Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-13T08:37:37.929Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biostratigraphic significance of brachiopods near the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2013

BERNARD MOTTEQUIN*
Affiliation:
Unité de Paléontologie animale, Département de Géologie, Université de Liège, Bâtiment B18, Allée du 6 Août, B–4000 Liège 1, Belgium
DENISE BRICE
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Paléontologie stratigraphique, Faculté Libre des Sciences et Institut Supérieur d'Agriculture, 48 Boulevard Vauban, F–59046 Lille, France
MARIE LEGRAND-BLAIN
Affiliation:
‘Tauzia’, 216 Cours du Général de Gaulle, F–33170 Gradignan, France
*
Author for correspondence: bmottequin@ulg.ac.be

Abstract

The biostratigraphic significance of selected uppermost Famennian (Upper Devonian) and lower Tournaisian (Mississippian) brachiopod genera, belonging to the orders Rhynchonellida (e.g. Araratella), Spiriferida (e.g. Sphenospira, Prospira), Spiriferinida (Syringothyris) and Productida (except Chonetidina), is discussed. Owing to the difficulties of identifying productidine and strophalosiidine genera, in contrast to rhynchonellides and spiriferides, the biostratigraphic potential of the former has generally been overlooked. Brachiopods flourished in neritic environments that were unfavourable for conodonts and ammonoids. In the absence of the latter traditional marker fossils, they are potentially important for locating the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary in shallow water depositional settings in conjunction with rugose corals and foraminifers. On a worldwide scale, further work is required to reach a better assessment of the aftermath of the Hangenberg biological Crisis on brachiopods, notably in revising the faunas from the classical areas of the Famennian and Tournaisian stages in Western Europe.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abramian, M. S. 1957. Brachiopods of Upper Famennian and Etroeungt Deposits of SW Armenia. Akademy Nauk Armyan SSR, Institut Geologii Nauk, Erevan, 142 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Abramian, M. S. 1974. Kamennougol'naia sistema–Brakhiopody. In Atlas Iskopaemyi Faunyi Armianskoy SSR (ed. Akopiana, V. T.), pp. 7785. Akademiya Armianskoy SSR-Institut Geologicheskikh Nauk.Google Scholar
Afanasjeva, G. A. 2002. Brachiopods of the Order Chonetida from the basin facies of the Devonian–Carboniferous transitional strata of the Thuringian and Rhenish Slate Mountains (Germany). Paleontological Journal 36, 626–31.Google Scholar
Afanasjeva, G. A. 2008. The genus Unispirifer Campbell (Brachiopoda, Spiriferida) in the Early Carboniferous in the Moscow Syneclise. Paleontological Journal 42, 373–7.Google Scholar
Afanasjeva, G. A., Alekseeva, R. E., Grunt, T. A., Lazarev, C. C., Komarov, V. N., Manankov, I. N., Pavlova, E. E., Rozman, X. C., Suur'suren, Sh., Ushatinskaya, G. T. & Erlanger, O. A., 2003. Paleontologia Mongolii Brakiopodii. Mongol Oulcin Sinjlechougani Akademii, Paleontologii Tov, 254 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Bahrammanesh, M., Angiolini, L., Antonelli, A. A., Aghababalou, B. & Gaetani, M. 2011. Tournaisian (Mississippian) brachiopods from the Mobarak Formation, North Iran. GeoArabia 16, 129–92.Google Scholar
Baliński, A. 1982. A new cardiarinid brachiopod (Rhynchonellacea). Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie Monatshefte 3, 129–36.Google Scholar
Baliński, A. 1996. Frasnian–Famennian brachiopod faunal extinction dynamics: an example from southern Poland. In Brachiopods. Proceedings of the Third International Brachiopod Congress, Sudbury/Ontario/Canada, 2–5 September 1995 (eds Copper, P. & Jin, J.), pp. 319–24. Balkema.Google Scholar
Baliński, A. 2002. Frasnian–Famennian brachiopod extinction and recovery in southern Poland. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 47, 289305.Google Scholar
Baliński, A. & Sun, Y. 2008. Micromorphic brachiopods from the Lower Carboniferous of South China, and their life habits. Fossils and Strata 54, 105–15.Google Scholar
Baliński, A. & Sun, Y. 2010. New paeckelmannelloidean spiriferids (Brachiopoda) from the early Mississippian of southern China. Special Papers in Palaeontology 84, 91–8.Google Scholar
