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Russian Geology and Geophysics

2013 year, number 9

BIOSTRATIGRAPHY AND AMMONITES OF THE MIDDLE OXFORDIAN TO LOWERMOST UPPER KIMMERIDGIAN IN NORTHERN CENTRAL SIBERIA

A. Wierzbowski, M. Rogov
Keywords: Northern Central Siberia, Oxfordian, Kimmeridgian, ammonites, phylogeny, taxonomy, zonal schemes, correlations

Abstract

The Middle Oxfordian to lowermost Upper Kimmeridgian ammonite faunas from northern Central Siberia (Nordvik, Chernokhrebentnaya, and Levaya Boyarka sections) are discussed, giving the basis for distinguishing the ammonite zones based on cardioceratid ammonites of the genus Amoeboceras (Boreal zonation), and, within the Kimmeridgian Stage, for distinguishing zones based on the aulacostephanid ammonites (Subboreal zonation). The succession of Boreal ammonites is essentially the same as in other areas of the Arctic and NW Europe, but the Subboreal ammonites differ somewhat from those known from NW Europe and Greenland. The Siberian aulacostephanid zones – the Involuta Zone and the Evoluta Zone — are correlated with the Baylei Zone (without its lowermost portion) and the Cymodoce Zone/lowermost part of the Mutabilis Zone (the Askepta Subzone) from NW Europe. The uniform character of the Boreal ammonite faunas in the Arctic makes possible a discussion on their phylogeny during the Late Oxfordian and Kimmeridgian: The succession of particular groups of Amoeboceras species referred to successive subgenera is revealed by the occurrence of well-differentiated assemblages of typical normal-sized macro- and microconchs, intermittently marked by the occurrence of assemblages of paedomorphic “small-sized microconchs” appearing at some levels preceding marked evolutionary modifications. Some comments on the paleontology of separate groups of ammonites are also given. These include a discussion on the occurrence of Middle Oxfordian ammonites of the genus Cardioceras in the Nordvik section in relation to the critical review of our previous paper. The discussion shows that the oldest deposits in the section belong to the Middle Oxfordian, which results in the necessity for some changes in the foraminiferal zonal scheme of Nikitenko et al. The ammonites of the Pictonia involuta group are distinguished as the new subgenus Mesezhnikovia Wierzbowski and Rogov.