Preliminary appraisal of biota from methane-seep and associated deposits, lower Holmwood Shale, Early Permian (Sakmarian), Irwin Basin, Western Australia.

David Haig, Antoine Dillinger, Geoffrey Playford, Rosine Riera, Aleksey Sadekov, Greg Skrzypek, Eckart Hakansson, Arthur Mory, Daniel Peyrot, Charmaine Thomas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Fossil assemblages preserved in nodules of the methane-seep deposits, recognized by Haig et al.(2022) in the lower Permian (Cisuralian, Sakmarian stage) of the Irwin Basin, include representatives of three ecosystems: seep, pelagic, and coastal plain. The seep biota, new to the Australian Permian, consists of small thickets with a framework of tubeworms, less common algal-like Tubiphytes, and problematica (? algae or sponges). Other components include microbial mats, macrophyte alga Litostroma (first report from Gondwana); foraminifers; sponges with siliceous monaxon spicules; a new group of small, lightly ornamented rostroconchs; microgastropods and rare larger types; ostracods and minute scolecodonts from polychaete jaws. Elements of the pelagic ecosystem are ammonoids (abundant in enclosing shale) and marine microphytoplankton. Probable vertebrate bone (possibly amphibians) and diverse spores and pollen from land plants come from the adjoining coastal plain. The surrounding mudstone lacks benthic macrofauna but includes an unusual assemblage of siliceous agglutinated foraminifers. The seeps were oases of high organic productivity on an otherwise barren muddy seafloor. The Holmwood Shale’s seep carbonates have close similarities to modern seep deposits in shallow-marine settings.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)75-102
Number of pages29
JournalRoyal Society of Western Australia Journal
Volume106
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Feb 2024

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