Becker, R. T. 1996. New faunal records and holostratigraphic correlation of the Hasselbachtal D/C boundary auxiliary stratotype (Germany). Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique 117, 1945.Google Scholar
Brauckmann, C., Chlupáč, I. & Feist, R. 1993. Trilobites at the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary. Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique 115, 507–18.Google Scholar
Brice, D. 1971. Etude paléontologique et stratigraphique du Dévonien de l'Afghanistan. Notes et Mémoires du Moyen Orient 11, 1364.Google Scholar
Brice, D. 1997. Clarification sur la position systématique de Spirifer strunianus Gosselet, 1879, brachiopode du Famennien supérieur de l'Avesnois (N. France). Emendation du genre Eobrachythyris Brice, 1971 . Geobios, Mémoire spécial 20, 6773.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brice, D. 1999. New data on systematics of some Famennian spiriferid brachiopods from Afghanistan and Iran. Senckenbergiana lethaea 79, 281–95.Google Scholar
Brice, D., Carls, P., Cocks, L. R. M., Copper, P., García-Alcalde, Godefroid, J. & Racheboeuf, P. R. 2000. Brachiopoda. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 220, 6586.Google Scholar
Brice, D., Legrand-Blain, M. & Nicollin, J.-P. 2005. New data on Late Devonian and Lower Carboniferous Brachiopods from NW Sahara: Morocco, Algeria. Annales de la Société géologique du Nord, 12 (2nd series), 145.Google Scholar
Brice, D., Legrand-Blain, M. & Nicollin, J.-P. 2007. Brachiopod faunal changes across the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary in NW Sahara (Morocco, Algeria). In Devonian Events and Correlations (eds Becker, T. R. & Kirchgasser, W. T.), pp. 261–71. Geological Society of London, Special Publication no. 278.Google Scholar
Brice, D. & Nicollin, J.-P. 2000. Eobrachythyris Brice, 1971, an index genus (Spiriferid Brachiopod) for the Late Devonian and Early Carboniferous in Southern Anti Atlas (N. Africa), North Gondwana. Travaux de l'Institut Scientifique (Rabat), Série Géologie & Géographie Physique 20, 5968.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. 2007. Productidina. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 6 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 2639–74. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. & Lazarev, S. S. 1997. Evolution and classification of the Productellidae (Productida), upper Paleozoic brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology 71, 381–94.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C., Lazarev, S. S. & Grant, R. E. 1995. A review and new classification of the brachiopod order Productida. Palaeontology 38, 915–36.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C., Lazarev, S. S., Grant, R. E. & Jin, Y.-G. 2000. Productidina, Strophalosiidina. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 3 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 424609. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. & Mundy, D. J. C. 1986. Some Dinantian chonopectinid productaceans (Brachiopoda) from the British Isles. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society 46, 110.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. & Mundy, D. J. C. 1993. Productellid and plicatiferid (productoid) brachiopods from the Lower Carboniferous of the Craven Reef Belt, North Yorkshire. British Museum (Natural History) Bulletin (Geology) 49, 99119.Google Scholar
Bublichenko, N. I. 1971. Lower Carboniferous brachiopods of the Rudny Altai (Tarkham Formation). Akademiia Nauk Kazakhskoi SSR, Alma-Ata, 189 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Campi, M. J. & Shi, G. R. 2007. The LinshuichonetesCrurithyris community and new productid species from the Cisuralian (Early Permian) of Sichuan, China. Alcheringa 31, 185–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caplan, M. L. & Bustin, R. M. 1999. Devonian–Carboniferous Hangenberg mass extinction event, widespread organic-rich mudrock and anoxia: causes and consequences. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 148, 187207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1972. Early Mississippian brachiopods from the Gilmore City Limestone of Iowa. Journal of Paleontology 46, 473–91.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1974. New genera of spiriferid and brachythyridid brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology 48, 674–96.