USING TRACE FOSSILS TO RECOGNIZE MARINE TRANSGRESSION: TIME DOES MATTER
Examples of time dependency are illustrated by the environmentally important marine trace fossils, Skolithos and Cruziana. Skolithos, a simple, vertical dwelling tube, has been noted in deposits ranging in age from Ediacaran through Recent. Using the presence of Skolithos to recognize Lower Paleozoic marine strata is clearly less problematic than doing so in younger deposits, especially after the appearance of Devonian terrestrial insects. Similarly, the marine, feeding-locomotion trace Cruziana, if attributed exclusively to trilobites, is properly restricted to the Paleozoic. However, if this trace fossil is treated as a form genus, its inferred behaviour is succeeded by the activities of isopods and other potentially non-marine arthropods and continues into the Recent, e. g., Isopodichnus. Consequently, as with Skolithos, the interpretation of Cruziana-bearing strata as marine loses certainty through geologic time and probably cannot be done with complete confidence much beyond the Devonian.