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Mazon Creek fossils

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Tullimonstrum gregarium in a concretion from the Mazon Creek lagerstätten.

The Mazon Creek fossils are conservation lagerstätten found near Morris, in Grundy County, Illinois. The fossils are found in ironstone concretions, formed approximately 300 mya in the mid-Pennsylvanian Epoch of the Carboniferous Period. These concretions frequently preserve both hard and soft tissues of animal and plant materials, as well as many soft-bodied organisms that do not normally fossilize. The quality, quantity and diversity of fossils in the area, known since the mid-nineteenth century, make the Mazon Creek lagerstätten important to paleontologists, in attempting to reconstruct the paleoecology of the sites.[1]

Contents

[edit] Geology

The Mazon Creek fossils are found in the Francis Creek Shale; the type locality is the Mazon River (or Mazon Creek), a tributary of the Illinois River near Morris, Grundy County, Illinois. The 25 to 30 meters of shale were formed approximately 300 mya, during the Pennsylvanian period. The fossiliferous concretions are usually found within the thickest deposits of Francis Creek. The concretions occur in localized deposits within the silty to sandy mudstones, in the lower four metres of the formation. The paleoecosystem is believed to be a large river delta system, deposited by at least one major river system flowing from the northeast. The sediments are believed to derive from the Appalachian orogeny events. The delta had a tropical climate, a result of the area being within 10° north latitude of the equator during the Pennsylvanian.

The remains of plants and animals were rapidly buried by the sediment deposited in the deltaic system. Bacterial decomposition of the remains produced carbon dioxide that combined with dissolved iron from the groundwater. This process formed siderite in the sediments surrounding the remains, forming detailed casts of their structure. Lithification of the sediments formed protective nodules of ironstone around the now fossilized remains.

The fossiliferous concretions are found in the Mazon River area of Grundy, Will, Kankakee, and Livingston counties. Additional fossils are found in LaSalle County, Illinois; between the Vermilion River and Marseilles, Illinois. The ironstone concretions are recovered from exposures along streams, roadcuts and in active or abandoned coal mine areas.

The site's importance was realized in the mid-nineteenth century: "the nodules of Mazon Creek, where fragments of plants, even of the softest texture, have been preserved in their integrity".[2]

[edit] Flora

The Mazon Creek flora comprises over 400 species from at least 130 genera. However, the true number of species is difficult to determine. Paleobotanists name separate plant structures with different names by convention, inflating the number of fossil plant taxa. Paleobotanists are currently determining which taxa are valid.

Mazon Creek flora includes: lycopsids, related to modern club moss, with arborescent forms named Lepidophloios, Sigillaria and Lepidodendron, and herbaceous forms called Lycopodites and Cormophyton; sphenopsids like Calamites a tree-like horsetail relative, with common foliage names of Annularia and Asterophyllites, and a vine-like form called Sphenophyllum; Pteridophyta as marattialean tree ferns and Filicales and Zygopteridales understory ferns, with common foliage names of Pecopteris, Acitheca and Lobatopteris; pteridosperms, also known as seed ferns, an extinct group of plants that grew both as trees and smaller shrubs, with features like pinnated leafs similar to true ferns, but reproduced by seeds instead of spores; they had common foliage names Mariopteris, Alethopteris, Odontopteris, Neuropteris, Laveineopteris and Macroneuropteris; extinct Gymnosperm Cordaites, believed to be closely related to and sharing many features with modern conifers.

[edit] Fauna

The Mazon Creek fauna has over 320 species of animals that have been identified. The fauna is divided into two components: the marine Essex fauna and the land and freshwater Braidwood fauna, that were washed into the deltaic sediments. The Essex fauna includes jellyfish, sea worms, snails, saltwater clams, shrimp, sea scorpions and fish. The Braidwood fauna includes insects, millipedes, centipedes, scorpions, spiders, other arachnids, amphibians, freshwater fish, freshwater shrimps, freshwater horseshoe crabs and ostracods.

The most famous faunal member is Illinois' state fossil Tullimonstrum, known popularly as the Tully Monster.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Illinois State Museum-Mazon Creek Fossil Exhibit
  2. ^ A.H.W. in Geological Survey of Illinois, 1866, p 489
  • Stephen A. Schellenberg, "Mazon Creek: preservation in late Paleozoic deltaic and marginal marine environments" in Walter Etter, James W. Hagadorn, Carol M. Tang, David J. Bottjer, editors, Exceptional Fossil Preservation: A Unique View on the Evolution of Marine Life (Columbia University Press) 2002
  • Charles W Shabica, Andrew A Hay editors. Richardson's Guide to the Fossil Fauna of Mazon Creek
  • Jack Wittry, The Mazon Creek Fossil Flora, ESCONI, 2006

[edit] External links

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