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Discovery of carbonaceous
remains from the Neoproterozoic shales of Vindhyan
Supergroup, India
Veeru Kant Singh*, Rupendra Babu and Manoj Shukla+
Birbal
Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany, 53, University Road,
Lucknow- 226007, India.
*Corresponding author. E -mail:
veerukantsingh@hotmail.com.
+Deceased on 06/06/2006
Accepted 24
September, 2009 |
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Neoproterozoic gray to dark gray carbonaceous shales
belonging to the Bhander Group exposed in and around Maihar
and Nagod areas, Satna district, Madhya Pradesh, contains an
exceptionally well preserved, diversified fossils
represented by both planktic and benthic meso-megascopic (millimeter
to centimeter in dimension) and multicellular metaphytes.
The fossils are of varied shape viz., leaf like thalloid
films, palmate, straight to curve, with/without holdfast.
Some of them are dichotomously branched and compactly
entangled thin filaments, including possible reproductive
structures. Out of eighteen algal taxa described assemblage
includes fifteen genera and sixteen species belong to known
metaphytes interpretable as multicellular eukaryotes. The
assemblage comprises thalloid algae referable to
Aggregatosphaera miaoheensis, Baculiphyca taeniata,
Doushantuophyton lineare, Daus-hantuophyton cometa,
Enteromorphites siniansis, Eopalmaria pristina,
Flabellophyton lantianensis, Glomulus filamentum,
Huangshanophyton fluticulosum, Jiangchuania
taeniphylla, Konglingiphyton erecta,
Palaeochorda vindhyansis, Sitaulia minor and
discoidal carbonaceous films of Churaria cir-cularis,
Longfengshania ovalis, Protoarenicola baiguashanensis,
Protoconites minor and Tawuia dalensis. Amongst
these two taxa viz. S. minor gen. et. sp. nov.
and P. vindhyansis gen. et. sp. nov. Presence
of holdfasts and branches indicates advent of complexity in
Neoproterozoic life. It is assumed that they preferred
shallow water where dissolved nutrients and congenial stable
environment. The multicellular metaphytes are comparable to
modern algae belonging to Rhodophyta, Phaeophyta,
Xanthophyta and Chlorophyta. This assemblage closely
resembles the known assemblages of the equivalent sediments
(Cryogenian to Early Ediacaran age) of Miaohe biota (China)
and White Sea Biota, central Ural (Russia).
Key
words: Multicellular, eukaryotes, metaphytes, Bhander group,
Vindhyan Supergroup.
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