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BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401
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Page 1: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

BURGESS SHALE

Kelly Lekan

November 19, 2007

GEO 401

Page 2: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

LOCATION

• British Columbia, Canada

• Yoho National Park

Page 3: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

GEOLOGY

• Cambrian period– ~505 million years ago

• Once located on the Western edge of Laurentia– Was near the equator– Environment was a

warm, shallow marine environment where light could easily penetrate the area.

Page 4: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

GEOLOGY

• Found within the Stephen Formation– Located between Mount Wapta and Mount

Field.

• Two major quarries– Walcott quarry (Named for founder of the

Burgess Shale Charles P. Walcott)• Contains the Phyllopod Bed• Most famous fossil collecting site

– Raymond quarry

Page 6: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

PRESERVATION

• Deposited in a deep-water basin adjacent to an algae reef

• Turbidity flows and mudslides transported and buried the organisms– Anoxic environment– Rapid burial– Killed instantly– Not in life position

Page 7: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

PALEONTOLOGY

• The best record we have of Cambrian animals– Most diverse and well-preserved fossil

localities– Soft body preservation

Page 8: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

PALEONTOLOGY

• 60,000 unique fossils have been collected

• 140 species

• 119 genera

• ‘Weird wonders’

Page 9: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

PALEONTOLOGY

• Dominated by arthropods• Sponges, worm-like phyla, brachiopods, echinoderms,

chordates, and mollusks• 13 different genera of trilobites• Diversity of life

– Benthic (lived in the substrates in the bottom of the ocean)– Active and passive suspension feeders, deposit feeders,

scavengers, active predators– Free swimmers and bottom dwellers

• Bottom dwellers moved by either burrowing or crawling

• Microfossils– Bacteria, protists, cyanobacteria, and dinoflagellates

• Macroscopic algae

Page 10: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.
Page 11: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

PALEONTOLOGY

• Well preserved exoskeletons, limbs, and infillings of the gut

• Soft tissue and muscles

• Phyllopod Bed

• Dark Stains– Radioactive carbon

Page 12: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

EVOLUTION

• Best record of Cambrian animals

• Cambrian explosion– 545-525 million years ago– Appearance of many new organisms– Soft bodied organisms

• ‘Taphonomic Window’– “Historical snapshot in the diversity of ancient

life”

Page 13: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

SIGNIFICANCE

• Best record of Cambrian animals

• Best record of soft body preservation

• Evidence of Cambrian explosion

• Evolution from pre-Cambrian life forms

• Diversity of life– Modes of life/adaptation– Body plans

Page 14: BURGESS SHALE Kelly Lekan November 19, 2007 GEO 401.

REFERENCES AND IMAGES• HPVM: Hooper Virtual Paleontological Museum. Burgess Shale:

Hidden Treasure in the Canadian Rockies. http://park.org/Canada/Museum/burgessshale/tablen.html

• MacRae, Andrew. Burgess Shale Fossils. http://www.geo.ucalgary.ca/~macrae/Burgess_Shale/

• Rivera, Alexei A. Fossil Lagerstatten: Burgess Shale. Department of Earth Sciences. University of Bristol. http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/palaeofiles/lagerstatten/Burgess/biota.html.

• Smithsonian: National Museum of Natural History. The Burgess Shale: Strange Creatures – A Burgess Shale Fossil Sampler. http://paleobiology.si.edu/burgess/index.html

• Trilobites. Trilobites of the Burgess Shale, Canada. http://www.trilobites.info/Burgess.htm

• UCMP Berkeley. Localities of the Cambrian: The Burgess Shale. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cambrian/burgess.html.