Paleoenvironments revealed by rare-earth element systematics in vertebrate bioapatite from the Lower Devonian of Svalbard

Author:

Žigaitė Živilė1,Fadel Alexandre12,Pérez-Huerta Alberto3,Jeffries Teresa4,Goujet Daniel5,Ahlberg Per Erik1

Affiliation:

1. Subdepartment of Evolution and Development, Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18A, 752 36 Uppsala, Sweden.

2. Laboratoire Géosystèmes, Université Lille 1, CNRS UMR8217, Villeneuve d’Ascq 59655, France.

3. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Alabama, 2018 Bevill Building, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, USA.

4. Earth Science Department, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, SW7 5BD London, UK.

5. Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Département Histoire de la Terre, Laboratoire de Paléontologie, UMR CNRS 7207, 57 rue Cuvier, 75231 Paris cedex 5, France.

Abstract

In situ rare-earth element (REE) compositions have been measured in early vertebrate microremains from the Lower Devonian basin of Andrée Land (Svalbard), with the aim of obtaining information about their early depositional environment and potential reworking. Vertebrate microremains with different histology were used for the analyses, sourced from two different localities of marginal marine to freshwater sediments from geographically distant parts of the Grey Hœk Formation (Skamdalen and Tavlefjellet members). We selected thelodont and undescribed ?chondrichthyan scales, which allowed us to define potential taxonomic, histological, and taphonomic variables of the REE uptake. Results showed REE concentrations to be relatively uniform within the scales of each taxon, but apparent discrepancies were visible between the studied localities and separate taxa. The compilation of REE abundance patterns as well as REE ratios have revealed that thelodont and ?chondrichthyan originating from the same locality must have had different burial and early diagenetic histories. The shapes of the REE profiles, together with the presence and absence of the Eu and Ce anomalies, equally suggested different depositional and diagenetic environments for these two sympatric taxa resulting from either stratigraphical or long-distance reworking. The REE concentrations appear to have visible differences between separate dental tissues, particularly between enameloid and dentine of thelodonts, emphasizing the importance of in situ measurements in microfossil biomineral geochemistry.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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