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The Nama assemblage was the last of the Ediacaran biotic assemblages. Following the Avalon and White Sea assemblages, it spanned from c. 550 Ma to c. 539 Ma, roughly coinciding with the Terminal Ediacaran biozone.[3] The assemblage was characterized by a faunal turnover, with the decline of the preexisting White Sea biota. The drop of diversity has been compared to the mass extinctions of the Phanerozoic. A second drop of diversity occurred at the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary, concluding the Nama assemblages with the end-Ediacaran extinction.[4][5][6]
Etymology and definitions
editThe Nama assemblage is named after the Nama Group from the Tsaus Mountains of Namibia, which preserves a Late Ediacaran record of soft-bodied fossils.[3] The biota of the Namibian sites clusters with similar biotas found in the Southwestern United States, South China and British Columbia,[7] leading to a Nama assemblage being first defined by Gehling in 2001.[8] This definition of a biological assemblage usually includes the totality of the biota found in these strata, which in the case of the Nama assemblage exhibits a strong temporal element.[3]
The full division of the Ediacaran biota into three separate assemblages was first postulated by Ben Waggoner in 2003 through parsimony analysis of endemicity. This study relied on temporal, paleogeographical and paleoenvironmental data.[8] This same clustering was later recovered through hierarchical clustering and non-metric multidimensional scaling.[9] Similar methods, supplemented with a network analysis-based clustering of genera into paleocommunities, or recurrent associations of taxa, later hinted at an additional cluster (Miahoe) overlapping with the Avalon and White Sea assemblages. The Nama assemblage was also recovered and interpreted as a paleocommunity. A closely related Terminal Ediacaran biozone, contrasting with the previous Ediacaran biota biozone, was recovered when including formations in the network analysis, comprising species-poor formations mostly consisting of Nama genera.[10]
Boundaries
editA proposed definition of the Nama assemblage as an evolutionary fauna by Wood and coauthors restricts it to new morphogroups such as calcifying metazoans, cloudinids and complex trace fossils, excluding holdovers from previous faunas such as Paracharnia. Under this definition, the assemblage's lower boundary would be the oldest appearance of Cloudina in the fossil record, placing the boundary at 550 Ma. This definition distinguishes the Nama assemblage from the Terminal Ediacaran biozone, the latter of which includes both holdovers and newer taxa.[3]
[definitely some discussion to be had, I've seen everything from 551 to 547, and from 543 to 539]
Paleohistory
editThe Nama assemblage is bounded from the earlier White Sea assemblage and later Cambrian period by two major episodes of faunal turnover, considered to be pulses of the end-Ediacaran extinction.[3] The genus diversity was lower than in the earlier Ediacaran and later Fortunian biotas, a fact that has been shown to be independent of sampling bias. Nonetheless, the decline in Ediacaran biota taxa was accompanied by a rise in sessile eumetazoans, with new developments such as the rise of predation and biomineralization.[10][11] Another decline in diversity has been also proposed around c. 545 Ma.[3]
Early decline
edit[one paragraph about the observed decline]
[then the hypotheses, cf network analysis article][12]
The decline in biodiversity from the previous White Sea assemblage has been argued to have been caused by decreasing sea oxygen levels, favoring the survival of animals with a higher surface-to-volume ratio.[5] This was, however, contested by findings showing a decline in both hard-bodied and soft-bodied fauna starting before the fall in oxygen levels. Under this model, the widespread anoxia in deeper waters would have minimally affected the Ediacaran fauna, largely concentrated in shallow water areas in continental shelf settings like the Nama Group.[13][3] Conversely, ecological change may have been responsible for the decline in oxygen levels.[14]
[long discussion about the anoxia, mention the "80% whatever" biodiversity lost from White Sea]
"Wormworld"
edit[describe briefly what the innovations were, and then discuss mostly about their impact on the ecosystem and how they replaced the ediacaran fauna, and then general view of the trophic web/ecosystem][11] ["wormworld" is also used in other refs, e.g. [15]]
Baykonurian glaciation
edit[talk about how the baykonurian glaciation impacted stuff because it certainly did]
[the 545 Ma event]
edit[note that Wood 2023 claims that Muscente 2019 refers to it, but it's not the case, probably see Boag 2016 or Grazhdankin 2014 instead][16][9]
Transition to Cambrian fauna
edit[discuss the continuity and how the Nama assemblage paved the way for the Cambrian explosion][17][11][18]
[mention how it has even been argued to represent the earliest Cambrian explosion][15]
[Treptichnus sp. and implications][19]
Biota
edit[a paragraph to say how it's markedly different from the earlier ediacaran stuff and clusters away]
The Nama biota was dominated by soft-bodied 'vendozoan' taxa such as erniettomorphs, although rangeomorphs, arboreomorphs and dipleurozoans were also present.[3]
