Abstract

Well-preserved miospore assemblages are recorded from the Late Ordovician (Katian–Hirnantian) Ghelli Formation in the Pelmis Gorge, located in the Alborz Mountain Range, Northeastern Iran. The palynomorphs were extracted from siliciclastic deposits that are accurately dated using marine palynomorphs (acritarchs and chitinozoans). The spore assemblages consist of 14 genera and 28 species (26 cryptospores and 2 trilete spore species). Six new cryptospore species are described: Rimosotetras punctata n.sp., Rimosotetras granulata n.sp., Dyadospora asymmetrica n.sp., Dyadospora verrucata n.sp., Segestrespora iranense n.sp., and Imperfectotriletes persianense n.sp. The study furthers knowledge of the development of the vegetative cover during the Late Ordovician. Various and abundant cryptospores in the Late Ordovician (Katian–Hirnantian) Ghelli Formation are probably related to the augmentation of land-derived sediments either during the global sea-level fall linked to the Late Ordovician glaciation or adaptation of the primitive land plants in a wide range of climatic conditions. These miospore taxa were produced by the earliest primitive land plants, which probably grew close to the shoreline and were washed in from adjacent areas, producing a high volume of miospores. The associated marine palynomorphs consist of acritarchs (13 genera and 18 species), chitinozoans (9 genera and 10 species), prasinophycean algae, scolecodonts, and graptolite remains, which are not discussed in detail herein. The established chitinozoan biozones of this part of the Palaeozoic sequence are the Armoricochitina nigerica Biozone, the Ancyrochitina merga Biozone, the Tanuchitina elongata Biozone, and the Spinachitina oulebsiri Biozone, suggesting a Late Ordovician age (Katian–Hirnantian). These chitinozoan biozones are widely evidenced only in the peri-Gondwanan Domain, indicating that the study area was part of this palaeo-continent in the Late Ordovician.

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