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1 January 2001 MIDDLE CAMBRIAN OF AVALONIAN MASSACHUSETTS: STRATIGRAPHY AND CORRELATION OF THE BRAINTREE TRILOBITES
GERD GEYER, ED LANDING
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Abstract

Although Middle Cambrian trilobites of the Braintree Member in eastern Massachusetts were among the first published on in North America, re-examination of this fauna has led to wholesale taxonomic and biostratigraphic re-evaluation. This low diversity fauna now includes at least seven species, with the first report of agnostoids (three poorly preserved taxa) and the ellipsocephalid Kingaspis avalonensis new species. Paradoxides (Acadoparadoxides) harlani Green emend., a senior synonym of P. (A.) haywardi Raymond, allows correlation into the lowest Middle Cambrian elsewhere in Avalon. However, all the polymeroid species are endemic, and this precludes a highly resolved correlation into other Cambrian paleocontinents. A breakdown of provincial barriers in the late Early Cambrian as western Gondwana passed from equatorial to the higher south latitudes of Avalon led to faunal exchanges between these continents. Paradoxides (Acadoparadoxides) and Kingaspis of the Braintree fauna are shared with western Gondwana, while Braintreella and “Agraulos quadrangularis are closest to genera known from the Spanish, Moroccan, and Perunican (Bohemian) margins of Gondwana.

GERD GEYER and ED LANDING "MIDDLE CAMBRIAN OF AVALONIAN MASSACHUSETTS: STRATIGRAPHY AND CORRELATION OF THE BRAINTREE TRILOBITES," Journal of Paleontology 75(1), 116-135, (1 January 2001). https://doi.org/10.1666/0022-3360(2001)075<0116:MCOAMS>2.0.CO;2
Accepted: 1 August 2000; Published: 1 January 2001
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