Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-x4r87 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T08:21:01.631Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early Ordovician (Skullrockian) Trilobites of the Antiklinalbugt Formation, Northeast Greenland, and their Biostratigraphic Significance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2015

Lucy M. E. McCobb
Affiliation:
Geology Department, National Museum of Wales, Cathays Park, Cardiff, CF10 3NP, UK,
W. Douglas Boyce
Affiliation:
Geological Survey, Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Natural Resources, P.O. Box 8700, St. John's, NL, Canada A1B 4J6, ;
Ian Knight
Affiliation:
Geological Survey, Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Natural Resources, P.O. Box 8700, St. John's, NL, Canada A1B 4J6, ;
Svend Stouge
Affiliation:
Natural History Museum of Denmark (Geological Museum), Øster Voldgade 5–7, DK-1350 Copenhagen K, Denmark,

Abstract

The Antiklinalbugt Formation of northeast Greenland comprises peritidal to subtidal carbonate sediments, deposited in shallow shelf settings during an early Tremadocian transgressive-regressive megacycle. The succession of shales and microbial, muddy and grainy limestone, with minor dolostone at the base and top, terminates at the cryptic Fimbulfjeld disconformity. The formation has yielded trilobites collected on Ella Ø, Albert Heim Bjerge, and Kap Weber by C. Poulsen (1920s and 1930s), J. W. Cowie and P. J. Adams (1950s), and during recent field studies in 2000 and 2001. The fauna includes dimeropygids Tulepyge cowiei and T. tesella n. spp., hystricurids Millardicurus and Hystricurus, and several species of Symphysurina. Micragnostus chiushuensis (Kobayashi, 1931) is rare, as are Chasbellus sp., Clelandia sp., and Lunacrania?. The presence of several Symphysurina species places the Antiklinalbugt Formation within the Symphysurina Zone. Chasbellus indicates the upper (lower Ordovician) part of the Symphysurina Zone for the lower upper Antiklinalbugt Formation. Conodonts place the middle lower formation in the Cordylodus intermedius conodont Biozone, the lower upper part in the Cordylodus angulatus conodont Biozone and the uppermost part in the Rossodus manitouensis conodont Biozone. This combined fauna is characteristic of the upper Skullrockian Stage of the Ibexian Series, with the lower part of the Antiklinalbugt Formation lying within the uppermost Cambrian of North America, and the upper part within the lower Ordovician. The entire formation lies within the global Tremadocian Stage of the early Ordovician.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

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

Adrain, J. M. and Westrop, S. R. 2006 a. New genus of dimeropygid trilobites from the earliest Ordovician of Laurentia. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 51:541550.Google Scholar
Adrain, J. M. and Westrop, S. R. 2006 b. New earliest Ordovician trilobite genus Millardicurus: The oldest known hystricurid. Journal of Paleontology, 80:650671.Google Scholar
Adrain, J. M., Lee, D.-C., Westrop, S. R., Chatterton, B. D. E., and Landing, E. 2003. Classification of the trilobite subfamilies Hystricurinae and Hintzecurinae subfam. nov., with new genera from the Lower Ordovician (Ibexian) of Idaho and Utah. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 48:553586.Google Scholar
Barnes, C. R. 1988. The proposed Cambrian–Ordovician global Boundary stratotype and point (GSSP) in Western Newfoundland. Geological Magazine, 125:381414.Google Scholar
Bergström, S. M., Chen, X., Gutiérrez-Marco, J. C., and Dronov, A. 2009. The new chronostratigraphic classification of the Ordovician System and its relations to major regional series and stages and to δ13 C chemostratigraphy. Lethaia, 42:97107.Google Scholar
Billings, E. 1859. Descriptions of some new species of trilobites from the lower and middle Silurian rocks of Canada. Canadian Naturalist and Geologist, 4:367383.Google Scholar
Boyce, W. D. 1989. Early Ordovician trilobite faunas of the Boat Harbor and Catoche Formations (St. George Group) in the Boat Harbor-Cape Norman area, Great Northern Peninsula, western Newfoundland. Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Mines and Energy, Geological Survey Branch, Report 89-2, 169 p.Google Scholar
