Accepted Manuscript Evaluating macrobenthic response to the Cretaceous–Palaeogene event: A highresolution ichnological approach at the Agost section (SE Spain) Weronika Łaska, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, Alfred Uchman PII:
S0195-6671(16)30254-3
DOI:
10.1016/j.cretres.2016.10.003
Reference:
YCRES 3461
To appear in:
Cretaceous Research
Received Date: 7 July 2016 Revised Date:
23 September 2016
Accepted Date: 6 October 2016
Please cite this article as: Łaska, W., Rodríguez-Tovar, F.J., Uchman, A., Evaluating macrobenthic response to the Cretaceous–Palaeogene event: A high-resolution ichnological approach at the Agost section (SE Spain), Cretaceous Research (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.cretres.2016.10.003. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
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Evaluating macrobenthic response to the Cretaceous-Palaeogene event: A high-
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resolution ichnological approach at the Agost section (SE Spain)
3 Weronika Łaska1, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar2, Alfred Uchman1
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Poland; e-mail:
[email protected],
[email protected]
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Granada, 18002 Granada, Spain; e-mail:
[email protected]
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Institute of Geological Sciences, Jagiellonian University, Oleandry 2a, 30-063 Kraków,
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Departamento de Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de
Abstract
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The Agost section (Betic Cordillera, Alicante Province, south-eastern Spain) is one of only a
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few places in the world where complete sedimentary successions across the Cretaceous-
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Palaeogene (K-Pg) boundary are available. Agost enables a high-resolution ichnological
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analysis illustrating the influence of environmental perturbations on burrowing organisms
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before, during and after the K-Pg boundary event. The uppermost Maastrichtian calcareous
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marlstones and marly limestones of the Raspay Formation (Plummerita hantkeninoides
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Biozone), beside the light-filled Maastrichtian trace fossils, contain dark-coloured early
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Danian trace fossils including Chondrites targionii, Chondrites ?affinis, Chondrites isp.,
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Pilichnus isp., Planolites isp., ?Teichichnus isp., Thalassinoides isp., Trichichnus linearis,
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Trichichnus isp., and Zoophycos isp. The ichnotaxonomic composition of the late
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Maastrichtian and early Danian trace fossil association does not reveal major differences,
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indicating no significant influence on composition of their trace makers immediately after the
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K-Pg event. The main factors that most likely promoted survivorship of the trace makers were
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their feeding strategy (deposit feeders, microbe gardeners) and an increased delivery of
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organic matter to the seafloor due to the high mortality during the K-Pg boundary event.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT However, the differences in the size of trace fossils are noted: They are distinctly smaller in
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the dark boundary layer (Guembelitria cretacea Biozone) than in the underlying uppermost
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Maastrichtian calcareous marlstones. This is an example of the Lilliput Effect. The dwarfed
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ichnoassociation was produced during and shortly after sedimentation of the dark boundary
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layer pointing to a delayed reaction of the burrowing organisms to the K-Pg boundary event
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compared to other groups of organisms. The dwarfing might be caused by environmental
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stress resulting from lower food supply due to collapse of primary production in the later
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phases of the K-Pg boundary event.
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Keywords: K-Pg boundary, trace fossils, palaeoecology, Lilliput Effect, Agost, Spain.
