Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA. / Lucas, Spencer G.; Allen, Bruce D.; Krainer, Karl; Barrick, James; Vachard, Daniel; Schneider, Joerg W.; DiMichele, William A.; Bashforth, Arden Roy.

In: Stratigraphy, Vol. 8, No. 1, 2011, p. 7-27.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lucas, SG, Allen, BD, Krainer, K, Barrick, J, Vachard, D, Schneider, JW, DiMichele, WA & Bashforth, AR 2011, 'Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA', Stratigraphy, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 7-27. <http://www.micropress.org/microaccess/stratigraphy/issue-281/article-1739>

APA

Lucas, S. G., Allen, B. D., Krainer, K., Barrick, J., Vachard, D., Schneider, J. W., DiMichele, W. A., & Bashforth, A. R. (2011). Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA. Stratigraphy, 8(1), 7-27. http://www.micropress.org/microaccess/stratigraphy/issue-281/article-1739

Vancouver

Lucas SG, Allen BD, Krainer K, Barrick J, Vachard D, Schneider JW et al. Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA. Stratigraphy. 2011;8(1):7-27.

Author

Lucas, Spencer G. ; Allen, Bruce D. ; Krainer, Karl ; Barrick, James ; Vachard, Daniel ; Schneider, Joerg W. ; DiMichele, William A. ; Bashforth, Arden Roy. / Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA. In: Stratigraphy. 2011 ; Vol. 8, No. 1. pp. 7-27.

Bibtex

@article{ef157f446e584ccd8cfea3d6d39b96f9,
title = "Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerst{\"a}tte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA",
abstract = "The Kinney Brick Quarry is a world famous Late Pennsylvanian fossil Lagerst{\"a}tte in central New Mexico, USA. The age assigned to the Kinney Brick Quarry (early-middle Virgilian) has long been based more on its inferred lithostratigraphic position than on biostratigraphic indicators at the quarry. We have developed three datasets--stratigraphic position, fusulinids and conodonts--that indicatethe Kinney Brick Quarry is older, of middle Missourian (Kasimovian) age. Our detailed local lithostratigraphic studies coupled with regional stratigraphic investigations indicate the Kinney Brick Quarry is in the Tinajas Member of the Atrasado Formation, so it is stratigraphically lower than suggested by previously published maps. A laterally extensive fusulinid-bearing limestone a few meters below the level of the Kinney Brick Quarry yields an early-middle Missourian fusulinid assemblage consisting of Tumulotriticites cf. T. tumidus and species of Triticites: T. cf. T. planus, T. cf. T. myersi and T. ex gr. T. ohioensis. The Kinney conodont fauna is characterized by Idiognathodus corrugatus and I. cherryvalensis, which suggest an assignment to the Idiognathodus confragus Zone of the North America Midcontinent region (Dennis cyclothem; middle Missourian). Nonmarine biostratigraphic indicators at the Kinney BrickQuarry indicate either an imprecise age (Late Pennsylvanian: megaflora) or a slightly younger age (late Kasimovian-early Gzhelian: blattids) than do stratigraphic position and marine microfossils. The well-established age of Kinney on the marine timescale thus can be used to better calibrate the nonmarine biostratigraphy. So, the insect biozonation of the Euramerican continental basins, which was calibrated to the so-called regional West European Carboniferous stages by macrofloras and to the globalmarine scale by sparse, ambiguous isotopic ages, can now be linked directly to the marine conodont zonation.",
author = "Lucas, {Spencer G.} and Allen, {Bruce D.} and Karl Krainer and James Barrick and Daniel Vachard and Schneider, {Joerg W.} and DiMichele, {William A.} and Bashforth, {Arden Roy}",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "7--27",
journal = "Stratigraphy",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Precise age and biostratigraphic significance of the Kinney Brick Quarry Lagerstätte, Pennsylvanian of New Mexico, USA

AU - Lucas, Spencer G.

AU - Allen, Bruce D.