Boyce, W. D., Mccobb, L. M. E., and Knight, I. 2011. Stratigraphic studies of the Watts Bight Formation (St. George Group), Port au Port Peninsula, western Newfoundland. In Current Research. Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Natural Resources, Mines Branch, Report 11–1.Google Scholar
Braithwate, L. F. 1976. Graptolites from the Lower Ordovician Pogonip Group of western Utah. Special Papers of the Geological Society of America, 166:1106.Google Scholar
Branson, E. B. and Mehl, M. G. 1933. Conodont studies, numbers 1 and 2. University of Missouri Studies, 8:1167.Google Scholar
Brezinski, D. K., Repetski, J. E., and Taylor, J. F. 1999. Stratigraphic and paleontologic record of the Sauk III regression in the central Appalachians. National Park Service, Paleontological Research, 4:3241.Google Scholar
Bridge, J. and Cloud, P. E. Jr. 1947. New gastropods and trilobites critical in the correlation of Lower Ordovician rocks. American Journal of Science, 245:545559.Google Scholar
Cleland, H. F. 1900. The Calciferous of the Mohawk Valley. Bulletins of American Paleontology, 13, 26 p.Google Scholar
Cleland, H. F. 1903. Further notes on the Calciferous (Beekmantown) Formation of the Mohawk Valley, with descriptions of new species. Bulletins of American Paleontology, 18, 25 p.Google Scholar
Cloud, P. E. Jr. and Barnes, V. E. 1948. The Ellenburger Group of central Texas. The University of Texas, Publication Number 4621, 473 p.Google Scholar
Cooper, R. A., Nowlan, G. S., and Williams, S. H. 2001. Global stratotype section and point for base of the Ordovician System. Episodes, 24:1928.Google Scholar
Cossman, M. 1902. Rectifications de nomenclature. Revue critique de Paléozöologie, 6:52.Google Scholar
Cowie, J. W. and Adams, P. J. 1957. The geology of the Cambro–Ordovician rocks of Central East Greenland. Pt. 1. Stratigraphy and Structure. Meddelelser om Grønland, 153(1), 193 p.Google Scholar
Dean, W. T. 1977. The Early Ordovician trilobite genus Missisquoia Shaw, 1951 in the southern Canadian Rocky Mountains of Alberta and British Columbia. Geological Survey of Canada Paper, 76–33:7 p.Google Scholar
Dean, W. T. 1989. Trilobites from the Survey Peak, Outram and Skoki Formations (Upper Cambrian–Lower Ordovician) at Wilcox Pass, Jasper National Park, Alberta. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 389, 141 p.Google Scholar
Escher, J. C. and Pulvertaft, T. C. R. 1995. Geological map of Greenland, 1:2 500 000. Copenhagen, Geological Survey of Greenland.Google Scholar
Ethington, R. L. and Clark, D. L. 1971. Lower Ordovician conodonts in North America. In Sweet, W. C. and Bergström, S. M. (eds.), Symposium on Conodont Biostratigraphy. Geological Society of America Memoir, 127:6382.Google Scholar
Ethington, R. L. and Clark, D. L. 1981. Lower and Middle Ordovician conodonts from the Ibex area, western Millard County, Utah. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 28 (2):1155.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. 1980. The Ordovician trilobites of Spitsbergen. III. Remaining trilobites of the Valhallfonna Formation. Skrifter Norsk Polarinstitutt 171, 163 p.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. 1983. Cambrian–Ordovician trilobites from the boundary beds in western Newfoundland and their phylogenetic significance, p. 179211. In Briggs, D. E. G. and Lane, P. D. (eds.), Trilobites and Other Early Arthropods: Papers in Honor of Professor H. B. Whittington, F. R. S. Special Papers in Palaeontology, 30.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. and Chatterton, B. D. E. 1988. Classification of the Trilobite Suborder Asaphina. Palaeontology, 31:165222.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. and Owens, R. M. 1975. Proetida: A new order of trilobites. Fossils and Strata, 4:227239.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. and Peel, J. S. 1989. Stratigraphy and hystricurid trilobites of the Christian Elv Formation (Lower Ordovician) of western North Greenland. Rapp. Grønlands Geol. Unders., 144:515.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A. and Skevington, D. 1980. Correlation of Cambrian–Ordovician boundary between Europe and North America: New data from western Newfoundland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 17:382388.Google Scholar
