Paper No. 8
Presentation Time: 8:20 AM-12:00 PM
PALEOECOLOGY OF THE LATE CARBONIFEROUS HUGHES CREEK SHALE, SOUTHEASTERN NEBRASKA
The Late Carboniferous (~290 million years) Hughes Creek Shale of the Foraker Formation is exposed discontinuously throughout the Forest City Basin of the North American Mid-Continent. While outcrops are extensive in Kansas, surface exposures in Nebraska occur only in the extreme southeastern corner of the state as shales and minor limestone. A measured stratigraphic section (~2m) near the town of Falls City, in Richardson County, Nebraska, contains a diverse and abundant macrofauna dominated by: brachiopods, bryozoans, crinoids, rugose corals and trilobites. Taphonomic analysis of the fossils (size-frequency distribution, articulation ratio, pedicle/brachial valve ratio, corrasion, epibiont coverage and fracture type) provides support for a hypothesis of short seafloor residence times for skeletal remains. While biased somewhat by preservation condition, taphonomic analysis strongly suggests that the fauna represents a single paleocommunity, amenable to paleoecologic analysis. Diversity indices (simple species richness, Margalef, Shannon-Weiner, equitability) were calculated by the PAST software program and compared with coeval paleocommunities in the Illinois and West Texas Basins. Finally, we document the first Nebraska Hughes Creek Shale occurrence of the shell-crushing shark, Petalodus ohioensis, the top-level carnivore for this basin.