In 2015, the Lawson Cove section in Millard County, Utah, was proposed as an Auxiliary boundary Stratotype Section and Point (ASSP) for the Tremadocian stage and Ordovician system. In addition to the first appearance datum of I. fluctivagus, fossils of olenid trilobite Jujuyaspis and planktonic graptolite Anisograptus matanensis are present in a nearby section.[10] In 2017,[11] the Xiaoyangqiao section near the Dayangcha Village, North China, was proposed as the second ASSP for the base of Tremadocian/Lower Ordovician. The first planktonic graptolites can be found right below the Cordylodus lindstromi Conodont Zone in this section.[12] Both ASSPs were approved through supermajority vote by the Subcommission on Ordovician
Stratigraphy in 2016 and 2019, respectively.[13] However, in 2021, the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) proposed to deny the use of specific points and replace them by Standard Auxiliary Boundary Stratotypes (SABS) for more "flexible" correlations with GSSPs.[13]
Several global events are observed in sediments of the Tremadocian age: the Acerocare Regressive Event, Black Mountain Transgressive Event (both in the Early Tremadocian), Peltocare Regressive Event, Kelly Creek Regressive Event, and Ceratopyge Regressive Event (the last two in the Late Tremadocian).[20] Lithological features of the Black Mountain event are observed in Australia and Gorny Altai, Russia.[20] The Ceratopyge Regressive Event records in Baltica at the end of the Apatokephalus serratus zone. Above the disappearance of Ceratopyge fauna, sediments are presented in a more depleted form due to the decreased sea level in the Late Tremadocian.[21]
The middle of the Tremadocian witnessed an extinction event known as the Mid-Tremadocian Extinction Event[22] or the Base Stairsian Mass Extinction Event,[23] which is particularly known to have affected Baltican conodonts.[22] This extinction event may have been caused by anoxia.[24][25]
Tremadocian life
Planktonic graptolites, an important index fossil, appear during the Tremadocian.[5] Tremadocian cephalopods were not very different from their Cambrian predecessors. Specimens of Ellesmeroceras and possibly Bassleroceras, found in Santa Rosita Formation, northwestern Argentina, show that cephalopods first migrated to the waters off western Gondwana already in the early Tremadocian. In the middle Tremadocian, cephalopods became more diverse and occupied new ecological niches.[26] During Tremadocian there was an exchange of fauna between Avalonia and Gondwana across the Rheic Ocean, as evidenced by the findings of morphologically similar trilobites of the genus Platypeltoides in Belgium, Wales (both were parts of Avalonia) and Morocco (Gondwana).[27]
^James Frederick Miller, Kevin Ray Evans, Rahymond Lindsay Ethington, Rebecca L. Freeman, James Loch, John E. Repetski, Robert L. Ripperdan, John F. Taylor (2015). "Proposed Auxiliary Boundary Stratigraphic Section and Point (ASSP) for the base of the Ordovician System at Lawson Cove, Utah, USA". Stratigraphy. 12 (3): 219–236. doi:10.29041/strat.12.4.02.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Ian G. Percival (2017). "Ordovician News Number 35"(PDF). Subcommission on Ordovician Stratigraphy. p. 4. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2023-10-24.