The Extinction of the Conulariids
Conulariids are unusual extinct metazoans most often considered to be a group of scyphozoan cnidarians or close relatives. Generally, the temporal range of conulariid fossils is perceived to be late Precambrian or Cambrian to Triassic, though a supposed Cretaceous conulariid from Peru was published...
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doaj-88930611e0644d20be8599c48b26b2b12020-11-24T23:05:49ZengMDPI AGGeosciences2076-32632012-03-012111010.3390/geosciences2010001The Extinction of the ConulariidsSpencer G. LucasConulariids are unusual extinct metazoans most often considered to be a group of scyphozoan cnidarians or close relatives. Generally, the temporal range of conulariid fossils is perceived to be late Precambrian or Cambrian to Triassic, though a supposed Cretaceous conulariid from Peru was published 46 years ago. A re-evaluation of this fossil indicates it is not a conulariid, but instead a pinnacean bivalve (Pinna sp.), confirming that the geologically youngest conulariids are of Late Triassic age. However, a review of the Triassic conulariid fossil record indicates it is very sparse, with only eight published records. It does not provide a reliable basis for analyzing the structure of conulariid extinction. Nevertheless, conulariid extinction still appears to have taken place very close to the end of the Triassic. The cause of conulariid extinction may have been the onset of the Mesozoic marine revolution, in which durivorous predators developed new mechanisms for preying on the epifaunal benthos, including the conulariids.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/2/1/1conulariidextinctionTriassicPeruMesozoic marine revolution |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Spencer G. Lucas |
spellingShingle |
Spencer G. Lucas The Extinction of the Conulariids Geosciences conulariid extinction Triassic Peru Mesozoic marine revolution |
author_facet |
Spencer G. Lucas |
author_sort |
Spencer G. Lucas |
title |
The Extinction of the Conulariids |
title_short |
The Extinction of the Conulariids |
title_full |
The Extinction of the Conulariids |
title_fullStr |
The Extinction of the Conulariids |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Extinction of the Conulariids |
title_sort |
extinction of the conulariids |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Geosciences |
issn |
2076-3263 |
publishDate |
2012-03-01 |
description |
Conulariids are unusual extinct metazoans most often considered to be a group of scyphozoan cnidarians or close relatives. Generally, the temporal range of conulariid fossils is perceived to be late Precambrian or Cambrian to Triassic, though a supposed Cretaceous conulariid from Peru was published 46 years ago. A re-evaluation of this fossil indicates it is not a conulariid, but instead a pinnacean bivalve (Pinna sp.), confirming that the geologically youngest conulariids are of Late Triassic age. However, a review of the Triassic conulariid fossil record indicates it is very sparse, with only eight published records. It does not provide a reliable basis for analyzing the structure of conulariid extinction. Nevertheless, conulariid extinction still appears to have taken place very close to the end of the Triassic. The cause of conulariid extinction may have been the onset of the Mesozoic marine revolution, in which durivorous predators developed new mechanisms for preying on the epifaunal benthos, including the conulariids. |
topic |
conulariid extinction Triassic Peru Mesozoic marine revolution |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/2/1/1 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT spencerglucas theextinctionoftheconulariids AT spencerglucas extinctionoftheconulariids |
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