Fortey, R. A., Landing, E., and Skevington, D. 1982. Cambrian–Ordovician boundary sections in the Cow Head Group, western Newfoundland, p. 95129. In Bassett, M. G. and Dean, W. T. (eds.), The Cambrian–Ordovician Boundary: Sections, Fossil Distributions, and Correlations. National Museum of Wales, Geological Series, 3.Google Scholar
Furnish, W. M. 1938. Conodonts from the Prairie du Chien beds of the upper Mississippi Valley. Journal of Paleontology, 12:318388.Google Scholar
Gotto, A. P. 1976. Ordovician trilobites and biostratigraphy of East Greenland. Unpublished M.Sc. thesis, University of Bristol.Google Scholar
Harrington, H. J. 1938. Sobre las faunas del Ordoviciano Inferior del Norte Argentino. Revista del Museo de La Plata. Sección Paleont. New Series 1:109289.Google Scholar
Harrington, A. H. and Leanza, A. F. 1957. Ordovician trilobites of Argentina. Special Publications of the Department of Geology University of Kansas, 1:276 p.Google Scholar
Heller, R. L. 1956. Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Roubidoux Formation of Missouri. Missouri Geological Survey and Water Resources, Series 2, 35:1113 (for 1954).Google Scholar
Higgins, A. K., Leslie, A. G., and Smith, M. P. 2001. Neoproterozoic–lower Paleozoic stratigraphical relationships in the marginal thin-skinned thrust belt of the East Greenland Caledonides: comparisons with the foreland in Scotland. Geological Magazine, 138:143160.Google Scholar
Hintze, L. F. 1953. Lower Ordovician trilobites from western Utah and eastern Nevada. Utah Geological and Mineralogical Survey Bulletin, for 1952, 48:1249.Google Scholar
Howell, B. F. 1935. Cambrian and Ordovician trilobites from Hérault, southern France. Journal of Paleontology, 9:222238.Google Scholar
Hu, C.-H. 1973. Description of basal Ordovician trilobites from the Deadwood Formation, northern Black Hills, South Dakota. Proceedings of the Geological Society of China, 16:8995.Google Scholar
Hupé, P. 1953. Classe des Trilobites, p. 44246. In Piveteau, J. (ed.), Traité de Paléontologie. Paris.Google Scholar
Hupé, P. 1955. Classification des trilobites. Annales de Paléontologie, 41:91325.Google Scholar
Huselbee, M. Y. 1998. Late Cambrian to earliest Ordovician (Ibexian) conodont evolution and biogeography of Greenland and northwest Scotland. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham, 296 p.Google Scholar
James, N. P. and Stevens, R. K. 1986. Stratigraphy and correlation of the Cambro–Ordovician Cow Head Group, western Newfoundland, Geological Survey of Canada, Bulletin 366, 143 p.Google Scholar
Jeppsson, L. and Anehus, R. 1999. A new technique to separate conodont elements from heavier minerals. Alcheringa, 23:5762.Google Scholar
Ji, Z. and Barnes, C. R. 1994. Lower Ordovician conodonts of the St. George Group, Port au Port Peninsula, western Newfoundland, Canada. Palaeontographica Canadiana 11, 149 p.Google Scholar
Karim, T. S. 2008. Olenid-dominated trilobite fauna from the Shallow Bay Formation (Cow Head Group), Cambrian–Ordovician boundary interval, western Newfoundland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 45:407425.Google Scholar
Kindle, C. H. 1929. An “Ozarkian” fauna from Jasper Park, Alberta. The Canadian Field-Naturalist, 43:144147.Google Scholar
Kindle, C. H. and Whittington, H. B. 1958. Stratigraphy of the Cow Head region, western Newfoundland. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 60:315342.Google Scholar
Knight, I., Azmy, K., Boyce, W. D., and Lavoie, D. 2008. Tremadocian carbonate rocks of the lower St. George Group, Port au Port Peninsula, western Newfoundland: lithostratigraphic setting of diagenetic, isotopic and geochemistry studies. In Current Research. Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Mines and Energy, Geological Survey Branch, Report 08-1:115149.Google Scholar
Kobayashi, T. 1931. Studies on the stratigraphy and palaeontology of the Cambro–Ordovician formation of Hua-lie-chai and Niu-hsin-tai, South Manchuria. Japanese Journal of Geology and Geography, 8:131189.Google Scholar
Kobayashi, T. 1933. Faunal study of the Wanwanian (basal Ordovician) Series with special notes on the Ribeiridae and the ellesmereoceroids. Journal of the Faculty of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo, Section II, 3:249328.Google Scholar
