Abstract

Richly fossiliferous Hirnantian shelly strata of near‐shore facies in northern Guizhou, South China, known as the Kuanyinchiao Formation, superbly record glacioeustatic sea‐level fluctuations and benthic faunal turnover. Recent studies of the temporal and spatial distribution of these carbonates and shelly fossils permit a critical stratigraphic revision and establishment of a robust regional stratigraphic correlation. The formation is revised to include three informal subdivisions, that is, units A, B, and C, in ascending order. Unit B of the formation typically is dominated by peloidal or oolitic grainstones, and unit C is composed of skeletal wackestone and calcareous mudstone, both units sharing distinctive coral and brachiopod faunas. This contrasts sharply with unit A of the formation, consisting of mudstone, silty mudstone, or calcareous mudstone, that yields the cool‐water Hirnantia fauna and associated coral fauna. In view of the presence of carbonate ooids and peloids, rugose corals, and a distinctive brachiopod assemblage, all indicative of warm‐water conditions, unit B, as well as unit C yielding the same shelly fauna, is interpreted as representing postglacial sedimentation immediately following the major Hirnantian glaciation, thus marking a significant climatic shift. Similar warm‐water carbonate rocks have been recognized in a number of regions along the margin of the Qianzhong Oldland, including Bijie, Renhuai, Tongzi, and Fenggang of northern Guizhou. Such a vast distribution area of these rocks indicates that postglacial carbonates are more widespread on the Yangtze Platform of South China than previously thought, providing a rare window into rocks and fossils of the survival interval immediately following the extinction event associated with the Hirnantian glacial episodes.

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