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Blackberry Hill

Blackberry Hill is a Konservat-Lagerstätte of Cambrian age located within the Elk Mound Group in Marathon County, Wisconsin. It is found in a series of quarries and outcrops that are notable for their large concentration of exceptionally preserved trace fossils in Cambrian tidal flats. One quarry in particular also has the distinction of preserving some of the first land animals. These are preserved as three-dimensional casts, which is unusual for Cambrian animals that are only lightly biomineralized.[1] Additionally, Blackberry Hill is the first occurrence recognized to include Cambrian mass strandings of scyphozoans (jellyfish).[2]

Blackberry Hill
Stratigraphic range: Mid Cambrian–Late Cambrian
Tidal flat at Blackberry Hill, showing its animals and their traces.
TypeKonservat-Lagerstätte
Unit ofElk Mound Group
Sub-units
Lithology
PrimarySandstone and orthoquartzite
Location
Coordinates44°42′39.24″N 89°30′43.40″W / 44.7109000°N 89.5120556°W / 44.7109000; -89.5120556
RegionWisconsin
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forTopographic feature (a summit) in Marathon County

Age and stratigraphic placement

The strata at Blackberry Hill are known to belong to the Elk Mound Group;[3][4] however, the lack of good stratigraphic markers (i.e., index fossils) in some Blackberry Hill localities, coupled with uncertainties about the age range of the Elk Mound Group itself, make it difficult to assign a precise age to these strata. Many researchers consider these rocks to be Late Cambrian,[4][2] which is the age to which the Elk Mound Group was originally assigned;[5] however, some recent authors now believe the Elk Mound Group and the fossils of Blackberry Hill could date back to the Middle Cambrian, based on certain fossils obtained from other areas.[6][7]

Geological and environmental setting

Most of the strata are composed of well bedded quartz sandstone and orthoquartzite. They were deposited mainly on intertidal and supratidal zones of tidal flats of an inland sea of the supercontinent Laurentia.[8] Ripple marks and numerous other sedimentary structures identical to those found on modern beaches abound on the strata surfaces. One of the most conspicuous features is extensive areas of specific structures not unlike those associated with modern biofilms and microbial mats.[4] There is mounting evidence suggesting that the feeding potential of this presumed microbial material was one of the forces that lured the first animals out of the sea.[9] It is also believed that the same material aided in the exceptional preservation of many of Blackberry Hill's trace fossils.[8][10][11]

Significance

Among the many paleontological discoveries thus far made at Blackberry Hill are the following:

  • The first body fossils, and therefore the identity, of one of the first animals to walk on land.[1][8]
  • The only fossils that link those animals with their trackways.[8]
  • Body fossils of what may be the first phyllocarid with well preserved legs.[1]
  • Identification of the maker of Protichnites trackways after over 150 years of speculation.[8]
  • The largest concentrations of fossilized, stranded scyphozoans (i.e., jellyfish).[3]
  • What may be the first mating behavior in the fossil record.[8]

The largest, most productive quarry is still in operation, thereby revealing fresh surfaces and the potential for new discoveries on a continuing basis.

Biota

Sedimentary structures associated with biofilms and microbial mats [4] are the only evidence of non-animal life at Blackberry Hill, as is the case elsewhere in this pre-embryophyte period in the history of Earth's life on land. The animal life of Blackberry Hill was, however, represented by several kinds of macrofossils, all preserved as three-dimensional casts or impressions,[1] including:

  • Mosineia macnaughtoni[1] These large (up to 10+ cm in length) arthropods, apparently having paddle or oar-like appendages, along with another genus from similar-aged strata of Quebec, have been identified as the oldest euthycarcinoids in the fossil record and some of the first animals to walk on land.[8] It is thus far known from only three exoskeletons preserved ventral-side-up, all lacking the heads and carapaces.
  • Arenosicaris inflata[1] This smaller arthropod (up to approximately 5 cm in length), more common than Mosineia (over 40 specimens to date), is one of the oldest members of the Phyllocarida. Disarticulated or splayed carapaces have been found in addition to essentially complete exoskeletons; however, the head is poorly known. Limbs, which are rarely fossilized in phyllocarids, are typically preserved in the A. inflata specimens.
  • Scyphozoan medusae – Most of these are dome-shaped fossils, usually represented as body cavity infillings formed as the stranded animals pumped their bodies in an attempt to escape, and in so doing, ingested sand.[12] Being composed mainly of water, scyphozoans rarely fossilize; however, they are found by the hundreds on some surfaces of one Blackberry Hill quarry.[3] The size of these fossils is also noteworthy; some specimens have achieved a diameter of 950 cm, making them the largest scyphozoan fossils on record.[7]