[describe general trends in biota]
Ecology
edit[discuss the competition or lack thereof between holdovers and newcomers, cf. [11][18]]
[also mention the different environments and how the biota was stratified]
Ediacaran biota holdovers
editWhile the Late Ediacaran assemblages are mostly temporally stratified, holdovers from the Avalon and White Sea assemblages were present later than 550 million years ago, and are usually assigned to the Nama assemblage on a chronological basis regardless of biological affinity. These include Hiemalora, Charnia and the arboreomorph Arborea. However, some definitions exclude these organisms from the Nama assemblage, distinguishing it from the temporal Terminal Ediacaran biozone.[3] [part of this might be redundant with the "definitions" section]
Erniettomorphs
editTubular organisms
editThe first traces of the tubular cloudinids appear in the Nama assemblage, including both the mineralized Cloudina and the softer-bodied Conotubus. Other tubular organisms are known, such as Namacalathus, Sinotubulites, Corumbella and Gaojiashania.[3]
[try to not repeat what was written in the wormworld section, which is more about the effects on the ecosystem while this is the diversity and innovations of tubular organisms][11]
Other metazoans
editReef structures
edit[also mention how cloudinids were believed to have built reefs but it has been put in doubt]
Enigmatics
editThe benthic, calcified Namacalathus is only known from the Nama assemblage, although its affiliations remain disputed.[3]
Geology
editPreservation modes
editThe Nama assemblage is characterized by a variety of preservation types, including Ediacaran type preservation, carbonaceous films, as well as skeletal and secondarily calcified fossils.[10]
Sites
edit[now is the good time to repeat that the Nama assemblage is not the Nama Group]
[do we need a paragraph to ramble about preservation quality needed? yes we do. namedrop "Nama-type preservation", but it's more relevant to the Nama Group than the assemblage itself]
[sites from Namibia, found to cluster with sites from the southwestern United States, British Columbia, South China and some place in Russia]
Nama Group
editWhile the earliest fossils in the Nama Group, known from the Tsaus Mountains environment, date back to before 550.5 Ma, they represent holdover taxa from the earlier Avalon and White Sea assemblages. [this sentence should be reworded and moved to the sites section, this is just an etymology. also it's not post-550 holdovers but actual WS?]
Dengying Formation/Shibantan Lägerstatte
edit[a good reference: [21]]
Blueflower Formation
editAlbemarle Group?
editAny other good Nama site
edit[shouldn't look like we're just listing every conceivable site. just list ones that are relevant and well-represented, and representative of cool Nama stuff]
Deep Spring Formation? Wood Canyon Formation? (cf. network article)
References
editCitations
edit- ^ Shen, Bing; Dong, Lin; Xiao, Shuhai; Kowalewski, Michal (4 January 2008). "The Avalon explosion: evolution of Ediacara morphospace". Science. 319 (5859): 81–84. Bibcode:2008Sci...319...81S. doi:10.1126/science.1150279. ISSN 1095-9203. PMID 18174439.
- ^ Shi, Wei; Li, Chao; Luo, Genming; Huang, Junhua; Algeo, Thomas J.; Jin, Chengsheng; Zhang, Zihu; Cheng, Meng (24 January 2018). "Sulfur isotope evidence for transient marine-shelf oxidation during the Ediacaran Shuram Excursion". Geology. 46 (3): 267–270. doi:10.1130/G39663.1.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Wood, Rachel; Bowyer, Fred T.; Alexander, Ruaridh; Yilales, Mariana; Uahengo, Collen-Issia; Kaputuaza, Kavevaza; Ndeunyema, Junias; Curtis, Andrew (September 2023). "New Ediacaran biota from the oldest Nama Group, Namibia (Tsaus Mountains), and re-definition of the Nama Assemblage". Geological Magazine. 160 (9): 1673–1686. Bibcode:2023GeoM..160.1673W. doi:10.1017/S0016756823000638. hdl:20.500.11820/bc8c23b0-d59c-4230-a45b-db854a8ad0f3. ISSN 0016-7568.
- ^ Bowyer, Fred T.; Uahengo, Collen-Issia; Kaputuaza, Kavevaza; Ndeunyema, Junias; Yilales, Mariana; Alexander, Ruaridh D.; Curtis, Andrew; Wood, Rachel A. (15 October 2023). "Constraining the onset and environmental setting of metazoan biomineralization: The Ediacaran Nama Group of the Tsaus Mountains, Namibia". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 620: 118336. Bibcode:2023E&PSL.62018336B. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2023.118336. ISSN 0012-821X.
- ^ a b c Evans, Scott D.; Tu, Chenyi; Rizzo, Adriana; Surprenant, Rachel L.; Boan, Phillip C.; McCandless, Heather; Marshall, Nathan; Xiao, Shuhai; Droser, Mary L. (15 November 2022). "Environmental drivers of the first major animal extinction across the Ediacaran White Sea-Nama transition". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 119 (46): e2207475119. Bibcode:2022PNAS..11907475E. doi:10.1073/pnas.2207475119. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 9674242. PMID 36343248.
- ^ Bottjer, David J.; Clapham, Matthew E. (2006). Xiao, Shuhai; Kaufman, Alan J. (eds.). Evolutionary Paleoecology of Ediacaran Benthic Marine Animals. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. pp. 91–114. doi:10.1007/1-4020-5202-2_4. ISBN 978-1-4020-5202-6.
