Fossil Studies, Vol. 3, Pages 8: An Ammonite Preserved in the Upper Pliocene Lower Tejo River Deposits of Quinta Do Conde (Southwest Portugal)


Fossil Studies, Vol. 3, Pages 8: An Ammonite Preserved in the Upper Pliocene Lower Tejo River Deposits of Quinta Do Conde (Southwest Portugal)

Fossil Studies doi: 10.3390/fossils3020008

Authors:
Carlos Neto de Carvalho
Miguel Barroso
Sofia Soares

A cast is an object that results from a fossilization process that is considerably rare in nature. For a cast to be produced, secondary diagenetic processes during and after fossilization are normally involved. Natural casts are formed when minerals are deposited within the fossil mold. Here we describe an exceptional example of the natural cast by gypsum of an ammonite presumably preserved as a limestone-made “half” mold that had previously been transported as an extraclast, deposited and dissolved within Upper Pliocene quartz sandstones of the ancestral Tejo river. Portable X-ray fluorescence was used to analyze and compare the geochemical composition of the ammonite fossil with that of the nodules found within the same bed, reflecting different diagenetic timings. The composition of the ammonite cast reflects the in situ dissolution of limestone and the precipitation of calcium sulfate. High δ34S‰ and Sr values obtained from the ammonite show that the cast was produced by percolating acidic waters in the vadose zone, under marine influence, during the Late Pliocene or already in the Pleistocene. The waters being rich in sulfur resulted more likely from a marine water-influenced water table. Alternatively, it may have resulted from the weathering concentration of sulfur from the Marco Furado ferricretes overlying Santa Marta sandstone. This is, so far, the only testimony of the enormous temporal discontinuity that occurred during the taphonomic history of an ammonite, with a final preservation in the form of a cast made of gypsum, the most didactic example of this type of fossilization ever found in Portugal.



Source link

Carlos Neto de Carvalho www.mdpi.com