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Journal ArticleDOI

Permian brachiopods from Chiapas, Mexico: new stratigraphical and paleobiogeographical insights

TLDR
In this paper, eleven brachiopod species from the Paso Hondo Formation in the Chicomuselo region of southern Chiapas, Mexico are described, including Dyoros (Tetragonetes) rectangulatus, Costispinifera rugatula, Echinosteges tuberculatus, Tropidelasma furcillatum, Acosarina rectimarginata, Tautosia transenna, Composita hapsida, and Neospirifer venezuelensis.
Abstract
Eleven brachiopod species from the Paso Hondo Formation in the Chicomuselo region of southern Chiapas, Mexico are described. Chonosteges cooperi is a new species. Dyoros (Tetragonetes) rectangulatus, Costispinifera rugatula, Echinosteges tuberculatus, Tropidelasma furcillatum, Acosarina rectimarginata, Tautosia transenna, Composita hapsida, and Neospirifer venezuelensis are recorded for the first time in Mexico. The brachiopods occur in a locality to the east of the town of Monte Redondo, deposited in limestone and argillaceous limestone. The associated biota is composed of different filter feeders, with diverse invertebrates (rugose corals, microconchids, hederelloids, bryozoans, and crinoids) recorded. Lithological traits and features of the fossils allowed the facies to be assigned to a shallow open marine paleoenvironment, within a homoclinal ramp. Brachiopods recorded at the locality allow the upper levels of the Paso Hondo Formation to be correlated with the Cherry Canyon and Road Canyon formations of Texas in the United States, which have been characterized as typical stratigraphic units from the Guadalupian of North America. This information indicates that the age of the Paso Hondo Formation can be extended from the Early Permian to the Roadian (early Guadalupian), making this the first report of a formation of this age in southeastern Mexico. The presence of typical taxa from the Middle Permian in both Chiapas and Texas suggests that those regions were closely connected during the late Paleozoic, at least during the early Guadalupian. The similarity of Mexican biota to coeval faunas of Texas indicates that the brachiopods found in Chiapas occurred in the Grandian Province during the Middle Permian, which also included Texas and New Mexico, Guatemala, Venezuela, and northwest Mexico.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Paleoecology of the first Devonian-like sclerobiont association on Permian brachiopods from southeastern Mexico

TL;DR: In this article, a sclerobiont association from the Paso Hondo Formation (Roadian, middle Permian), Chiapas, Mexico is described, which is similar to those recorded in different Devonian localities, especially by the cooccurrence of microconchids, hederelloids, and bryozoans.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new middle Permian microconchid from Chiapas, Mexico, and its palaeoecological implications

TL;DR: Microconchus maya is described as a new species from the Monte Redondo locality (Roadian, middle Permian) of the Paso Hondo Formation in Chiapas, Mexico as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hederella carbonaria Condra & Elias, 1944 from the Roadian (middle Permian) of Mexico

TL;DR: Taylor and Wilson as discussed by the authors reported that the hederelloids exhibit microprismatic calcite in the microstructure of the walls of their tubes that differs from the lamellar one found in Paleozoic bryozoans and auloporid corals.
References
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Classification of Carbonate Rocks According to Depositional Textures

TL;DR: In this paper, three textural features seem especially useful in classifying those carbonate rocks that retain their depositional texture: presence or absence of carbonate mud, which differentiates muddy carbonate from grainstone; abundance of grains, which allows muddy carbonates to be subdivided into mudstone, wackstone, and packstone; and presence of signs of binding during deposition, which characterizes boundstone.
Book

Microfacies of Carbonate Rocks: Analysis, Interpretation and Application

Erik Flügel
TL;DR: New Perspectives in Microfacies: as discussed by the authors presented new perspectives in microfacies, including diagenesis, porosity, and Dolomitization of limestones, as well as the use of micro-facies for preservation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbonate ramp depositional systems

TL;DR: The classification, tectonic settings, stratigraphy, and early diagenesis of carbonate ramp systems are reviewed in this paper, where a range of wave-, storm-, and tide-dominated ramps can be recognized and this form the most convenient basis for ramp classification.
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