Trace fossils

  • Protichnites – These trackways (up to 8 cm wide at Blackberry Hill) are characterized by two parallel rows of paired footprints, often in sets, and a medial furrow or series of medial impressions, presumably from a dragging or touching tail. The maker of Protichnites was conjectural since 1852, when Sir Richard Owen, the pioneering British anatomist and paleontologist who coined the term “dinosauria,” first named and described them based on material from equivalent strata of Quebec.[13] Fossils from Blackberry Hill named P. eremita,[14] found over 150 years later, solved the mystery by eventually revealing that at least some Protichnites were likely produced by the euthycarcinoid Mosineia macnaughtoni.[1][8] P. eremita was originally interpreted to have been the product of an arthropod with the assistance of a mollusk shell that it used in hermit crab-style behavior.[14]
  • Diplichnites – These trackways at Blackberry Hill often resemble Protichnites, except they lack medial markings. They may have been made by the same animal(s) that produced Protichnites,[1] based on individual trackways having medial furrows that appear and disappear as the animal travelled. It has been suggested that some Diplichnites are undertracks, whereby the animal walked on the top layer of sand, but only the tips of its appendages reached the underlying layer.[15] In these cases, the top layer might then exhibit Protichnites due to the tail that dragged on the surface, and the bottom layer would result in the furrow-less Diplichnites. It is possible that some Diplichnites were produced by trilobites or unknown arthropods, but no fossils of trilobites have been found thus far at Blackberry Hill.[16]
  • Climactichnites – These distinctive trace fossils, up to 14 cm in width and resembling tire tracks, are the most conspicuous trails at Blackberry Hill, literally covering large surfaces of certain strata. Two ichnospecies are found: C. wilsoni, which are surface trails that have lateral ridges; and C. youngi, which are burrows that lack lateral ridges.[2] Their maker was likely a large, slug-like mollusk.[2][17][18] Occasionally the resting trace, Musculopodus, is found at one end of a C. wilsoni.[2] It has been speculated that the animal may have remained burrowed in the sediment in the daytime to avoid desiccation from the sunlight,[17] and emerged at night to feed on the near-shore and on-shore microbial mats; however, there is no direct fossil evidence of grazing at Blackberry Hill, such as fossilized fecal pellets or strands.[18]
  • Other trace fossils – A variety of less conspicuous trace fossils is common at Blackberry Hill. The resting trace Rusophycus, bilobate linear traces similar to Cruziana and Aulichnites, and ropelike traces are sometimes found in close association with Arenosicaris inflata and are believed to result mainly from the burrowing activity of that phyllocarid.[19]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Collette and Hagadorn, 2010
  2. ^ a b c d e Getty and Hagadorn, 2008
  3. ^ a b c Hagadorn et al., 2002
  4. ^ a b c d Schieber et al., 2007
  5. ^ Ostrom, 1966
  6. ^ Seilacher and Hagadorn, 2010
  7. ^ a b Young and Hagadorn, 2010
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Collette et al., 2012
  9. ^ MacNaughton et al., 2002
  10. ^ Seilacher, 2007, page 28
  11. ^ Seilacher, 2008
  12. ^ Hagadorn and Belt, 2008, page 429
  13. ^ Owen, 1852
  14. ^ a b Hagadorn and Seilacher, 2009
  15. ^ Goldring and Seilacher, 1971
  16. ^ Hoxie, 2005
  17. ^ a b Yochelson and Fedonkin, 1993
  18. ^ a b Getty and Hagadorn, 2009
  19. ^ Collette et al., 2010

