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Creators/Authors contains: "Lonsdale, Mary"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
  2. Abstract The Cambrian Explosion saw the widespread development of mineralized skeletons. At this time, nearly every major animal phylum independently evolved strategies to build skeletons through either agglutination or biomineralization. Although most organisms settled on a single strategy,SalterellaBillings, 1865 employed both strategies by secreting a biocalcitic exterior shell that is lined with layers of agglutinated sediments surrounding a central hollow tube. The slightly older fossil,VolborthellaSchmidt, 1888, shares a similar construction with agglutinated grains encompassing a central tube but lacks a biomineralized exterior shell. Together these fossils have been grouped in the phylum Agmata Yochelson, 1977, although no phylogenetic relationship has been suggested to link them with the broader metazoan tree, which limits their contribution to our understanding of the evolution of shells in early animals. To understand their ecology and place them in a phylogenetic context, we investigatedSalterellaandVolborthellafossils from the Wood Canyon and Harkless formations of Nevada, USA, the Illtyd Formation of Yukon, Canada, and the Shady Formation of Virginia, USA. Thin-section petrography, acid maceration, scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray tomographic microscopy were used to provide new insights into these enigmatic faunas. First, morphological similarities in the aperture divergence angle and ratio of central tube diameter to agglutinated layer thickness suggestSalterellaandVolborthellaare related. Second, both fossils exhibit agglutinated grain compositions that are distinctive from their surrounding environments and demonstrate selectivity on the part of their producers. Finally, the calcitic shell composition and simple layers of blocky prismatic shell microstructure inSalterellasuggest a possible cnidarian affinity. Together these data point to these organisms being sessile, semi-infaunal filter or deposit feeders and an early experimentation in cnidarian biomineralization chronicling a hypothesized transition from an organic sheath inVolborthellato a biomineralized shell inSalterella. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 13, 2026
  3. Abstract We describe > 200 ribbon-like macroscopic fossils from terminal Ediacaran strata at Mount Dunfee, Nevada, USA ∼ 115 m below the local placement of the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary. They are preserved as casts and molds, composed of Fe-oxides and Fe-rich aluminosilicates in an aluminosilicate clay matrix. Measurements of 50 of the specimens provide a fossil size range of 0.22–0.74 mm-wide and 0.1–75.0 mm-long. Some specimens evidence original flexibility and appear to be fragmented, consistent with soft body preservation. They are therefore interpreted as body fossils, rather than trace fossils. Given this interpretation, we suggest that the fossils’ size range and ribbon-like morphologies are consistent with them being members of the problematicum Vendotaenia, which have not been previously reported from Ediacaran strata within the southern Great Basin. The phylogenetic affinity of vendotaenids is unresolved, but they are commonly interpreted as a form of eukaryotic macroalgae. This report firmly establishes vendotaenids in Ediacaran strata on Laurentia, broadening their known paleogeographic range during the end-Ediacaran Period. Additionally, the morphology of the fossils described here supports the notion that, although vendotaenids are reported from many Ediacaran paleocontinents globally, there was low macroalgal diversity at the end of the Ediacaran Period. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 20, 2026
  4. The Ediacaran−Cambrian boundary strata in the Great Basin of the southwestern United States record biological, geochemical, and tectonic change during the transformative interval of Earth history in which metazoans diversified. Here, we integrate new and compiled chemostratigraphic, paleontological, sedimentological, and stratigraphic data sets from the Death Valley region, the White-Inyo Ranges, and Esmeralda County in Nevada and California and evaluate these data within a regional geologic framework. A large negative carbon isotope (δ13C) excursion—also known as the Basal Cambrian Excursion, or BACE—is regionally reproducible, despite lateral changes in sedimentary facies and dolomitization across ∼250 km, consistent with a primary marine origin for this perturbation. Across the southern Great Basin, Ediacaran body fossils are preserved in a variety of taphonomic modes, including cast and mold preservation, two-dimensional compressional preservation, two-dimensional and three-dimensional pyritization, and calcification. The stratigraphic framework of these occurrences is used to consider the relationships among taphonomic modes for fossil preservation and paleoenvironmental settings within this basin. In this region, Ediacaran-type fossils occur below the nadir of the BACE, while Cambrian-type trace fossils occur above. Sedimentological features that include giant ooids, stromatolites, and textured organic surfaces are widespread and abundant within the interval that records biotic turnover and coincide with basaltic volcanism and the BACE. We hypothesize that the prevalence of these sedimentological features, the BACE, and the disappearance of some Ediacaran clades were caused by environmental perturbation at the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary. 
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