AU - Krainer, Karl

AU - Barrick, James

AU - Vachard, Daniel

AU - Schneider, Joerg W.

AU - DiMichele, William A.

AU - Bashforth, Arden Roy

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - The Kinney Brick Quarry is a world famous Late Pennsylvanian fossil Lagerstätte in central New Mexico, USA. The age assigned to the Kinney Brick Quarry (early-middle Virgilian) has long been based more on its inferred lithostratigraphic position than on biostratigraphic indicators at the quarry. We have developed three datasets--stratigraphic position, fusulinids and conodonts--that indicatethe Kinney Brick Quarry is older, of middle Missourian (Kasimovian) age. Our detailed local lithostratigraphic studies coupled with regional stratigraphic investigations indicate the Kinney Brick Quarry is in the Tinajas Member of the Atrasado Formation, so it is stratigraphically lower than suggested by previously published maps. A laterally extensive fusulinid-bearing limestone a few meters below the level of the Kinney Brick Quarry yields an early-middle Missourian fusulinid assemblage consisting of Tumulotriticites cf. T. tumidus and species of Triticites: T. cf. T. planus, T. cf. T. myersi and T. ex gr. T. ohioensis. The Kinney conodont fauna is characterized by Idiognathodus corrugatus and I. cherryvalensis, which suggest an assignment to the Idiognathodus confragus Zone of the North America Midcontinent region (Dennis cyclothem; middle Missourian). Nonmarine biostratigraphic indicators at the Kinney BrickQuarry indicate either an imprecise age (Late Pennsylvanian: megaflora) or a slightly younger age (late Kasimovian-early Gzhelian: blattids) than do stratigraphic position and marine microfossils. The well-established age of Kinney on the marine timescale thus can be used to better calibrate the nonmarine biostratigraphy. So, the insect biozonation of the Euramerican continental basins, which was calibrated to the so-called regional West European Carboniferous stages by macrofloras and to the globalmarine scale by sparse, ambiguous isotopic ages, can now be linked directly to the marine conodont zonation.

AB - The Kinney Brick Quarry is a world famous Late Pennsylvanian fossil Lagerstätte in central New Mexico, USA. The age assigned to the Kinney Brick Quarry (early-middle Virgilian) has long been based more on its inferred lithostratigraphic position than on biostratigraphic indicators at the quarry. We have developed three datasets--stratigraphic position, fusulinids and conodonts--that indicatethe Kinney Brick Quarry is older, of middle Missourian (Kasimovian) age. Our detailed local lithostratigraphic studies coupled with regional stratigraphic investigations indicate the Kinney Brick Quarry is in the Tinajas Member of the Atrasado Formation, so it is stratigraphically lower than suggested by previously published maps. A laterally extensive fusulinid-bearing limestone a few meters below the level of the Kinney Brick Quarry yields an early-middle Missourian fusulinid assemblage consisting of Tumulotriticites cf. T. tumidus and species of Triticites: T. cf. T. planus, T. cf. T. myersi and T. ex gr. T. ohioensis. The Kinney conodont fauna is characterized by Idiognathodus corrugatus and I. cherryvalensis, which suggest an assignment to the Idiognathodus confragus Zone of the North America Midcontinent region (Dennis cyclothem; middle Missourian). Nonmarine biostratigraphic indicators at the Kinney BrickQuarry indicate either an imprecise age (Late Pennsylvanian: megaflora) or a slightly younger age (late Kasimovian-early Gzhelian: blattids) than do stratigraphic position and marine microfossils. The well-established age of Kinney on the marine timescale thus can be used to better calibrate the nonmarine biostratigraphy. So, the insect biozonation of the Euramerican continental basins, which was calibrated to the so-called regional West European Carboniferous stages by macrofloras and to the globalmarine scale by sparse, ambiguous isotopic ages, can now be linked directly to the marine conodont zonation.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

SP - 7

EP - 27

JO - Stratigraphy

JF - Stratigraphy

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 35125256