Further reading

  • Collette, J. H.; K. C. Gass & J. W. Hagadorn (2012). "Protichnites eremita unshelled? Experimental model-based neoichnology and new evidence for a euthycarcinoid affinity for this ichnospecies". Journal of Paleontology. 86 (3): 442–454. doi:10.1666/11-056.1.
  • Collette, J. H. & J. W. Hagadorn (2010). "Three-dimensionally preserved arthropods from Cambrian Lagerstatten of Quebec and Wisconsin". Journal of Paleontology. 84 (4): 646–667. doi:10.1666/09-075.1.
  • Collette, J. H.; J. W. Hagadorn & M. A. LaCelle (2010). "Dead in their tracks: Cambrian arthropods and their traces from intertidal sandstones of Quebec and Wisconsin". PALAIOS. 25 (8): 475–486. doi:10.2110/palo.2009.p09-134r.
  • Getty, P. R. & J. W. Hagadorn (2008). "Reinterpretation of Climactichnites Logan 1860 to include subsurface burrows, and erection of Musculopodus for resting traces of the trailmaker". Journal of Paleontology. 82 (6): 1161–1172. doi:10.1666/08-004.1.
  • Getty, P. R. & J. W. Hagadorn (2009). "Palaeobiology of the Climactichnites tracemaker". Palaeontology. 52 (4): 753–778. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2009.00875.x.
  • Goldring, R. & A. Seilacher (1971). "Limulid undertracks and their sedimentological implications". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Abhandlungen. 137: 422–442.
  • Hagadorn, J. W. & E. S. Belt (2008). "Stranded in upstate New York: Cambrian scyphomedusae from the Potsdam Sandstone". PALAIOS. 23 (7): 424–441. doi:10.2110/palo.2006.p06-104r.
  • Hagadorn, J. W.; R. H. Dott & D. Damrow (2002). "Stranded on an Upper Cambrian Shoreline: Medusae from Central Wisconsin". Geology. 30 (2): 147–150. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(2002)030<0147:SOALCS>2.0.CO;2.
  • Hagadorn, J. W. & A. Seilacher (2009). "Hermit arthropods 500 million years ago?". Geology. 37 (4): 295–298. doi:10.1130/G25181A.1.
  • Hoxie, C. T. (2005). "Late Cambrian arthropod trackways in subaerially exposed environments: Incentives to simplify a problematic ichnogenus". Unpublished B.A. Thesis: 1–89.
  • MacNaughton, R. B.; J. M. Cole; R. W. Dalrymple; S. J. Braddy; D. E. G. Briggs & T. D. Lukie (2002). "First steps on land:Arthropod trackways in Cambrian-Ordovician eolian sandstones, Canada". Geology. 30 (5): 391–394. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(2002)030<0391:FSOLAT>2.0.CO;2. S2CID 130821454.
  • Ortega-Hernandez, J.; Tremewan, J. & Braddy, S. J. (2010). "Euthycarcinoids". Geology Today. 26 (5): 195–198. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2451.2010.00770.x.
  • Ostrom, M. E. (1966). Cambrian Stratigraphy of Western Wisconsin. Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey.
  • Owen, R. (1852). "Description of the impressions and footprints of the Protichnites from the Potsdam sandstone of Canada". Geological Society of London Quarterly Journal. 8 (1–2): 214–225. doi:10.1144/GSL.JGS.1852.008.01-02.26.
  • Schieber, J.; Bose, P. K.; Eriksson, P. G.; Banerjee, S.; Sarkar, S.; Altermann, W.; Catuneau, O. (2007). Atlas of Microbial Mat Features Preserved within the Clastic Rock Record. Elsevier. pp. 53–71.
  • Seilacher, A. (2007). Trace Fossil Analysis. New York, New York: Springer. p. 226.
  • Seilacher, A. (2008). "Biomats, biofilms, and bioglue as preservational agents for arthropod trackways". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 270 (3–4): 252–257. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2008.07.011.
  • Seilacher, A. & J. W. Hagadorn (2010). "Early molluscan evolution: Evidence from the trace fossil record". PALAIOS. 25 (9): 565–575. doi:10.2110/palo.2009.p09-079r.
  • Yochelson, E. L. & M. A. Fedonkin (1993). "Paleobiology of Climactichnites, an enigmatic Late Cambrian fossil". Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology. 74 (74): 1–74. doi:10.5479/si.00810266.74.1.
  • Young, G. A. & J. W. Hagadorn (2010). "The fossil record of cnidarian medusa". Palaeoworld. 19 (3–4): 212–221. doi:10.1016/j.palwor.2010.09.014.

