust during the Paleozoic, and were accreted to Asia in the Late Paleozoic or Early Mesozoic, with the subduction of the intervening oceanic crust. From east to west the Malay peninsula and Sumatra are composed of three continental blocks: East Malaya with a Cathaysian Permian flora and fauna; Sibumasu, including the western part of the Malay peninsula and East Sumatra, with Late Carboniferous,Early Permian ,pebbly mudstones' interpreted as glaciogenic diamictites; and West Sumatra, again with Cathaysian fauna and flora. A further unit, the Woyla nappe, is interpreted as an intraoceanic arc thrust over the West Sumatra block in the mid Cretaceous. There are varied opinions concerning the age of collision of Sibumasu with East Malaya and the destruction of Paleotethys. In Thailand, radiolarites have been used as evidence that Paleotethys survived until after the Middle Triassic. In the Malay peninsula, structural evidence and the ages of granitic intrusions are used to support a Middle Permian to Early Triassic age for the destruction of Paleotethys. It is suggested that the West Sumatra block was derived from Cathaysia and emplaced against the western margin of Sibumasu by dextral transcurrent faulting along a zone of high deformation, the Medial Sumatra Tectonic Zone. These structural units can be traced northwards in Southeast Asia. The East Malaya block is considered to be part of the Indochina block, Sibumasu can be traced through Thailand into southern China, the Medial Sumatra Tectonic Zone is correlated with the Mogok Belt of Myanmar, the West Burma block is the extension of the West Sumatra block, from which it was separated by the formation of the Andaman Sea in the Miocene, and the Woyla nappe is correlated with the Mawgyi nappe of Myanmar. [source]


Complex behavioural pattern as an aid to identify the producer of Zoophycos from the Middle Permian of Oman

LETHAIA, Issue 2 2009
DIRK KNAUST
The trace fossil Zoophycos is abundant in transgressive, shallow marine carbonates in the Middle Permian (Wordian) Khuff Formation of the Huqf-Haushi Uplift of Interior Oman. It often occurs as part of a complex (compound) trace fossil that comprises two integrated elements: (i) irregular galleries with straight to gently curved tunnels and interconnected shafts, and (ii) simple planar to complex spreiten structures with a marginal tube (Zoophycos). The galleries are characterized by irregularly winding, dichotomous branching, large variation in shape and size and circular to elliptical vertical cross-sections. Zoophycos consists of spreiten with a marginal tube, either originating as a simple lobe from the convex segment of a curved tunnel, or forming more complex, subcircular, spreiten systems parallel to bedding. The spreiten were formed by simple strip mining, where the animal defecated without producing faecal pellets. U-shaped marginal tubes indicate that the burrows were well aerated. The complex trace fossil points to combined dwelling and deposit-feeding behaviour, with irregular galleries in the firm substrate and Zoophycos spreiten in the softground below it. It can be assumed that the animal used the open tunnel system mainly for dwelling (domichnion) and possibly suspension feeding, but occasionally changed to deposit feeding while creating the spreiten (fodinichnion). The integration of the irregular galleries (tunnels and interconnected shafts) with the marginal tubes of Zoophycos suggests the same producer for this compound trace fossil. Many modern polychaetes produce very similar galleries within firm and soft substrates, and polychaetes are therefore interpreted as the most likely producers. Similarities between Permian and Triassic Zoophycos suggest comparable trace making behaviour before and after the end-Permian mass extinction. [source]


A biogeographically mixed, Middle Permian brachiopod fauna from the Baoshan Block, western Yunnan, China

PALAEONTOLOGY, Issue 2 2001
G. R. Shi
A small brachiopod fauna is described from the carbonate rocks of the basal Shazipo Formation of the Baoshan Block, western Yunnan, south-west China, including significant new ventral and dorsal internal morphological features of Cryptospirifer omeishanensis Huang. This fauna is regarded as Wordian (Middle Guadalupian, Middle Permian) because of the presence of Cryptospirifer omeishanensis Huang and associated fusulinids (Neoschwagerina craticulifera Zone). Palaeobiogeographically, the brachiopod fauna is of considerable interest because of its admixed nature characterized by typical warm-water Cathaysian elements intermingled with temperate Peri-Gondwanan taxa. This in turn is interpreted to indicate that the Baoshan Block may have been situated in an intermediate palaeogeographical position between Gondwanaland to the south and Cathaysia to the north during the Mid Permian and, as such, it probably furnished an important ,stepping stone' for the dispersal of Mid Permian eastern Tethyan marine invertebrate taxa (e.g. Cryptospirifer) to the western Tethys. [source]


Review of the Permian Camptoneuritidae (Insecta: Grylloblattida)

ACTA GEOLOGICA SINICA (ENGLISH EDITION), Issue 4 2010
Danil S. ARISTOV
Abstract: The Permian family Camptoneuritidae (Insecta: Grylloblattida) is reviewed. New synonymies are proposed: Camptoneuritidae Martynov, 1930 = Demopteridae Carpenter, 1950, syn. nov., = Jabloniidae Kukalova, 1964, syn. nov. Key to genera of Camptoneuritidae is given. All genera are redescribed and illustrated. Camptoneurites soyanensis sp. nov. from Soyana locality (Middle Permian, Kazanian Stage; Arkhangelsk Region, Russia) and Tyulkinia bashkuevi gen. et sp. nov. from Tyulkino locality (Lower Permian, Kungurian Stage; Perm Region, Russia) are described. [source]