Replacement of benthic communities in two Neoproterozoic–Cambrian subtropical-to-temperate rift basins, High Atlas and Anti-Atlas, Morocco
Replacement of benthic communities in two Neoproterozoic–Cambrian subtropical-to-temperate rift basins, High Atlas and Anti-Atlas, Morocco
The ‘Cambrian explosion’ is often introduced as a major shift in benthic marine communities with a coeval decline of microbial consortia related to the diversification of metazoans and development of bioturbation (‘Agronomic Revolution’). Successive community replacements have been reported along with ecosystem diversification and increase in guild complexity from Neoproterozoic to Cambrian times. This process is recorded worldwide but with regional diachroneities, some of them directly controlled by the geodynamic conditions of sedimentary basins. The southern High Atlas and Anti-Atlas of Morocco record development of two rifts, Tonian (?) – early Cryogenian and latest Ediacarian–Cambrian in age, separated by the onset of the Pan-African Orogeny. This tectonically controlled, regional geodynamic change played a primary control on pattern and timing of benthic ecosystem replacements. Benthic communities include microbial consortia, archaeocyathan–thromboid reefal complexes, chancelloriid–echinoderm–sponge meadows, and deeper offshore echinoderm-dominated communities. Microbial consortia appeared in deeper parts of the Tonian (?) – early Cryogenian fluvio-deltaic progradational rift sequences, lacustrine environments of the Ediacaran Volcanic Atlasic Chain (Ouarzazate Supergroup) and the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary interval, characterized by the peritidal-dominated Tifnout Member (Adoudou Formation). They persisted and were largely significant until Cambrian Age 3, as previous restricted marine conditions precluded the immigration of shelly metazoans in the relatively shallow epeiric parts of the Cambrian Atlas Rift. Successive Cambrian benthic communities were replaced as a result of distinct hydrodynamic and substrate conditions, which allow identification of biotic (e.g., antagonistic relationships between microbial consortia and echinoderms, and taphonomic feedback patterns in chancelloriid–echinoderm–sponge meadows) and abiotic (e.g., rifting, associated volcanism and drastic platform drowning events, and substrate) factors that controlled ecosystem diversification in the Atlas Rift.
CITATION: Clausen, Sébastien. Replacement of benthic communities in two Neoproterozoic–Cambrian subtropical-to-temperate rift basins, High Atlas and Anti-Atlas, Morocco . : Elsevier , 2014. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 98, October 2014, pp. 72-93 - Available at: https://library.au.int/replacement-benthic-communities-two-neoproterozoic–cambrian-subtropical-temperate-rift-basins-high-9