Abstract

The Late Triassic is a critical period that witnessed major biological and environmental events. The geographic range and taxonomic diversity of conodonts were significantly changed during the Late Triassic, with the geographic range contracting prior to complete extinction of the group near the end of the Triassic. In the present study, we recognize for the first time a continuous middle Norian (Upper Triassic) conodont succession from the Qamdo (Changdu) area, eastern Tibet (Xizang), which was part of the North Qiangtang and Qamdo-Simao Block (NQ-QSB) located in the northeastern Tethys Ocean during the Late Triassic. Four conodont zones are established from the middle Norian (Alaunian) of the Chaiwei section in Qamdo, and in ascending order these are: the Epigondolella spiculata Zone, the Orchardella elongata Zone, the Mockina postera Zone, and the E. serrulata Zone; the neighboring Tuoba section also records these four zones, in addition to the upper lower Norian (upper Lacian) Ancyrogondolella uniformis Zone. All of these zones (except for the M. postera Zone) have been recognized for the first time in eastern Tibet. The Lacian-Alaunian boundary is tentatively placed at the level of sample CW-3 at the Chaiwei section and at the level of sample TBL-36 at the Tuoba section by the first occurrence (FO) of E. spiculata in each section. The position of the Alaunian-Sevatian boundary (ASB) is uncertain since the conodont assemblage from the top of the Bolila Formation at the study sections lacks age-diagnostic elements. The conodonts recovered from the Qamdo area have not only dated the Bolila Formation but also refined the conodont biostratigraphic zonation of the Alaunian in the study area. This allows improved correlation between the faunas of Qamdo and their counterparts elsewhere in Tibet and Europe, although the conodont zonations from these regions display lower precision than those established from North America. The Alaunian conodont faunas at Chaiwei and Tuoba appear to be dominated by juvenile specimens; this often appears to be the case in the Alaunian of the Tethyan Realm, but seems not occur in North America. This may suggest that the conodonts living in these two realms may have inhabited different ecological environments. The faunal turnover around the Lacian-Alaunian transition, with the evolution of Epigondolella, Orchardella, and Mockina from Ancyrogondolella, can be recognized in both study sections, although it is more remarkable in the Tuoba section. Although the lack of previous detailed studies of Norian conodont biostratigraphy from Tibet hampers correlation in this region and beyond, this study demonstrates the possibility of establishing high-resolution conodont biostratigraphic successions from Tibet in the future, since the conodont faunas recognized from Tibet and adjacent areas (e.g., Baoshan) suggest that relatively complete Norian strata exist in these regions. Overall, this study also provides new data to improve our understanding of conodont evolution during the Alaunian, and is significant in providing palaeontological data for studying the palaeogeographic evolution of eastern Tethyan ocean basins in the Late Triassic.

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