Kobayashi, T. 1939. On the Agnostids. Part 1. Journal of the Faculty of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo, sect. 2, 4:369522.Google Scholar
Kobayashi, T. 1955. The Ordovician fossils from the McKay Group in British Columbia, western Canada, with a note on the Early Ordovician paleogeography. Journal of the Faculty of Science, University of Tokyo, sect. 2, 9:355493.Google Scholar
Kurtz, V. E. and Miller, J. F. 1981. Early Ordovician conodont faunas from central East Greenland. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, 13:285.Google Scholar
Lake, P. 1906. A Monograph of the British Cambrian trilobites. Part 1. Palaeontographical Society Monograph, 28 p.Google Scholar
Landing, E., Westrop, S. R., and Knox, L. A. 1996. Conodonts, stratigraphy, and relative sea-level changes of the Tribes Hill Formation (Lower Ordovician, east-central New York). Journal of Paleontology, 70:656680.Google Scholar
Landing, E., Westrop, S. R., and Van Aller Hernick, L. 2003. Uppermost Cambrian–Lower Ordovician faunas and Laurentian platform sequence stratigraphy, eastern New York and Vermont. Journal of Paleontology, 77:7898.Google Scholar
Landing, E., Westrop, S. R., Kröger, B., and English, A. M. 2011. Left behind—delayed extinction and a relict trilobite fauna in the Cambrian–Ordovician boundary succession (east Laurentian platform, New York). Geological Magazine, 148:529557.Google Scholar
Lee, S-B and Choi, D. K. 2007. Trilobites of the Pseudokoldinioidia fauna (uppermost Cambrian) from the Taebaek Group, Taebaeksan Basin, Korea. Journal of Paleontology, 81:14541465.Google Scholar
Lee, S.-B., Lee, D.-C., and Choi, D. K. 2008. Cambrian–Ordovician trilobite family Missisquoiidae Hupé, 1955: Systematic revision and palaeogeographical considerations based on cladsitic analysis. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 260:315341.Google Scholar
Loch, J. D., Stitt, J. H., and Derby, J. R. 1993. Cambrian–Ordovician boundary interval extinctions: implications of revised trilobite and brachiopod data from Mount Wilson, Alberta, Canada. Journal of Paleontology, 67:497517.Google Scholar
Loch, J. D. and Taylor, J. F. 2011. New symphysurinid trilobites from the Cambrian–Ordovician boundary interval in the western United States. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 42:417436.Google Scholar
Lochman, C. 1964. Basal Ordovician faunas from the Williston Basin, Montana. Journal of Paleontology, 38:453476.Google Scholar
Lochman-Balk, C. and Wilson, J. L. 1967. Stratigraphy of upper Cambrian–Lower Ordovician subsurface sequence in Williston Basin. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 51:883917.Google Scholar
Ludvigsen, R. 1982. Upper Cambrian and Lower Ordovician biostratigraphy of the Rabbitkettle Formation, western District of MacKenzie. Royal Ontario Museum, Life Sciences Contributions, 134:188.Google Scholar
Matthew, G. F. 1888. Illustrations of the fauna of the St. John Group, No. IV. Part I. Description of a new species of Paradoxides (Paradoxides regina). Part II. The smaller trilobites with eyes (Ptychoparidae and Ellipsocephalidae). Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada, 5:115166.Google Scholar
Matthew, G. F. 1892. Illustrations of the fauna of the St. John Group, 6. Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada, 9:3365.Google Scholar
McCobb, L. M. E., Boyce, W. D., Knight, I., and Stouge, S. In press. Lower Ordovician trilobites from the Septembersø formation, north-east Greenland. Alcheringa.Google Scholar
Mccobb, L. M. E. and Owens, R. M. 2008. Ordovician (Ibex–Whiterock) trilobites from north-east Greenland, p. 253258. In Rábano, I., Gozalo, R. and García-Bellido, D. (eds.), Advances in Trilobite Research. Cuadernos del Museo Geominero, 9. Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, Madrid.Google Scholar
M'coy, F. 1849. On the classification of some British fossil Crustacea, with notices of new forms in the University collection at Cambridge. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Ser. 2, 4:161179, 392–414.Google Scholar
Miller, J. F. 1969. Conodont fauna from the Notch Peak Limestone (Cambro–Ordovician), House Range, Utah. Journal of Paleontology, 43:413439.Google Scholar
