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I posted this on DINOSAUR, but thought some of the other lists would be interested. ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- A dinosaur list member requested that I post a summary of Dr. David Meyer's talk to the November meeting of the Kentucky Paleontological Society. Dr. Meyer kindly gave me permission to post the abstract of his paper- "Population Paleoecology and Comparative Taphonomy of Two Edrioasteroid (Echinodermata) Pavements: Upper Ordovician of Kentucky and Ohio" which appeared in the journal ^Historical Biology^ Vol. 4, pp. 155 - 178 (1990). ************************************************************************* POPULATION PALEOECOLOGY AND COMPARITIVE TAPHONOMY OF TWO EDRIOASTEROID (ECHINODERMATA) PAVEMENTS: UPPER ORDOVICIAN OF KENTUCKY AND OHIO BY: David L. Meyer University of Cincinnati Key words: edrioasteroid, echinoderm, epizoans, Ordovician, paleoecology, taphonomy. ABSTRACT Two strophomenid brachiopod shell pavements bearing abundant edrioasteroid epizoans occur stratigraphically within the top 4.5 m of the Corryville Formation (Upper Ordovician, Maysvillian) in Boone County, Kentucky, and Hamilton County, Ohio. Both assemblages are dominated by ^Isorophus cincinnatiensis^ and contain ^Carneyella pilea^ and ^Streptaster vorticellatus^ as lesser constituents. Pedicle exterior valves of ^Rafinesquina "alternata"^ are the perferred substratum for all species at both sites, but the Kentucky population occurs mainly on unabraded, articulated shells and the Ohio population occupies abraded, disarticulated shells. The Kentucky population includes a greater size range of ^Isorophus^ (at least three cohorts) than the Ohio population (at least two cohorts), suggesting a greater time span of colonization for the Kentucky site. Host shells from Kentucky have anterior-posterior axes strongly aligned NE-SW wheras the Ohio shells are unoriented. ^Isorophus^ in Kentucky show a preference for the anterior margin of the ^Rafinesquina^ pedicle exterior valve, whereas ^Isorophus^ in Ohio show no prefered location on host shells. The Kentucky edrioasteroids are inferred to have attached to mainly live ^Rafinesquina^ in brachial-valve-up position. Host shells were inverted and oriented by a NE-SW storm surge, then buried rapidly. Ohio edrioasteroids occupied mainly dead, already inverted host shells not oriented by storm surge possibly because of their more downslope (distal) location. Comparative taphonomic relationships between the coeval populations are consistant with a model of proximal to distal distribution along a gentle shallow subtidal N-S paleoslope subject to episodic storm activity. ******************************************************************** Dan Phelps jfcost00@ukcc.uky.edu (606) 277-3148 Ask me how to join The Kentucky Paleontological Society!
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