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Award ID contains: 1827669

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  1. 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
  2. Abstract The fossil record of the terminal Ediacaran Period is typified by the iconic index fossilCloudinaand its relatives. These tube-dwellers are presumed to be primitive metazoans, but resolving their phylogenetic identity has remained a point of contention. The root of the problem is a lack of diagnostic features; that is, phylogenetic interpretations have largely centered on the only available source of information—their external tubes. Here, using tomographic analyses of fossils from the Wood Canyon Formation (Nevada, USA), we report evidence of recognizable soft tissues within their external tubes. Although alternative interpretations are plausible, these internal cylindrical structures may be most appropriately interpreted as digestive tracts, which would be, to date, the earliest-known occurrence of such features in the fossil record. If this interpretation is correct, their nature as one-way through-guts not only provides evidence for establishing these fossils as definitive bilaterians but also has implications for the long-debated phylogenetic position of the broader cloudinomorphs. 
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  3. null (Ed.)
    Abstract We present chemostratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and geochronology from a succession that spans the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary in Sonora, Mexico. A sandy hematite-rich dolostone bed, which occurs 20 m above carbonates that record the nadir of the basal Cambrian carbon isotope excursion within the La Ciénega Formation, yielded a maximum depositional age of 539.40 ± 0.23 Ma using U-Pb chemical abrasion–isotope dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry on a population of sharply faceted volcanic zircon crystals. This bed, interpreted to contain reworked tuffaceous material, is above the last occurrences of late Ediacaran body fossils and below the first occurrence of the Cambrian trace fossil Treptichnus pedum, and so the age calibrates key markers of the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary. The temporal coincidence of rift-related flood basalt volcanism in southern Laurentia (>250,000 km3 of basalt), a negative carbon isotope excursion, and biological turnover is consistent with a mechanistic link between the eruption of a large igneous province and end-Ediacaran extinction. 
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  4. null (Ed.)
    The Ediacaran–Cambrian transition marks one of the most important geobiological revolutions in Earth History, including multiple waves of evolutionary radiation and successive episodes of apparent mass extinction. Among the proposed drivers of these events (in particular the extinction of the latest Neoproterozoic ‘Ediacara biota’) is the emergence of complex metazoans and their associated behaviors. Many metazoans are thought to have crucial geobiological impacts on both resource availability and the character of the physical environment – ‘ecosystem engineering’ – biological processes best preserved in the geological record as trace fossils. Here, we review this model using the trace fossil record of the Ediacaran to Cambrian Nama Group of southern Namibia, combining previous published accounts with the results of our own field investigations. We produce a revised ichnostratigraphy for the Nama Group that catalogues new forms, eliminates others, and brings the trace fossil record of the Nama into much closer alignment with what is known from other Ediacaran sections worldwide. We provide evidence for a link between sequence stratigraphy, oxygen, and the emergence of more complex bilaterian behaviors. Lastly, we show that observed patterns of extinction and survival over pulses of Ediacaran extinction are hard to ally with any one specific source of ecological stress associated with bioturbation, and thus a biologically-driven extinction of the Ediacara biota, if it occurred, was more likely to have been driven by some combination of these factors, rather than any single one. 
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