USE OF HIGH-RESOLUTION FOSSIL DATA TO ASSESS THE CAUSES OF METER-SCALE CYCLICITY IN THE TYPE CINCINNATIAN SERIES (UPPER ORDOVICIAN)
Previous studies have demonstrated that the distribution of biota through the study interval is controlled by environmental variables correlated to water depth. Therefore, a direct comparison of stratigraphic variations in faunal composition to meter-scale lithologic alternations is an appropriate test of the influence of water depth on meter-scale cyclicity.
In the present analyses, ordination scores generated from faunal abundance data were grouped into bins that correspond to the upper and lower parts of each meter-scale cycle, using three different binning protocols. For each cycle, ordination scores from the lower bin were compared to those from the upper bin; consistent differences between the two would suggest a water depth control on meter-scale biotic patterns, and, thus, on cyclicity. However, results indicate no consistent correspondence of faunal patterns to meter-scale lithologic patterns, suggesting that water depth does not play a significant role in meter-scale cyclicity. While the different binning protocols did affect analytical outcomes in various ways, the lack of a consistent difference between upper and lower bins within each cycle was robust to all protocols. Thus, a model invoking oscillations of storm intensity and frequency appears to provide the most parsimonious explanation for the origin of Cincinnatian meter-scale cyclicity.