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1987. Lower Carboniferous brachiopods from the Banff Formation of western Alberta. Bulletin of Geological Survey of Canada 378, 1183.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1988. Early Mississippian brachiopods from the Glen Park Formation of Illinois and Missouri. Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History 27, 182.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1991. Subdivision of the Lower Carboniferous in North America by means of articulate brachiopod generic ranges. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 130, 145–55.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 2006. Paeckelmanelloidea [sic]. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1812–21. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. & Gourvennec, R. 2006 a. Spiriferida. Introduction. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1689–94. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. & Gourvennec, R. 2006 b. Spiriferidina. Introduction. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1877–80. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. & Johnson, J. G. 2006. Spiriferinida. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1877–937. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L., Johnson, J. G., Gourvennec, R. & Hou, H.-F. 2006. Spiriferida. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1689–870. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. & Kammer, T. W. 1990. Late Devonian and early Carboniferous brachiopods (Brachiopoda, Articulata) from the Price Formation of West Virginia and adjacent areas of Pennsylvanian and Maryland. Annals of Carnegie Museum 59, 77103.Google Scholar
Chen, Z. Q. 2004. Devonian–Carboniferous brachiopod zonation in the Tarim Basin, northwest China: implications for biostratigraphy and biogeography. Geological Journal 39, 431–58.Google Scholar
Chen, Z. Q. & Shi, G. R. 1999. Latest Devonian (Famennian) to earliest Carboniferous (Tournaisian) brachiopods from the Bachu Formation of the Tarim Basin, Xinjiang Province, northwest China. Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia 105, 231–50.Google Scholar
Chu, S. 1933. Corals and Brachiopoda of the Kinling Limestone. National Research Institute of Geology, Academia Sinica, Monographs (Nanking), Series A 2, 173.Google Scholar
Cisterna, G. A. & Isaacson, P. E. 2003. A new Carboniferous brachiopod genus from South America. Alcheringa 27, 6373.Google Scholar
Conil, R., Dreesen, R., Lentz, M.-A., Lys, M. & Plodowski, G. 1986. The Devono–Carboniferous transition in the Franco–Belgian Basin with reference to Foraminifera and Brachiopods. Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique 109, 1926.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A. 1954. Unusual Devonian brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology 28, 325–32.Google Scholar
Copper, P. 2002. Reef development at the Frasnian/Famennian mass extinction boundary. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 181, 2765.Google Scholar
Corradini, C. & Kaiser, S. I. 2009. Morphotypes in the early Siphonodella lineage: implications for the definition of the Devonian/Carboniferous boundary. In ICOS 2009 Abstracts (eds Henderson, Ch. M. & MacLean, Ch.), p. 13. Permophiles no. 53 (Supplement 1).Google Scholar
Corradini, C., Kaiser, S. I., Perri, M. C. & Spalletta, C. 2011. Protognathodus (Conodonta) and its potential as a tool for defining the Devonian/Carboniferous boundary. Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia 117, 1528.Google Scholar
Curry, G. B. & Brunton, C. H. C. 2007. Stratigraphic distribution of brachiopods. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 6 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 29013081. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Dehée, R. 1929. Description de la faune d'Etroeungt. Faune de passage du Dévonien au Carbonifère. Mémoires de la Société géologique de France (nouvelle série) 11, 164.Google Scholar
Fagerstrom, J. A. 1994. The history of Devonian–Carboniferous reef communities: extinctions, effects, recovery. Facies 30, 170–92.Google Scholar
Fotieva, N. N. 1985. A guide to brachiopods of boundary deposits of the Devonian and Carboniferous. Trudy Paleontologicheskii Institut Akademii Nauk SSSR, 212, 179 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Friedman, M. & Sallan, L. C. 2012. Five hundred million years of extinction and recovery: a Phanerozoic survey of large-scale diversity patterns in fishes. Palaeontology 55, 707–42.Google Scholar
