Abstract

A study of fossils in thin sections of a sample from the uppermost Krol E Member in the Mussoorie Hills of the Lesser Himalaya, India, proves the existence of morphologically differentiated calcified sponges within the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary time interval. The sponges, described as Mussooriella kroli n.g., n.sp. and Maldeotaina composita n.g., n.sp. indicate the presence of different organization grades at the Precambrian-Cambrian interval. Mussooriella had a calcareous skeleton consisting of skeletal elements composed of an inner laminated part and a distinct peripheral layer with knobs. Maldeotaina is characterized by a stromatoporoid-grade growth pattern following a thalamid-grade pattern. The stromatoporoidgrade part of the skeletons reminds strongly on skeletal elements common in labechiid Ordovician and younger stromatoporoids. Maldeotaina also shows criteria of Early Cambrian fossils, originally described as stromatoporoids and later excluded from this group and transferred to archaeocyaths. These similarities point to an Early Cambrian age of the fossil-bearing horizon in the topmost Krol E Member. Growth cavities with crypts indicate that the sponges might have contributed to the formation of small metazoan reefs-like structures.

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