Hypothesized Cambrian Medusae from Saint John, New Brunswick, reinterpreted as sedimentary structures

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Abstract

More than a hundred radial and discoidal structures occur on bed tops of shales and very fine sandstones of the Cambrian (Series 3) King Square Formation in New Brunswick, Canada. These structures typically contain a central sediment plug, radial lineations that extend outward from the central plug, concentric rings, and a broad trough surrounding or underlying ring margins. Originally interpreted as fossils of scyphozoan medusae, these structures could represent one of only a half-dozen mass strandings documented from the fossil record. Instead, re-evaluation of their sedimentology and morphology suggests that they are likely sedimentary structures known as Astropolithon. These sand-volcano-like structures formed by subsurface blistering, cracking, and failure of a near-surface or surface bed, triggered by the upward movement of gases or other fluids from underlying beds. © Atlantic Geology, 2011.

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Hagadorn, J. W., & Miller, R. F. (2011). Hypothesized Cambrian Medusae from Saint John, New Brunswick, reinterpreted as sedimentary structures. Atlantic Geology, 47, 66–80. https://doi.org/10.4138/atlgeol.2011.002

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