Gaetani, M. 1964. Rossirhynchus adamantinus gen. n., sp. n. from the Tournaisian of central Elburz, Iran (Rhynchonellida). Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia 70, 637–48.Google Scholar
García-Alcalde, J. L. & Menéndez-Álvarez, J. R. 1988. The Devonian–Carboniferous Boundary in the Asturo-Leonese Domain (Cantabrian Mountains, NW Spain). Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 100, 2137.Google Scholar
García-Alcalde, J. L., Menéndez-Álvarez, J. R., García-López, S. & Soto, F. 1985. El Devónico Superior y el Carbonífero Inferior del Sinclinal de Beberino (Pola de Gordon, León, NO. de España). In Dixième Congrès International de Stratigraphie et de Géologie du Carbonifère, Madrid 1983, pp. 375386. Compte-rendu no. 2.Google Scholar
Gosselet, J. 1857. Note sur le terrain Dévonien de l'Ardenne et du Hainaut. Bulletin de la Société géologique de France 14, 364–74.Google Scholar
Grechishnikova, I. A. & Levitskii, E. S. 2011. The Famennian–Lower Carboniferous reference section Geran-Kalasi (Nakhichevan Autonomous Region, Azerbaijan). Stratigraphy and Geological Correlation 19, 2446.Google Scholar
Goldring, R. 1970. The stratigraphy about the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary in Barnstaple area of North Devon, England. In 6th International Congress of Carboniferous Stratigraphy and Geology, Sheffield 1967, pp. 807816. Compte-rendu no. 2.Google Scholar
Halamski, A. T. & Baliński, A. 2009. Latest Famennian brachiopods from Kowala, Holy Cross Mountains, Poland. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 54, 289306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hance, L. & Poty, E. 2006. Hastarian. Geologica Belgica 9, 111–16.Google Scholar
Havlíček, V. 1979. Upper Devonian and lower Tournaisian Rhynchonellida in Czechoslovakia. Vestník Ústredního ústavu geologického 54, 87101.Google Scholar
Havlíček, V. 1984. Paleontological supplement. Diagnoses of new genera and species. (Part 2). In Explanatory Booklet, Geological Map of Libya, 1:250,000, Sheet Sabhá NG 33–2 (eds Seidl, K. & Röhlich, P.), pp. 63–9. Tripoli: Industrial Research Centre, Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 2006 a. Adolfioidea. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1703–14. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G. 2006 b. Cyrtospiriferoidea. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 5 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1722–32. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Kaiser, S. I. 2009. The Devonian/Carboniferous boundary stratotype section (La Serre, France) revisited. Newsletters on Stratigraphy 43, 195205.Google Scholar
Kaiser, S. I., Becker, R. T., Steuber, T. & Aboussalam, S. Z. 2011. Climate-controlled mass extinctions, facies, and sea-level changes around the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary in the eastern Anti-Atlas (SE Morocco). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 310, 340–64.Google Scholar
Kalashnikov, N. V. 1974. Early Carboniferous Brachiopods from the Pechora Urals. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Komi Filial, Institut Geologii. Nauka, Leningrad, 220 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Kebria-ee, M. R. & Taghvaei, M. R. 2010. Some Strunian Brachiopoda from the Khoshyylagh Formation in the Meyghan section (NE Shahrud, Eastern Alborz of Iran). Geological Society of Australia, Abstracts 95, 59.Google Scholar
Krestovnikov, V. N. & Karpyshev, V. S. 1948. Fauna and stratigraphy of the Etroeungian beds of the Zigan river (southern Ural mountains). Trudy Geologicheskii Institut Akademii Nauk SSSR (Geologii) 66 (21), 2966 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Kullmann, J. 2002. Ammonoid evolution during the critical intervals before and after the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary and the Mid-Carboniferous boundary. Abhandlungen der Geologischen Bundesanstalt 57, 371–7.Google Scholar
Lazarev, S. S. 1989. Systematics of the Devonian brachiopod suborder Strophalosiidina. Paleontological Journal 23, 2536.Google Scholar