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1. Introduction
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The Agost section (SE Spain) is one of the most important Cretaceous-Palaeogene (KPg) boundary interval sections worldwide, because of a very expanded and continuous
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sedimentary record across the boundary. This section has been profusely studied, including
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variable aspects, such as magnetostratigraphy (Groot et al., 1989), chronostratigraphy
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(MacLeod and Keller, 1991), mineralogy and geochemistry (e.g., Smit, 1990; Martínez-Ruiz,
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1994; Martínez-Ruiz et al., 1992, 1997, 1999), micropaleontology (e.g., Alegret et al., 2003;
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Arenillas et al., 2004; Canudo et al., 1991; Molina et al., 1996, 1998, 2005; Pardo et al.,
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1996). Recently, the study of trace fossils (Rodríguez-Tovar and Uchman, 2004a, b) and the
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integration of ichnological with geochemical and isotopic analyses (Rodríguez-Tovar, 2005;
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Rodríguez-Tovar et al., 2004; Sosa-Montes de Oca et al., 2013, 2016) has revealed especially
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useful in the interpretation of the K-Pg boundary in the Agost section. Since the first
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT ichnological studies of the K-Pg boundary in Denmark (Ekdale and Bromley, 1984), Alabama
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(Savrda, 1993), and NE Mexico (Ekdale and Stinnesbeck, 1998), and later studies at Agost,
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Caravaca, and Sopelana in Spain (Rodríguez-Tovar and Uchman, 2006, 2008; Rodríguez-
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Tovar et al., 2010, 2011), Bidart in France (Alegret et al., 2015; Rodríguez-Tovar et al., 2010,
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2011), Gubbio in Italy (Monaco et al., 2015) and El Kef in Tunisia (Rodríguez-Tovar et al.,
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2016), new challenges have appeared, such as the selectivity of some palaeoenvironmental
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changes, the variable response of the biotic communities, or the timing of recovery after the
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K-Pg boundary event (see Labandeira et al., in press, for a recent review). Therefore, new
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high-resolution studies in the best-preserved sections worldwide must be conducted, focusing
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on the aspects that have been highlighted. The aim of this paper is a revised high-resolution
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ichnological analysis of the Agost section, in order to improve interpretation of some aspects
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of the K-Pg boundary event. For this purpose, the boundary interval has been examined
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centimetre by centimetre in order to record lithology and ichnological features, and to collect
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representative samples. As the result, the section has received a better characterization of trace
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fossils, with discoveries of new ichnotaxa, and a more precise determination of ichnological
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changes through the section, including detailed observations of the dark boundary layer.
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2. Geological setting
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The section crops out in a cut along the Agost-Castalla road (CV-827), about 1 km north of
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the town Agost in the Alicante Province, south-eastern Spain (N 38°27.147′, W 0°38.197′;
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Fig. 1). The Agost section belongs to the Prebetic, which corresponds to the outermost and
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northernmost part of the Betic Cordillera. The Prebetic is composed of Mesozoic and
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resulted from the breakup of Pangaea and divergence of Africa and Europe since the Triassic.
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The Agost section is located in the Internal Prebetic subdomain, which represents the
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relatively distal palaeogeographic part of the epicontinental shelf system developed on the
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South Iberian palaeomargin during the Mesozoic. The Agost section shows no hiatus,
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condensed interval, or erosional surface (Arenillas et al., 2004; MacLeod and Keller, 1991;
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Molina et al., 2005; Pardo et al., 1996).
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The uppermost Maastrichtian deposits belong the uppermost part of the Raspay Formation
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(Chacón and Martín-Chivelet, 2005), which consists of medium and thick beds of grey
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calcareous marlstones and marlstones (Figs. 2; 3A) containing planktic and benthic
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foraminifera, ostracods and scarce fragments of echinoderms.
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These beds are overlain by a 4–10 cm-thick layer of carbonate-poor, dark olive calcareous
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claystones (the dark boundary layer; CaCO3 content 25%) with a 2 mm-thick rusty-red layer
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(the “rusty layer”) at its base that marks the K-Pg boundary (Fig. 3A–C). The dark boundary
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layer is also called the “dark clay boundary layer”, “boundary layer” or the “K-Pg boundary
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layer” in previous papers (e.g. Alegret et al., 2015; Kędzierski et al., 2011; Rodríguez-Tovar
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et al., 2011; Sosa-Montes de Oca et al., 2016). The rusty layer contains Kfs and Fe-oxide
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sphaerules and enrichment of iridium and other platinum-group elements and it is interpreted
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as a distal ejecta layer of the Chicxulub impact (e.g., Martínez-Ruiz, 1994; Martínez-Ruiz et
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al., 1992, 1997, 1999). The carbonate content increases up the dark boundary layer, which
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passes upward into cream-coloured calcareous marlstones (CaCO3 content 70%) followed by
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rose marly limestones (CaCO3 content 85%). The rose marly limestones constitute the top of
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the studied interval. The lowermost Danian deposits belong to the lowermost part of the Agost
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Formation (Chacón and Martín-Chivelet, 2005).
