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This paper presents the results of a paleoenvironmental study of two Hauterivian–Aptian adjacent sections (Transnordestina A/B) of the Iguatu Basin using ostracods and aided by X-ray fluorescence (XRF), total organic carbon (TOC), total sulfur (S), and spectral analyses. Cluster analysis divided the 10 genera found into two main groups: one composed of Alicenula-Pattersoncypris?-Brasacypris-Hastacypris-Ilyocypris?, and the second composed of Cypridea-Looneyellopsis-Rhinocypris?. The first group is interpreted as representing paleoenvironments with permanent waterbodies, such as lakes, and the second as being indicative of ephemeral settings, such as temporary pools in an inundation plain. XRF analysis using the positive peaks of Ca/Ti and Ca/RTi, Fe, Al ratios show a few dry periods, particularly in the lower and middle part of Transnordestina A, between 0 to 175 m and 385 to 475 m, which also display a small number of ostracods. Total S shows several high peaks which might be indicative of gypsum deposition during droughts. Spectral analysis of molar Ti/Al ratio shows two intervals with different sedimentation rates, between 0 and 233 m, and 233 to 836 m. For the first interval, six 100 ka eccentricity cycles were identified; the low number of ostracods for the interval and highly variable Ca/Ti and Ca/RTi, Fe, Al values indicate a different sedimentation rate in a drier environment. For the second interval, ten 405 ka cycles were identified; its higher ostracod count and more stable Ca/Ti and Ca/RTi, Fe, Al values could be indicative of increasing humidity.
The Pennsylvanian–Permian Maroon Formation of northwest Colorado is an up to 4,600 m thick succession of mainly siliciclastic continental red-beds deposited in equatorial intermontane basins of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains. Sedimentary surfaces of fluvio-lacustrine to eolian siltstones and fine-grained sandstones from various stratigraphic levels within the Maroon Formation preserve cm-sized straight to gently curved sediment-filled acicular structures referred to five morphological groups: single, branched, stellate, rosette, and bunched. Depositional environment, shape, and size of the structures are most similar to ice crystal marks that result from freezing of water-saturated fine-grained substrate at the sediment-air interface. They differ from other syngenetically produced crystals and crystal pseudomorphs in sedimentary rocks mainly by crystal shape and environmental conditions. The potential ice crystal marks of the Maroon Formation are notable for the fidelity and morphological diversity of the crystal casts and could be a key for the understanding of similar but hitherto often only called enigmatic structures of the sedimentary rock record. The ice crystal mark occurrences in the Maroon Formation suggest that night frost affected lower elevation equatorial areas during the climax of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age and may stimulate research on evolutionary adaptations of early terrestrial biota to overcome significant air temperature fluctuations.
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