Abstract

Drillholes to several kilometres depth on Kolguev Island in the southern Barents Sea have sampled early Palaeozoic successions, known elsewhere in the Pechora Basin to overlie Neoproterozoic basement complexes. New studies on acritarch microfossils from the lowermost part of the Palaeozoic succession (c. 4500 m depth), reached by the Bugrino 1 and North-Western 202 boreholes, revealed diverse and biostratigraphically significant assemblages, which indicate the position of the Cambrian-Ordovician boundary in a sedimentologically continuous offshore marine succession. Upper Cambrian strata equivalent to the Peltura and Acerocare zones are distinguished on the basis of common taxa known from the neighbouring East European Platform and other areas in Baltica, Avalonia, and Gondwana. Invertebrate faunas, including brachiopods, problematic mollusc and phyllocarid arthropods, are revised taxonomically; they are indicative for the Tremadocian and Arenigian stages in the upper part of the succession. The Cambrian strata are insofar documented by fossil record only on the Kolguev Island, although their extension (of various series) in other areas of the Pechora Basin is claimed on the grounds of geophysical data and/or is inferred from geological successions. This new biostratigraphic evidence and facies development suggest that the Upper Cambrian-Tremadocian platformal deposits were likely widely distributed over the northeastern Baltica, as they were in the East European Platform and Baltoscandia. They were accumulated on a stable and passive margin of the craton with steady subsidence and a high rate of sedimentation.

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