Abstract

Rates of modern sedimentation in various depositional settings have been compiled and adjusted for compaction for the purpose of estimating the spans of time represented in thin stratigraphic samples. Owing to discontinuous or low rates of sedimentation, it is either impossible or impractical to recover a continuous series of discrete life assemblages of fossil populations by collecting microstratigraphic samples from continuously fossiliferous intervals. Assemblages that are less time-averaged may be recovered from discontinuous records formed in depositional environments with higher rates of intermittent sedimentation, but these are isolated in time and cannot be used to observe the dynamics of local faunal history. Patterns of fossil distribution may appear similar to patterns of living populations explained by neontologic processes, but the longer time scale of even the best fossil sequences suggests the action of uniquely paleontologic processes that may be driven by environmental changes.

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