Lazarev, S. S. 1990. Evolution and systematics of productids. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskii Institut, Trudy 242, 1173 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Lazarev, S. S. 2004. Revision of the brachiopod Family Schrenkiellidae Lazarev, 1990 . Paleontological Journal 38, 154–61.Google Scholar
Lazarev, S. S. & Suur'suren, Sh. 1992. New productids (Brachiopoda) from the Carboniferous of Mongolia. In New Taxa of Invertebrate Fossils from Mongolia (ed. Grunt, T. A.), pp. 6170. Trudy Joint Russian/Mongolian Palaeontological Expedition 41 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Legrand-Blain, M. 1991. Les Brachiopodes Productacés Spinocarinifera nigra (Gosselet, 1888) et formes voisines dans le Dévono-Dinantien du Nord de la France et de la Belgique. Annales de la Société Géologique du Nord 1 (2ème série), 2952.Google Scholar
Legrand-Blain, M. 1995a. Relations entre les domaines d'Europe occidentale, d'Europe méridionale (Montagne Noire) et d'Afrique du Nord à la limite Dévonien-Carbonifère: les données des brachiopodes. Bulletin de la Société belge de Géologie 103, 7797.Google Scholar
Legrand-Blain, M. 1995 b. Les brachiopodes Productida au passage Dévonien-Carbonifère sur le craton nord-saharien. In Actes du 4ème colloque de Géologie africaine, Pau 1993 (eds Arbey, F. & Lorenz, J.), pp. 425–44. Editions du CTHS.Google Scholar
Legrand-Blain, M. & Martínez Chacón, M. L. 1988. Brachiopods at the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary, La Serre (Montagne Noire; Hérault, France): preliminary report. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 100, 119–27.Google Scholar
Li, X., Tan, L., Sun, Y. & Baliński, A. 2011. Discovery and significances of the brachiopod genus Axiodeaneia from Guangxi, China. Acta Paleontologica Sinica 50, 3240.Google Scholar
Ma, X. P, Zong, P. & Sun, Y. 2011. The Devonian (Famennian) sequence in the western Junggar area, northern Xinjiang, China. Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy Newsletter 26, 44–9.Google Scholar
Martynova, M. V. 1961. Stratigraphy and brachiopods of the Famennian Stage in west central Kazakhstan. Materialy po Geologii Tsentral'nogo Kazakhstana 2, 1211.Google Scholar
McKellar, R. G. 1970. The Devonian productoid brachiopod faunas of Queensland. Geological Survey of Queensland (Palaeontological Paper) 342, 140.Google Scholar
Menning, M., Alekseev, A. S., Chuvashov, B. I., Davydov, V. I., Devuyst, F.-X., Forke, H. C., Grunt, T. A., Hance, L., Heckel, P. H., Izokh, N. G., Jin, Y.-G., Jones, P. J., Kotlyar, G. V., Kozur, H. W., Nemyrovska, T. I., Schneider, J. W., Wang, X.-D., Weddige, K., Weyer, D. & Work, D. M. 2006. Global time scale and regional stratigraphic reference scales of Central and West Europe, East Europe, Tethys, South China, and North America as used in the Devonian–Carboniferous–Permian Correlation Chart 2003 (DCP 2003). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 240, 318–72.Google Scholar
Mergl, M. & Massa, D. 1992. Devonian and Lower Carboniferous brachiopods and bivalves from western Libya. Biostratigraphie du Paléozoïque 12, 1115.Google Scholar
Mottequin, B. 2008 a. Late Middle to Late Frasnian Atrypida, Pentamerida, and Terebratulida (Brachiopoda) from the Namur–Dinant Basin (Belgium). Geobios 41, 493513.Google Scholar
Mottequin, B. 2008 b. Late middle Frasnian to early Famennian (Late Devonian) strophomenid, orthotetid, and athyridid brachiopods from southern Belgium. Journal of Paleontology 82, 1052–73.Google Scholar
Mottequin, B. 2010. Mississipian (Tournaisian) brachiopods from the Hook Head Formation, County Wexford (south-east Ireland). Special Papers in Palaeontology 84, 243–85.Google Scholar
Mottequin, B. & Legrand-Blain, M. 2010. Late Tournaisian (Carboniferous) brachiopods from Mouydir (Central Sahara, Algeria). Geological Journal 45, 353–74.Google Scholar
Muir-Wood, H. & Cooper, G. A. 1960. Morphology, classification and life habits of the Productoidea (Brachiopoda). The Geological Society of America, Memoir 81, 1447.Google Scholar
Nalivkin, D. V. 1975. Brachiopoda. In Paleontological Atlas of Carboniferous Deposits of the Urals (ed. Stepanov, L.), pp. 154203. Vsesoiuznyi Neftianoi Nauchno-Issledovatel'skii Geologo-Razvedochnyi Institut (VNIGRI), Trudy no. 383 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Nalivkin, D. V. 1979. Brachiopods from the Tournaisian Stage of the Urals. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Otdelenie Geologii Geofiziki i Geokhimii, Nauka, Leningrad, 248 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Nicollin, J.-P. & Brice, D. 2001. Systematics, biostratigraphy and biogeography of four Famennian spiriferid brachiopods from Morocco. Geologica Belgica 3, 173–89.Google Scholar