- ^ Hofmann, Hans J.; Mountjoy, Eric W. (2001). "Namacalathus-Cloudina assemblage in Neoproterozoic Miette Group (Byng Formation), British Columbia: Canada's oldest shelly fossils". Geology. 29 (12): 1091. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(2001)029<1091:NCAINM>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0091-7613.
- ^ a b Waggoner, Ben (1 February 2003). "The Ediacaran Biotas in Space and Time". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 43 (1): 104–113. doi:10.1093/icb/43.1.104. ISSN 1540-7063.
- ^ a b Boag, Thomas H.; Darroch, Simon A. F.; Laflamme, Marc (November 2016). "Ediacaran distributions in space and time: testing assemblage concepts of earliest macroscopic body fossils". Paleobiology. 42 (4): 574–594. doi:10.1017/pab.2016.20. ISSN 0094-8373.
- ^ a b c Muscente, A. D.; Bykova, Natalia; Boag, Thomas H.; Buatois, Luis A.; Mángano, M. Gabriela; Eleish, Ahmed; Prabhu, Anirudh; Pan, Feifei; Meyer, Michael B.; Schiffbauer, James D.; Fox, Peter; Hazen, Robert M.; Knoll, Andrew H. (2019-02-22). "Ediacaran biozones identified with network analysis provide evidence for pulsed extinctions of early complex life". Nature Communications. 10 (1): 911. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-08837-3. ISSN 2041-1723.
- ^ a b c d e Schiffbauer, James D; Huntley, John Warren; O'Neil, Gretchen R.; Darroch, Simon A.F.; Laflamme, Marc; Cai, Yaoping (November 2011). "The Latest Ediacaran Wormworld Fauna: Setting the Ecological Stage for the Cambrian Explosion". Geological Society of America. 26 (11): 4–11.
- ^ Muscente, A. D.; Boag, Thomas H.; Bykova, Natalia; Schiffbauer, James D. (2018-02-01). "Environmental disturbance, resource availability, and biologic turnover at the dawn of animal life". Earth Science Reviews. 177: 248–264. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.11.019. ISSN 0012-8252.
- ^ Tostevin, Rosalie; Clarkson, Matthew O.; Gangl, Sophie; Shields, Graham A.; Wood, Rachel A.; Bowyer, Fred; Penny, Amelia M.; Stirling, Claudine H. (2019-01-15). "Uranium isotope evidence for an expansion of anoxia in terminal Ediacaran oceans". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 506: 104–112. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2018.10.045. ISSN 0012-821X.
- ^ Lenton, Timothy M.; Daines, Stuart J. (2018). "The effects of marine eukaryote evolution on phosphorus, carbon and oxygen cycling across the Proterozoic–Phanerozoic transition". Emerging Topics in Life Science. 2 (2): 267–278. doi:10.1042/ETLS20170156. PMC 7289021. PMID 32412617.
- ^ a b Darroch, Simon A.F.; Smith, Emily F.; Laflamme, Marc; Erwin, Douglas H. (September 2018). "Ediacaran Extinction and Cambrian Explosion". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 33 (9): 653–663. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2018.06.003.
- ^ Grazhdankin, Dmitriy (March 2014). "Patterns of Evolution of the Ediacaran Soft-Bodied Biota". Journal of Paleontology. 88 (2): 269–283. doi:10.1666/13-072. ISSN 0022-3360.
- ^ Tarhan, Lidya G. (October 2018). "Ecological Expansion and Extinction in the Late Ediacaran: Weighing the Evidence for Environmental and Biotic Drivers". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 58 (4): 688–702. doi:10.1093/icb/icy020.
- ^ a b Wood, Rachel; Liu, Alexander G.; Bowyer, Frederick; Wilby, Philip R.; Dunn, Frances S.; Kenchington, Charlotte G.; Cuthill, Jennifer F. Hoyal; Mitchell, Emily G.; Penny, Amelia (April 2019). "Integrated records of environmental change and evolution challenge the Cambrian Explosion". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 3 (4): 528–538. doi:10.1038/s41559-019-0821-6. ISSN 2397-334X.
- ^ Gehling, James G.; Jensen, SöRen; Droser, Mary L.; Myrow, Paul M.; Narbonne, Guy M. (2001-03). "Burrowing below the basal Cambrian GSSP, Fortune Head, Newfoundland". Geological Magazine. 138 (2): 213–218. doi:10.1017/S001675680100509X. ISSN 0016-7568.
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(help) - ^ Grotzinger, J.; Adams, E. W.; SchröDer, S. (2005-09). "Microbial–metazoan reefs of the terminal Proterozoic Nama Group ( c. 550–543 Ma), Namibia". Geological Magazine. 142 (5): 499–517. doi:10.1017/S0016756805000907. ISSN 0016-7568.
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(help) - ^ Xiao, Shuhai; Chen, Zhe; Pang, Ke; Zhou, Chuanming; Yuan, Xunlai (January 2021). "The Shibantan Lagerstätte: insights into the Proterozoic–Phanerozoic transition". Journal of the Geological Society. 178 (1). doi:10.1144/jgs2020-135. ISSN 0016-7649.
Bibliography
edit[I'm already planning the switch to sfn]