External links

  • Blackberry Hill fossils
Provides a discussion of Blackberry Hill fossils, as one of Paleontology Portal’s “Famous Flora and Fauna” pages.

blackberry, hill, konservat, lagerstätte, cambrian, located, within, mound, group, marathon, county, wisconsin, found, series, quarries, outcrops, that, notable, their, large, concentration, exceptionally, preserved, trace, fossils, cambrian, tidal, flats, qua. Blackberry Hill is a Konservat Lagerstatte of Cambrian age located within the Elk Mound Group in Marathon County Wisconsin It is found in a series of quarries and outcrops that are notable for their large concentration of exceptionally preserved trace fossils in Cambrian tidal flats One quarry in particular also has the distinction of preserving some of the first land animals These are preserved as three dimensional casts which is unusual for Cambrian animals that are only lightly biomineralized 1 Additionally Blackberry Hill is the first occurrence recognized to include Cambrian mass strandings of scyphozoans jellyfish 2 Blackberry HillStratigraphic range Mid Cambrian Late Cambrian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NTidal flat at Blackberry Hill showing its animals and their traces TypeKonservat LagerstatteUnit ofElk Mound GroupSub unitsMount Simon FormationWonewoc FormationLithologyPrimarySandstone and orthoquartziteLocationCoordinates44 42 39 24 N 89 30 43 40 W 44 7109000 N 89 5120556 W 44 7109000 89 5120556RegionWisconsinCountryUnited StatesType sectionNamed forTopographic feature a summit in Marathon County Contents 1 Age and stratigraphic placement 2 Geological and environmental setting 3 Significance 4 Biota 5 Trace fossils 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksAge and stratigraphic placement EditThe strata at Blackberry Hill are known to belong to the Elk Mound Group 3 4 however the lack of good stratigraphic markers i e index fossils in some Blackberry Hill localities coupled with uncertainties about the age range of the Elk Mound Group itself make it difficult to assign a precise age to these strata Many researchers consider these rocks to be Late Cambrian 4 2 which is the age to which the Elk Mound Group was originally assigned 5 however some recent authors now believe the Elk Mound Group and the fossils of Blackberry Hill could date back to the Middle Cambrian based on certain fossils obtained from other areas 6 7 Geological and environmental setting EditMost of the strata are composed of well bedded quartz sandstone and orthoquartzite They were deposited mainly on intertidal and supratidal zones of tidal flats of an inland sea of the supercontinent Laurentia 8 Ripple marks and numerous other sedimentary structures identical to those found on modern beaches abound on the strata surfaces One of the most conspicuous features is extensive areas of specific structures not unlike those associated with modern biofilms and microbial mats 4 There is mounting evidence suggesting that the feeding potential of this presumed microbial material was one of the forces that lured the first animals out of the sea 9 It is also believed that the same material aided in the exceptional preservation of many of Blackberry Hill s trace fossils 8 10 11 Ripple marks are exceptionally distinct on the surfaces of many layers at Blackberry Hill Sand stromatolites such as these encrusting a ripple marked surface are common sedimentary structures associated with microbial activity Significance EditAmong the many paleontological discoveries thus far made at Blackberry Hill are the following The first body fossils and therefore the identity of one of the first animals to walk on land 1 8 The only fossils that link those animals with their trackways 8 Body fossils of what may be the first phyllocarid with well preserved legs 1 Identification of the maker of Protichnites trackways after over 150 years of speculation 8 The largest concentrations of fossilized stranded scyphozoans i e jellyfish 3 What may be the first mating behavior in the fossil record 8 The largest most productive quarry is still in operation thereby revealing fresh surfaces and the potential for new discoveries on a continuing basis Biota EditSedimentary structures associated with biofilms and microbial mats 4 are the only evidence of non animal life at Blackberry Hill as is the case elsewhere in this pre embryophyte period in the history of Earth s life on land The animal life of Blackberry Hill was however represented by several kinds of macrofossils all preserved as three dimensional casts or impressions 1 including Mosineia macnaughtoni 1 These large up to 10 cm in length arthropods apparently having paddle or oar like appendages along with another genus from similar aged