Nicollin, J.-P. & Brice, D. 2004. Biostratigraphical value of some Strunian (Devonian, uppermost Famennian) Productidina, Rhynchonellida, Spiriferida, Spiriferinida brachiopods. Geobios 37, 437–53.Google Scholar
Paproth, E., Feist, R. & Flajs, G. 1991. Decision on the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary stratotype. Episodes 14, 331–6.Google Scholar
Plodowski, G. 1968. Neue Spiriferen aus Afghanistan. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 49, 251–9.Google Scholar
Plodowski, G. 1970. Stratigraphie und Spiriferen (Brachiopoda) des Paläozoikums der Dascht-e-Nawar SW (Afghanistan). Palaeontographica A 134, 1132.Google Scholar
Plodowski, G. & Kononova, L. 1994. Dichospirifer Brice, 1970, eine Leit-Gattung im höchsten Oberdevon (Mit einem Conodontenbiostratigraphischen Anhang). Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 169, 1727.Google Scholar
Poletaev, V. I. 1975. Early Carboniferous and Bashkirian smooth spiriferids and athyrids of the Donets Basin. Akademia Nauk Ukrainskoi SSR, Institut Geologicheskikh Nauk. Izdatelstvo Naukova Dumka, Kiev, 140 pp. (in Russian).Google Scholar
Poletaev, V. I. 2006. New species of spiriferids (Brachiopoda) from the Devonian and Carboniferous of eastern Europe. Paleontological Journal 40, 507–17.Google Scholar
Poletaev, V. I. & Lazarev, S. S. 1995. General stratigraphic scale and brachiopod evolution in the late Devonian and Carboniferous subequatorial belt. Bulletin de la Société belge de Géologie 103, 99107.Google Scholar
Poty, E. 1999. Famennian and Tournaisian recoveries of shallow water Rugosa following late Frasnian and late Strunian major crises, southern Belgium and surrounding areas, Hunan (South China) and the Omolon region (NE Siberia). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 154, 1126.Google Scholar
Poty, E., Denayer, J. & Mottequin, B. 2011. Middle and Late Frasnian (Late Devonian) sea-level changes in Southern Belgium: their consequences on corals and brachiopods. Kölner Forum für Geologie und Paläontologie 19, 137–8.Google Scholar
Roberts, J. 1971. Devonian and Carboniferous brachiopods from the Bonaparte Gulf Basin, Northwestern Australia. Bulletin of the Australia Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics 122, 1319.Google Scholar
Rozman, H. S. 1962. Stratigraphy and brachiopods of the Famennian stage of Mugodzhars and adjacent areas. Trudy Geologičeskogo Instituta AN SSSR, 50, 1187 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Rzhonsnitskaya, M. A. 1988. The Brachiopoda of the Devonian/Carboniferous boundary deposits on the USSR territory. In The Devonian/Carboniferous Boundary at the Territory of the USSR (eds Sokolov, B. S., M. Kalmikova, A & Dohakova, L. M.), pp. 262–71. Minsk: Nauka i Technica (in Russian).Google Scholar
Sartenaer, P. 1970. Nouveaux genres rhynchonellides (Brachiopodes) du Paléozoïque. Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique 46 (32), 132.Google Scholar
Sartenaer, P. 1997. Novaplatirostrum, late Famennian rhynchonellid brachiopod genus from Sauerland and Thuringia (Germany). Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique, Sciences de la Terre 67, 2537.Google Scholar
Sartenaer, P. 1998. The presence in Morocco of the late Famennian genus Hadyrhyncha Havlíček, 1979 (rhynchonellid, brachiopod). Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique, Sciences de la Terre 68, 115–20.Google Scholar
Sartenaer, P. & Plodowski, G. 1996. Restatement of the late Tournaisian Spirifer tornacensis de Koninck, 1883 on the base of the original collection. Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique, Sciences de la Terre 66, 5371.Google Scholar
Sartenaer, P. & Plodowski, G. 2003. Reassessment of the Strunian genus Araratella Abramian, Plodowski and Sartenaer, 1975 in the northern Gondwanaland (Rhynchonellida, Brachiopoda). Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 242, 329–48.Google Scholar