Miller, J. F., Evans, K. R., Loch, J. D., Ethington, R. L., Stitt, J. H., Holmer, L., and Popov, L. E. 2003. Stratigraphy of the Sauk III Interval (Cambrian–Ordovician) in the Ibex area, western Millard County, Utah and central Texas. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 44:23118.Google Scholar
Müller, K. J. 1959. Kambrische Conodonten. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Geologischen Gesellschaft, 111:434485.Google Scholar
Nielsen, A. T. 1996. A review of Ordovician agnostid genera (Trilobita). Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences, 87:463501.Google Scholar
Nicoll, R. S., Miller, J. F., Nowlan, G. S., Repetski, J. E., and Ethington, R. L. 1999. Iapetonudus (n. gen.) and Iapetognathus Landing, unusual earliest Ordovician multielement conodont taxa and their utility for biostratigraphy. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 44:2755.Google Scholar
Norford, B. S. 1969. The early Canadian (Tremadocian) trilobites Clelandia and Jujuyaspis from the southern Rocky Mountains of Canada. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin, 182:115.Google Scholar
Orndorff, R. C., Taylor, J. F. and Traut, R. W. 1988. Uppermost Cambrian and lowest Ordovician conodont and trilobite biostratigraphy in northwestern Virginia.Virginia Minerals, 34 (2):1320.Google Scholar
Palmer, A. R. 1968. Cambrian trilobites of east-central Alaska. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, 559-B, 115 p.Google Scholar
Pander, C. H. 1856. Monographie der fossilen Fische des silurischen Systems der russischbaltischen Gouvernements. Akademie der Wissenschaften St. Petersburg, 91 p.Google Scholar
Peel, J. S. and Cowie, J. W. 1979. New names for Ordovician formations in Greenland. In Peel, J. S. (ed.), Lower Palaeozoic stratigraphy and palaeontology: Shorter contributions. Rapport Grønlands Geologiske Undersøgelse, 91:117124.Google Scholar
Poulsen, C. 1927. The Cambrian, Ozarkian and Canadian faunas of Northwest Greenland. Meddelelser om Grønland, 70:235343.Google Scholar
Poulsen, C. 1930. Contributions to the stratigraphy of the Cambro–Ordovician of East Greenland. Meddelelser om Grønland, 74:297316.Google Scholar
Poulsen, C. 1937. On the Lower Ordovician faunas of East Greenland. Meddelelser om Grønland, 119:172.Google Scholar
Poulsen, C. and Rasmussen, H. W. 1951. Geological Map (scale 1:50,000) and description of Ella Ø. Meddelelser om Grønland, 151, Nr 5: 25p.Google Scholar
Raymond, P. E. 1913. Notes on some new and old trilobites in the Victoria Memorial Museum, Canada Geological Survey (Ottawa). Bulletin of the Victoria Memorial Museum, 1:3339.Google Scholar
Raymond, P. E. 1937. Upper Cambrian and Lower Ordovician Trilobita and Ostracoda from Vermont. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 48:10791146.Google Scholar
Repetski, J. and Ethington, R. L. 1983. Rossodus manitouensis (Conodonta), a new early Ordovician index fossil. Journal of Paleontology, 57:289301.Google Scholar
Resser, C. E. 1942. New upper Cambrian trilobites. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 103 (5):1136.Google Scholar
Robison, R. A. and Pantoja-Alor, J. 1968. Tremadocian trilobites from the Nochixtlán Region, Oaxaca, Mexico. Journal of Paleontology, 42:767800.Google Scholar
Ross, R. J. 1951. Stratigraphy of the Garden City Formation in north-eastern Utah, and its trilobite faunas. Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, 6:1161.Google Scholar
Ross, R. J. 1967. Some Middle Ordovician brachiopods and trilobites from the Basin Ranges, western United States. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 523-D, 43 p.Google Scholar
Ross, R. J. Jr., Hintze, L. F., Ethington, R. L., Miller, J. F., Taylor, M. E., and Repetski, J. E. 1997. The Ibexian, lowermost series in the North American Ordovician. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper 1579A, p. 150.Google Scholar
Rushton, A. W. A. and Tripp, R. P. 1979. A fossiliferous lower Canadian (Tremadoc) boulder from the Benan Conglomerate of the Girvan district. Scottish Journal of Geology, 15:321327.Google Scholar
Salter, J. W. 1864 –1883. A monograph of the British trilobites. Palaeontographical Society, London, 224 p.Google Scholar
