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PALAEONTOLOGY Lagerstätten

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The Lagerstätten

Unique windows into the past

Ottoia prolifica, showing muscle bands and gut

Ottoia prolifica, showing muscle bands and gut.
Ottoia is a priapulid worm found commonly in the Burgess Shale.
Burgess Shale, Cambrian Period
British Columbia, Canada
image copyright © 1995 by Andrew MacRae


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As far as fossil remains go, almost always, only scraps of bone or shell or a few carbonized leaves are all that remain of past organisms. Too often the soft parts decompose, and even the hard parts degrade.

In some exceptional instances however, usually anaerobic environments, or a sudden mudslide or volcanic eruption, organisms are buried before their bodies can be broken down by bacteria, or consumed by scavengers. Eventually their bodies are carbonized or mineralized, and so even soft-bodied creatures become fossilized. Such environments provide a unique, rare and precious window to the past.

These extraordinary fossil deposits, where organisms are so well preserved that even their soft parts remain as carbon films, are referred to as Lagerstätten, a German word meaning "deposit places". These are geological fossil deposits that are rich with varied, well-preserved fossils, representing a wide variety of life from a particular era. These spectacular fossil deposits represent a window into the past, a kind of "snapshot" of the type of organisms (hard and sometimes soft-bodied) that lived at that particular time and place.


Some LagerstättenLocationPeriod/EpochAge of Deposits
ChengjiangYunnan Province, ChinaEarly Cambrian535 million years old
Burgess ShaleBritish Columbia, CanadaMiddle Cambrian530 million years old
OrstenSweden Furongian500 million years old
HunsrückschieferGermanyEarly Devonian370 million years old
Mazon CreekNortheastern Illinois, USALate Carboniferous300 million years old
HolzmadenWürttemberg, GermanyEarly Jurassic190 million years old
Solnhofen LimestoneBavaria, GermanyLate Jurassic150 million years old
Auca MahuevoPatagonia, ArgentinaLate Cretaceous80 million years old
Green River FormationWyoming and Colorado, USAEocene50 million years old
Messel Oil ShaleHessen, GermanyEocene49 million years old
Ashfall Fossil BedsNebraska, United StatesMiocene10 million years old
Rancho La BreaSouthern California, United StatesLate Pleistocene20,000 years old

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General

web page Looking Back Through Lagerstätten - good intro - with links

web page Lagerstätten - very brief intro - has a useful table listing the main Lagerstätten

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Specific

this list is incomplete...

web pagephotoslinks Burgess Shale fossils - by Andrew MacRae - short intro to Burgess Shale and representative fossil organisms - best on the Web

Web Site Mazon Creek Fossils - the Illinois State Museum Mazon Creek homepage

UCMP The Solnhofen Limestone of Germany

web pagephotos Chengjiang Fossils - I don't like commercial fossil sites, but this one has some nice photos

web pages 'Orsten' Research and Dieter Waloszek's View of Arthropod and Crustacean Phylogeny - includes info on arthropods from this important but less well-known Furongian Lagerstätten


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In Association with Amazon.com

cover
cover
The Fossils of the Burgess Shale
- by Derek E. G. Briggs
Solnhofen - a study of Mesozoic Palaeontology
by K. Werner Barthel, S. Conway-Morris, and N. H. Swinburne

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content by
M. Alan Kazlev
page last modified 15 March 2002
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