strata of Quebec have been identified as the oldest euthycarcinoids in the fossil record and some of the first animals to walk on land 8 It is thus far known from only three exoskeletons preserved ventral side up all lacking the heads and carapaces Arenosicaris inflata 1 This smaller arthropod up to approximately 5 cm in length more common than Mosineia over 40 specimens to date is one of the oldest members of the Phyllocarida Disarticulated or splayed carapaces have been found in addition to essentially complete exoskeletons however the head is poorly known Limbs which are rarely fossilized in phyllocarids are typically preserved in the A inflata specimens Scyphozoan medusae Most of these are dome shaped fossils usually represented as body cavity infillings formed as the stranded animals pumped their bodies in an attempt to escape and in so doing ingested sand 12 Being composed mainly of water scyphozoans rarely fossilize however they are found by the hundreds on some surfaces of one Blackberry Hill quarry 3 The size of these fossils is also noteworthy some specimens have achieved a diameter of 950 cm making them the largest scyphozoan fossils on record 7 The euthycarcinoid Mosineia macnaughtoni the presumed maker of some of the Protichnites at Blackberry Hill Carapace of the phyllocarid Arenosicaris inflata Splayed carapace is about 3 cm wide across both valves Stranded scyphozoans jellyfish in a partially flooded quarry Due to the flat horizontal bedding at this quarry the scyphozoans shown in the background in the top right photo are seen protruding above the water s surface Trace fossils EditProtichnites These trackways up to 8 cm wide at Blackberry Hill are characterized by two parallel rows of paired footprints often in sets and a medial furrow or series of medial impressions presumably from a dragging or touching tail The maker of Protichnites was conjectural since 1852 when Sir Richard Owen the pioneering British anatomist and paleontologist who coined the term dinosauria first named and described them based on material from equivalent strata of Quebec 13 Fossils from Blackberry Hill named P eremita 14 found over 150 years later solved the mystery by eventually revealing that at least some Protichnites were likely produced by the euthycarcinoid Mosineia macnaughtoni 1 8 P eremita was originally interpreted to have been the product of an arthropod with the assistance of a mollusk shell that it used in hermit crab style behavior 14 Diplichnites These trackways at Blackberry Hill often resemble Protichnites except they lack medial markings They may have been made by the same animal s that producedProtichnites 1 based on individual trackways having medial furrows that appear and disappear as the animal travelled It has been suggested that some Diplichnites are undertracks whereby the animal walked on the top layer of sand but only the tips of its appendages reached the underlying layer 15 In these cases the top layer might then exhibit Protichnites due to the tail that dragged on the surface and the bottom layer would result in the furrow less Diplichnites It is possible that some Diplichnites were produced by trilobites or unknown arthropods but no fossils of trilobites have been found thus far at Blackberry Hill 16 Climactichnites These distinctive trace fossils up to 14 cm in width and resembling tire tracks are the most conspicuous trails at Blackberry Hill literally covering large surfaces of certain strata Two ichnospecies are found C wilsoni which are surface trails that have lateral ridges and C youngi which are burrows that lack lateral ridges 2 Their maker was likely a large slug like mollusk 2 17 18 Occasionally the resting trace Musculopodus is found at one end of a C wilsoni 2 It has been speculated that the animal may have remained burrowed in the sediment in the daytime to avoid desiccation from the sunlight 17 and emerged at night to feed on the near shore and on shore microbial mats however there is no direct fossil evidence of grazing at Blackberry Hill such as fossilized fecal pellets or strands 18 Other trace fossils A variety of less conspicuous trace fossils is common at Blackberry Hill The resting trace Rusophycus bilobate linear traces similar to Cruziana and Aulichnites and ropelike traces are sometimes found in close association with Arenosicaris inflata and are believed to result mainly from the burrowing activity of that phyllocarid 19 The trackways Protichnites with particularly distinct medial furrows Distinctness of the furrows and footprints is believed to be influenced by substrate characteristics whether the trackways were produced under water or on land and other factors The trackways Diplichnites possibly an undertrack Climactichnites