Schaub, H. P. 1955. Tectonics and morphology of Kap Oswald (NE Greenland), Medelesser om Grønland, Bind 103, no.10, 33 p.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. B. 1951. The paleontology of northwestern Vermont. I. New Late Cambrian trilobites. Journal of Paleontology, 25:97114.Google Scholar
Shergold, J. H., Laurie, J. R. and Sun, X. 1990. Classification and review of the trilobite order Agnostida Salter, 1864: an Australian perspective. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics Australia Report 296, p. 193.Google Scholar
Smith, M. P. 1982. Conodonts from the Ordovician of East Greenland. Rapport Grønlands Geoliske Undersøgelse, 108:14.Google Scholar
Smith, M. P. 1991. Early Ordovician conodonts of East and North Greenland. Meddelelser om Grønland, Geoscience, 26, 81 p.Google Scholar
Smith, M. P., Rasmussen, J. A., Higgins, A. K., and Leslie, A. G. 2004. Lower Palaeozoic stratigraphy of the East Greenland Caledonides. Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, 6:528.Google Scholar
Smith, M. P. and Rasmussen, J. A. 2008. Cambrian–Silurian development of the Laurentian margin of the Iapetus Ocean in Greenland and related areas. Geological Society of America Memoir, 202:137167.Google Scholar
Stitt, J. H. 1971. Late Cambrian and earliest Ordovician trilobites, Timbered Hills and Lower Arbuckle Groups, western Arbuckle Mountains, Murray County, Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin 110, 83 p.Google Scholar
Stitt, J. H. 1977. Late Cambrian and earliest Ordovician trilobites, Wichita Mountains area, Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin 124, 79 p.Google Scholar
Stitt, J. H. 1983. Trilobites, biostratigraphy, and lithostratigraphy of the McKenzie Hill Limestone (Lower Ordovician), Wichita and Arbuckle Mountains, Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin 134, 54 p.Google Scholar
Stitt, J. H. and Straatmann, W. M. 1997. Trilobites from the upper part of the Deadwood Formation (upper Franconian and Trempealeauan stages, upper Cambrian), Black Hills, South Dakota. Journal of Paleontology, 71:86102.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Boyce, W. D., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., and Knight, I. 2001. Vendian–Lower Ordovician stratigraphy of Ella Ø, north-east Greenland: new investigations. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 189:107114.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Boyce, W. D., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., and Knight, I. 2002. Lower–Middle Ordovician stratigraphy of north-east Greenland. Geology of the Greenland Survey Bulletin, 191:117125.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Boyce, W. D., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., and Knight, I. 2003. The Ordovician succession of north-east Greenland: Stratigraphy and significance. INSUGEO, Serie Correlación Geológica, 17:145149.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Boyce, W. D., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., and Knight, I., 2012 a. Extended abstract—development of the lower Cambrian–Middle Ordovician carbonate platform: North Atlantic Region. In Derby, J. R., Fritz, R. D., Longacre, S. A., Morgan, W. A., and Sternbach, C. A. (eds.), The Great American Carbonate Bank: The Geology and Economic Resources of the Cambrian–Ordovician Sauk Megasequence of Laurentia. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Memoir 98:307a312a.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Boyce, W. D., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., and Knight, I. 2012 b. Development of the lower Cambrian–Middle Ordovician carbonate platform: North Atlantic Region. In Derby, J. R., Fritz, R. D., Longacre, S. A., Morgan, W. A., and Sternbach, C. A. (eds.), The Great American Carbonate Bank: The Geology and Economic Resources of the Cambrian–Ordovician Sauk Megasequence of Laurentia. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir, 98:597626.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Christiansen, J. L., Harper, D. A. T., Houmark-Nielsen, M., Kristiansen, K., MacNiocaill, C., and Buchardt-Westergård, B. 2011. Chapter 56. Neoproterozoic (Cryogenian–Ediacaran) deposits in north-east Greenland. In The Geological Record of Neoproterozoic Glaciations. Geological Society of London, Memoir 36, Chapter 56:581592.Google Scholar
