Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Ausich, William I. (William Irl), 1952-

Title Disarticulation and Preservation of Fossil Echinoderms : Recognition of Ecological-Time Information in the Echinoderm Fossil Record / William I. Ausich
Published Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, [2021]

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Series Elements of paleontology
Cambridge elements. Elements of paleontology.
Summary The history of life on earth is largely reconstructed from time-averaged accumulations of fossils. A glimpse at ecologic-time attributes and processes is relatively rare. However, the time-sensitive and predictability of echinoderm disarticulation makes them model organisms to determine post-mortem transportation and allows recognition of ecological-time data within paleocommunity accumulations. Unlike many other fossil groups, this has allowed research on many aspects of echinoderms and their paleocommunities, such as the distribution of soft tissues, assessment of the amount of fossil transportation prior to burial, determination of intraspecific variation, paleocommunity composition, estimation of relative abundance of taxa in paleocommunities, determination of attributes of niche differentiation, etc. Crinoids and echinoids have received the most amount of taphonomic research, and the patterns present in these two groups can be used to develop a more thorough understanding of all echinoderm clades
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 16, 2021)
Subject Echinodermata, Fossil.
Geochronometry.
Echinodermata, Fossil
Geochronometry
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781108893374
1108893376
9781108898003
1108898009