wilsoni the surface trails from a large slug like mollusk In this sprawling example the many trackways are seen overlapping each other These examples are about 10 cm wide Trace resembling Aulichnites possibly from the phyllocarid Arenosicaris inflata References Edit a b c d e f g h Collette and Hagadorn 2010 a b c d e Getty and Hagadorn 2008 a b c Hagadorn et al 2002 a b c d Schieber et al 2007 Ostrom 1966 Seilacher and Hagadorn 2010 a b Young and Hagadorn 2010 a b c d e f g h Collette et al 2012 MacNaughton et al 2002 Seilacher 2007 page 28 Seilacher 2008 Hagadorn and Belt 2008 page 429 Owen 1852 a b Hagadorn and Seilacher 2009 Goldring and Seilacher 1971 Hoxie 2005 a b Yochelson and Fedonkin 1993 a b Getty and Hagadorn 2009 Collette et al 2010Further reading EditCollette J H K C Gass amp J W Hagadorn 2012 Protichnites eremita unshelled Experimental model based neoichnology and new evidence for a euthycarcinoid affinity for this ichnospecies Journal of Paleontology 86 3 442 454 doi 10 1666 11 056 1 Collette J H amp J W Hagadorn 2010 Three dimensionally preserved arthropods from Cambrian Lagerstatten of Quebec and Wisconsin Journal of Paleontology 84 4 646 667 doi 10 1666 09 075 1 Collette J H J W Hagadorn amp M A LaCelle 2010 Dead in their tracks Cambrian arthropods and their traces from intertidal sandstones of Quebec and Wisconsin PALAIOS 25 8 475 486 doi 10 2110 palo 2009 p09 134r Getty P R amp J W Hagadorn 2008 Reinterpretation of Climactichnites Logan 1860 to include subsurface burrows and erection of Musculopodus for resting traces of the trailmaker Journal of Paleontology 82 6 1161 1172 doi 10 1666 08 004 1 Getty P R amp J W Hagadorn 2009 Palaeobiology of the Climactichnites tracemaker Palaeontology 52 4 753 778 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2009 00875 x Goldring R amp A Seilacher 1971 Limulid undertracks and their sedimentological implications Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Abhandlungen 137 422 442 Hagadorn J W amp E S Belt 2008 Stranded in upstate New York Cambrian scyphomedusae from the Potsdam Sandstone PALAIOS 23 7 424 441 doi 10 2110 palo 2006 p06 104r Hagadorn J W R H Dott amp D Damrow 2002 Stranded on an Upper Cambrian Shoreline Medusae from Central Wisconsin Geology 30 2 147 150 doi 10 1130 0091 7613 2002 030 lt 0147 SOALCS gt 2 0 CO 2 Hagadorn J W amp A Seilacher 2009 Hermit arthropods 500 million years ago Geology 37 4 295 298 doi 10 1130 G25181A 1 Hoxie C T 2005 Late Cambrian arthropod trackways in subaerially exposed environments Incentives to simplify a problematic ichnogenus Unpublished B A Thesis 1 89 MacNaughton R B J M Cole R W Dalrymple S J Braddy D E G Briggs amp T D Lukie 2002 First steps on land Arthropod trackways in Cambrian Ordovician eolian sandstones Canada Geology 30 5 391 394 doi 10 1130 0091 7613 2002 030 lt 0391 FSOLAT gt 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 130821454 Ortega Hernandez J Tremewan J amp Braddy S J 2010 Euthycarcinoids Geology Today 26 5 195 198 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2451 2010 00770 x Ostrom M E 1966 Cambrian Stratigraphy of Western Wisconsin Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey Owen R 1852 Description of the impressions and footprints of the Protichnites from the Potsdam sandstone of Canada Geological Society of London Quarterly Journal 8 1 2 214 225 doi 10 1144 GSL JGS 1852 008 01 02 26 Schieber J Bose P K Eriksson P G Banerjee S Sarkar S Altermann W Catuneau O 2007 Atlas of Microbial Mat Features Preserved within the Clastic Rock Record Elsevier pp 53 71 Seilacher A 2007 Trace Fossil Analysis New York New York Springer p 226 Seilacher A 2008 Biomats biofilms and bioglue as preservational agents for arthropod trackways Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 270 3 4 252 257 doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2008 07 011 Seilacher A amp J W Hagadorn 2010 Early molluscan evolution Evidence from the trace fossil record PALAIOS 25 9 565 575 doi 10 2110 palo 2009 p09 079r Yochelson E L amp M A Fedonkin 1993 Paleobiology of Climactichnites an enigmatic Late Cambrian fossil Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 74 74 1 74 doi 10 5479 si 00810266 74 1 Young G A amp J W Hagadorn 2010 The fossil record of cnidarian medusa Palaeoworld 19 3 4 212 221 doi 10 1016 j palwor 2010 09 014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blackberry Hill Blackberry Hill fossilsProvides a discussion of Blackberry Hill fossils as one of Paleontology Portal s Famous Flora and Fauna pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blackberry Hill amp oldid 1115669288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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