Lower and Middle Cambrian trace fossils from the Láncara and Oville formations in the area of Presa del Porma (Cantabrian Zone, northern Spain)
GÁMEZ VINTANED, J. A., MAYORAL E. AND GOZALO R.
The Lower Cambrian succession of the
Cantabrian Zone (northern part of the Iberian Massif, Spain) consists of two
lithosttratigraphic units: the basal Herrería Formation (a thick unit of
mainly coarse siliciclastics unconformably overlying the uppermost Precambrian
shales of the Narcea Group) and the Láncara Formation (composed of a Lower
dolomitic member and a calcareous upper member). The Lower/Middle Cambrian
boundary lies within the upper member of the Láncara Formation and is marked
by the FAD of the trilobite Eoparadoxides mureroensis (cf.
Gozalo
et
al.,
1993). The overlying Middle Cambrian
Oville Formation consists of greenish mudstones and scarce fine-grained
sandstones.
The Láncara and Oville formations crop
out downstream the dam wall of Presa del Porma (northern León province,
northern Spain). During our work, research was focused on two sections running
from the upper part of the basal dolomitic member of the Láncara Formation to
the Lower part of the Oville Formation. Sections separate by some 2 km. Sdzuy
(1969) established the trilobite biostratigraphy for most of rocks included
in the two sections but reported theminto a composite one, classically,known as Presa del Porma section.
Following indications by
Klaus Sdzuy, the bigger part of the classical Presa del Porma section is named
here section "Pu" ("u" stands for the German untere, Lower).
Zamarreño (1972) described the stratigraphy and sedimentology of the
Section "Pu".
The bottom of section "Pu"
records the upper part of the Lower, mainly dolomitic member of the Láncara
Formation. It is built up by 34 m, the Lower part of which are beige,
parallel-laminated platy dolomicrites with dark grey and yellowish claystones
interbedded; beige dolomicrites with interbedded bluish grey siltstones and
claystones appear at the upper part; both intervals are separated by some 3 m
covered. Sparse, simple trace fossils occur in yellowish claystones near the
bottom of the section (level Pu/0.2), consisting of smallsized burrows (2 to
4 mm in diameter) attributable to Helminthopsis
ichnosp. and aff. Neonereites,
as well as dispersal faecal pellets. Mud-tracks do also occur in
adjacent beds. Minuscule cf. Bergaueria
appear in bluish grey siltstones near the top of the member (level
Pu/0.12). Scarcity of ichnological data prevents from establishing any
ichnoassociation for this interval.
The boundary between the Lower and upper
members of the Láncara Formation is marked by a sharp contact on a
decimetric bed of red claystone. The basal part of the upper member is Middle
Cambrian in age (Sdzuy, 1995), and consists of 11 m of glauconitic, light grey
limestones. The brachiopod Trematobolus do occur. Ichnocoenoses occur in
glauconitic, light grey limestones with dispersal thin lenses of reddish
claystone (level Pu/5). Four types of traces have been identified,
concentrating at che contact between the two lithologies. Firstly,
crescent-shaped cf
Planolites
1.5 to 2.0 cm wide and 5 to 15 cm in length are preserved as
partial full reliefs overprinting the top of limestone beds. In most cases, the overlying claystone was eroded and we only know of its
existence from the partial preservation of the burrow´s muddy infill.. Secondly, apparently paired
vertical burrows identified as Cylindrichnus? are also common. They are
somewhat elliptical in cross section, 1 to 2 cm deep and 2 to 3 cm in the
bigger dimension across. Centres of paired burrows separate up to 6.5 cm.
Additionally, Rhizocorallium? 15
cm long and over 4 cm wide occur as limestone hyporeliefs,
A thickness of 10 m at the boundary
between the Láncara Formation and the overlyirig Oville Formation is covered
by soil, the covered interval possibly including the very basal part of the
latter unit. Ten metres of the basal Oville Formation were measured along the
section (top covered), consisting mainly of greyish green siltstones bearing
carbonate nodules, and subordinate reddish siltstones, very fine green
sandstones and centimetre-scale layers of limestone. Trace fossils are very
abundant and show a higher diversity than in previous ichnocoenoses: Cochlichnus
ichnosp. (1.3 mm across), Cylindrichnus
concentricus Toots in
Howard, 1966 (2 to 11 mm; appearing in both siltstone and
limestone), Planolites
annularis Walcott, 1890 (4 to 13 mm), P. beverleyensis (Billings,
1862) (3.5 to 5 mm), P. montanus
Richter, 1937 (2.5 to 3.5 mm), P. terraenovae Fillion and Pickerill, 1990 (11 mm), Planolites
ichnosp., Psammichnites
ichnosp. (7 mm), Sericichnus
mureroensis Gámez Vintaned and Mayoral,1995 (3 to 15 mm), Teichichnus
ichnosp. (9 to 34 mm across, and 4 to 20 mm in height), and
meniscate burrows (4 mm across). An ichnoassociation of Cylindrichnus+Teichichnus is representative
for the Oville Formation. Ichnocoenoses reflect soft substrata very rich in
nutrients, exploited by a diversity of soft-bodied organisms together with
trilobites in an open sublittoral setting.
According to Sdzuy (1969) and Gozalo et
al. (in this volume), the trilobites Acadolenus
decorus Sdzuy, 1968, Eccaparadoxides
asturianus (Sdzuy, 1968) and Tonkinella
aff. breviceps have been found at the bottom of the Oville
Formation, level Pu/21. The age of this assemblage is E. asturianus zone (i.e.., Upper Leonian, in the
Mediterranean biochranology). Badulesia
tenera (HARTT in Dawson, 1865) appears at the top of the
section (level Pu/24), indicating a lowermost Caesaraugustan age.
Section "Po".
It
starts with 17 m of beige dolomicrites, with dark grey and yellowish
claystones interbedded at the lower part, and bluish grey siltstones at the
upper part.
The boundary with the overlying upper member of the Láncara Formation is
covered. The basal 11 m of the upper member are glauconitic, secondary
dolostones. Then follow 5 m of light grey and greenish grey limestones,
griotte limestones, and bioclastic, glauconite-bearing reddish limestones. The
top of the upper member of the Láncara Formation is 2.3 m of griotte
limestones. According to Sdzuy (1969), the topmost strata of the griotte contain the trilobites
Asturiarpis cf. inopinatus, Corynexochus aff. delagei
and Peronopsella pokrovskajae pokrovskajae Sdzuy, 1968. This assemblage
correlates probably with early Acadolenus-bearing strata, and may indicate a
Middle to lowermost Upper Leonian age. No ichnofossils were recovered
throughout the formation.
A sharp contact separates the bottom of
the Oville Formation, which is made up by 4.4 m of greyish green siltstones
with carbonate nodules and two centimetre-scale beds of nodular limestone,
constituting the top of the section (levels Po/14 to Po/16). Trace fossils are
very abundant throughout the siltstones: Cylindrichnus concentricus (from
vertical to almost horizontal), Sericichnus
mureroensis, Planolites terraenovae,
and wandering Planolites? 1.5 cm across. The trilobite
Eccaparadoxides asturianus occurring at level Po/16 indicates an Upper Leonian
age.
Acknowledgements.
Financial support was profited from projects PB98-0994 and PB96-0744, DGES,
Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Cultura.
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