Stouge, S. and Peel, J. S. 1979. Ordovician conodonts from the Precambrian Shield of southern West Greenland. Rapport Grønlands Geoliske Undersøgelse, 91:105109.Google Scholar
Stouge, S., Stouge, G. B., and Albanesi, R. 1985. Lower Ordovician conodonts from Washington Land, western North Greenland. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark, 33:261272.Google Scholar
Sun, X.-W. 1989. Cambrian agnostoids from the North China Platform. Palaeontologia Cathayana, 4:53129.Google Scholar
Swinnerton, H. H. 1915. Suggestions for a revised classification of trilobites. Geological Magazine, 2:407496, 538–545.Google Scholar
Taylor, J. F. 1999. Distribution and stratigraphic utility of Clelandia in the lower Ibexian of North America. Acta Universitatis Carolinae, Geologica, 43 (1/2):357360.Google Scholar
Taylor, J. F., Repetski, J. E., and Orndorff, R. C. 1992. The Stonehenge transgression: a rapid submergence of the central Appalachian platform in the early Ordovician, p. 409418. In Webby, B. D. and Laurie, J. R. (eds.), Global Perspectives on Ordovician geology. Balkema, Rotterdam.Google Scholar
Taylor, J. F., Repetski, J. E., Loch, J. D., and Leslie, S. A. 2012. Biostratigraphy and Chronostratigraphy of the Cambrian–Ordovician Great American Carbonate Bank. In Derby, J. R., Fritz, R. D., Longacre, S. A., Morgan, W. A., and Sternbach, C. A. (eds.), The Great American Carbonate Bank: The Geology and Economic Resources of the Cambrian–Ordovician Sauk Megasequence of Laurentia. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Memoir 98:1536.Google Scholar
Taylor, M. E. and Landing, E. 1982. Biostratigraphy of the Cambrian–Ordovician transition in the Bear River Range, Utah and Idaho, western United States, p. 181191. In Bassett, M. G. and Dean, W. T. (eds.), The Cambrian–Ordovician boundary: sections, fossil distributions, and correlations. National Museum of Wales, Geological Series, 3.Google Scholar
Terfelt, F, Bagnoli, G., and Stouge, S. 2012. Re-evaluation of the conodont Iapetognathus and implications for the base of the Ordovician System GSSP. Lethaia, 45:227237.Google Scholar
Ulrich, E. O. 1930. Trilobita, p. 212222. In Bridge, J. (ed.), Geology of the Eminence and Cardareva Quadranges. Missouri Bureau of Geology and Mines, 2.Google Scholar
Walcott, C. D. 1914. The Cambrian faunas of eastern Asia. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 64:175.Google Scholar
Walcott, C. D. 1924 a. Geological formations of Beaverfoot-Brisco-Stanford Range, British Columbia, Canada. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 75:152.Google Scholar
Walcott, C. D. 1925. Cambrian and Ozarkian trilobites. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collection, 75:61146.Google Scholar
Westrop, S. R. 1986. Trilobites of the upper Cambrian Sunwaptan Stage, southern Canadian Rocky Mountains, Alberta. Palaeontographica Canadiana 3, 179 p.Google Scholar
Westrop, S. R. 1995. Sunwaptan and Ibexian (upper Cambrian–Lower Ordovician) trilobites of the Rabbitkettle Formation, Mountain River region, northern Mackenzie Mountains, northwest Canada. Palaeontographica Canadiana 12, 75 p.Google Scholar
Westrop, S. R., Knox, L. A., and Landing, E. 1993. Lower Ordovician (Ibexian) trilobites from the Tribes Hill Formation, central Mohawk Valley, New York State. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 30:16181633.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, F. W. 1936. The Cambrian faunas of northeastern Australia. Parts 1 and 2. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 11:59112.Google Scholar
Whittington, H. B. 1968. Zonation and correlation of Canadian and early Mohawkian series, p. 4960. In Zen, E-an, White, W. S., Hadley, J. B., and Thompson, J. B. (eds.), Studies of Appalachian Geology: Northern and Maritime. Wiley-Interscience, New York.Google Scholar
Winston, D. and Nicholls, H. 1967. Late Cambrian and early Ordovician faunas from the Wilberns Formation of central Texas. Journal of Paleontology, 41:6696.Google Scholar
Zhang, M. and Peng, X. 1998. New trilobites from the upper Cambrian Changshan Formation of Shandong and Liaoning. Journal of the Changchun University of Science and Technology, 28:241246.Google Scholar
Zhu, Z.-L. and Wittke, H. W. 1989. Upper Cambrian trilobites from Tangshan, Hebei Province, North China. Palaeontologia Cathayana, 4:199259.Google Scholar