Saarina are cloudinimorph fossils from the Ediacaran (Vendian) and Early Cambrian marine deposits of European Russia and Laurentia. They are tubes made up of stacked conical elements. These fossils are comparable to the dwelling tubes of worms or cnidarians.

Saarina
Temporal range: Ediacaran to Cambrian, about 558–533 Ma
A fossil of Saarina juliae
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Family:
Saarinidae Sokolov, 1965
Genus:
Saarina Sokolov, 1965
Species
  • S. tenera Sokolov, 1965
  • S. kirsanovi Gnilovskaya, 1996
  • S. juliae Gnilovskaya, 1996

Occurrence edit

Fossils of the type species, S. tenera, were found in a core from the Gatchina No.13 borehole in the Leningrad Region, Russia. The most conspicuous deposits associated with these fossils are referred to as the Lomonosov Fm., Lontova Horizon, and lower Tommotian (=Cambrian Stage 2).

S. kirsanovi fossils were found in a core from the Vorob'evo No.1 borehole, Moscow Region and in a core from the Malinovka borehole, near Obozersky in the Arkhangelsk Region.

S. juliae was found in a core from the Gavrilov-Yam No.5 borehole, Yaroslavl Region. The deposites with S. kirsanovi and S. juliae are referred to the Redkino Horizon, Upper Vendian (Ediacaran), and are about 558 mya old.

They are also known from early Cambrian rocks in the USA.[1]

Description edit

Saarina was a tube-dwelling organism of unknown biological affinity, known from its siliciclastic deposits dating to the late Ediacaran (Vendian) and lowest Cambrian of the Russian Platform. It was funnel-shaped, consisting of dense, thinly-walled and annulated, ringlike segments. The fossils are preserved in the substrate as a result of superficial mineralization during the early stages of decomposition.

The fossils are typically found in mudstone and preserved in the form of flat pyrite ribbons as a result of superficial pyritization in the early stage of organic decomposition.

Saarina tubes were cylindrical in form, conical at the base, consisting of funnel-shaped narrow rings. The wall of the tube was thin, originally organic-walled, not chitinous. The tubes attained widths up to 7 mm.

The species of the Saarina differ mainly in the forms of the funnels:

  • S. tenera have straight conical funnels.
  • S. juliae have conical funnels, curved outward.
  • S. kirsanovi have funnels curved inward.

See also edit

List of Ediacaran genera

References edit

  1. ^ Nelson, Lyle L.; Crowley, James L.; Smith, Emily F.; Schwartz, Darin M.; Hodgin, Eben B.; Schmitz, Mark D. (2023). "Cambrian explosion condensed: High-precision geochronology of the lower Wood Canyon Formation, Nevada". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 120 (30). Bibcode:2023PNAS..12001478N. doi:10.1073/pnas.2301478120. PMC 10372641. PMID 37459545.
  • Gnilovskaya, M. B. (1996). "New saarinids from the Vendian of the Russian Platform". Dokl. Ross. Akad. Nauk. 348: 89–93.