Savage, N. M. 2002 a. Camarotoechioidea. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 4 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1132–64. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Savage, N. M. 2002 b. Rhynchoporoidea. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 4 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1232–5. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Savage, N. M. 2002 c. Rhynchotetratidae and Tetracameridae. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 4 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1246–51. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Savage, N. M., Manceñido, M. O., Owen, E. F., Carlson, S. J., Grant, R. E., Dagys, A. S. & Sun, D.-L. 2002. Rhynchonellida. In Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H, Brachiopoda, 4 (revised) (ed. Kaesler, R. L.), pp. 1027–376. Boulder and Lawrence: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Shilo, N. A., Bouckaert, J., Afanasjeva, G. A., Bless, M. J. M., Conil, R., Erlanger, O. A., Gagiev, M. H., Lazarev, S. S., Onoprienko, Y. I., Poty, E., Razina, T. P., Simakov, K. V., Smirnova, L. V., Streel, M. & Swennen, R. 1984. Sedimentological and paleontological Atlas of the Late Famennian and Tournaisian in the Omolon Region (NE-USSR). Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique 107, 137247.Google Scholar
Simakov, K. V. 1990. Major evolutionary events among spiriferids at the Devonian–Carboniferous boundary. In Extinction Events in Earth History (ed. Walliser, O. H.), pp. 189–98. Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences no. 30.Google Scholar
Stainbrook, M. A. 1947. Brachiopoda of the Percha Shale of New Mexico and Arizona. Journal of Paleontology 21, 297328.Google Scholar
Streel, M., Brice, D. & Mistiaen, B. 2006. Strunian. Geologica Belgica 9, 105–9.Google Scholar
Streel, M., Caputo, M. V., Loboziak, S. & Melo, J. H. G. 2000. Late Frasnian–Famennian climates based on palynomorph analyses and the question of the Late Devonian glaciations. Earth-Science Reviews 52, 121–73.Google Scholar
Sun, Y. & Baliński, A. 2008. Silicified Mississippian brachiopods form Muhua, southern China: lingulids, craniids, strophomenids, productids, orthotetids, and orthids. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 53, 485524.Google Scholar
Sun, Y. & Baliński, A. 2011. Silicified Mississippian brachiopods from Muhua, southern China: rhynchonellides, athyridides, spiriferides, spiriferinides, and terebratulides. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 56, 793842.Google Scholar
Sun, Y., Ma, X., Zhang, Y. & Wang, H. 2006. Diversity pattern of Tournaisian brachiopods in South China. In Originations, Radiations and Biodiversity Changes–Evidences from the Chinese Fossil Record (eds Rong, J., Fang, Z., Zhou, Z., Zhan, R., Wang, X. & Yuan, X.), pp. 477–85, 893–5. Beijing: Beijing Science Press.Google Scholar
Tan, Z. X. 1986. Early Carboniferous brachiopods from the Liujiatang Formation of central Hunan. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 25, 426–44 (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Tan, Z. X. 1987. Brachiopoda. In The Late Devonian and Early Carboniferous Strata and Palaeobiocoenosis of Hunan (eds Tan, Z., Dong, Z., Jin, Y., Li, S. & Yang, Y.), pp. 111–33. Beijing: Geological Publishing House (in Chinese).Google Scholar
Tsyganko, B. S. 2008. Famennian substage boundaries. Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy Newsletter 23, 6870.Google Scholar
Veevers, J. J. 1959. Devonian brachiopods from the Fitzroy Basin, Western Australia. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics Bulletin 45, 1220.Google Scholar
Weyer, D. 1972. Rozmanaria, ein neues Rhynchonellida-Genus aus dem europäischen Oberfamenne. Geologie 21, 8499.Google Scholar
Winchell, A. 1865. Descriptions of new species of fossils, from the Marshall Group of Michigan, and its supposed equivalent, in other states; with notes on some fossils of the same age previously described. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Proceedings (series 2) 17, 109–33.Google Scholar
Xu, H. K., & Yao, Z. G. 1988. Brachiopoda. In Devonian–Carboniferous Boundary in Nanbiancun, Guilin, China. Aspects and Records (ed. Yu, C. M.), pp. 263326. Beijing: Beijing Science Press.Google Scholar
Zong, P., Ma, X. & Sun, Y. 2012. Productide, athyridide and terebratulide brachiopods across the Devonian and Carboniferous boundary in western Junggar, Xinjiang. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica, 51, 416–35 (in Chinese).Google Scholar