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According to the benthic foraminiferal assemblages, the deposition of the sedimentary interval studied took place in middle bathyal depths (600–1000 m; Alegret et al., 2003;
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Molina et al., 2005). A detailed biostratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous and the Lower
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Palaeogene transition in the section analyzed is based on planktic foraminifera (Alegret et al.,
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2003; Arenillas et al., 2004; Molina et al., 2005). The Plummerita hantkeninoides Subzone
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(Pardo et al., 1996) corresponds to the uppermost 3.45 m-thick portion of the Maastrichtian
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deposits. Within the lower Danian, the Guembelitria cretacea Biozone (Canudo et al., 1991;
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Molina et al., 1996, 2004), correlated with the P0 Zone (Pardo et al., 1996), is differentiated
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from the first 14 cm of the lowest Danian, including the dark boundary layer and the
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overlying ~5 cm thick layer of light calcareous marlstones. This biozone was subdivided into
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the Hedbergella holmdelensis and the Parvularugoglobigerina longiapertura subzones by
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Arenillas et al. (2004). Above the Guembelitria cretacea Biozone, the
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Parvularugoglobigerina eugubina Biozone (Molina et al., 1996), which is equivalent to the
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P1a p.p. [P1a(1)] (Pardo et al., 1996) or to the Parvularugoglobigerina longiapertura p.p.
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biozones (Canudo et al., 1991), corresponds to the 60–65 cm-thick interval above the lower
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Guembelitria cretacea Biozone.
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3. Materials and methods
The studied exposure was trenched and the continuous sampling was performed to
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provide the highest resolution studies. The overlapping samples of rocks vertical to bedding
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100 cm below the K-Pg boundary to 30 cm above the boundary were collected. In the
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laboratory samples were processed to produce above 80 slabs which were impregnated with
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improving visibility of barely noticeable bioturbation structures. The polished slabs were
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scanned using flatbed scanner Epson Perfection V 350 Photo. Digital image treatment was
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applied to enhance visibility of bioturbation structures and facilitate the ichnofabric analysis.
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Three thin sections were made to investigate Thalassinoides and Teichichnus infilling which
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were observed and photographed using a Nikon Eclipse 50i polarizing microscope equipped
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with a Nikon DS-Fi1 digital camera. A scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM, Hitachi
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S4700) with field emission and EDS analysis was used to compound and morphological
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analysis of Zoophycos ferruginous marginal tube infilling. The samples are housed at the
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Institute of Geological Science, Jagiellonian University, and at the Department of Stratigraphy
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and Palaeontology, University of Granada.
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4. Results
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4.1. Trace fossils
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Previous ichnological analyses in the Agost sections revealed a relatively abundant
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and conspicuously dark trace fossil assemblage of the Danian occurring within the light
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Maastrichtian sediments. It consists of Alcyonidiopsis longobardiae, Chondrites ?targionii,
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Diplocraterion ?parallelum, Planolites isp., Thalassinoides isp., and Zoophycos isp.
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(Rodríguez-Tovar & Uchman, 2004a, b). The high-resolution ichnological analysis herein
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confirms the presence of the previously recognized Chondrites targionii, Planolites isp.,
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Thalassinoides isp., and Zoophycos isp., but also allows recognition of new ichnotaxa
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including Chondrites ?affinis, Chondrites isp., cf. Pilichnus isp., Planolites isp. A, Planolites
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isp. B, ?Teichichnus isp., Trichichnus linearis, and cf. Trichichnus isp.
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Chondrites targionii (Brongniart, 1828) (Fig. 4A–H) is a system of tree-like branching horizontal and subhorizontal tunnels that ramify downward (1st, 2nd, and rarely 3rd order of
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branching) at acute angles (15–60°). The tunnels are elliptical cross-sections, 1–2 mm wide,
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up to 80 mm long. An alternate branching pattern is the most common; opposite branching is
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rare. The branches are straight or curved near the master tunnel. In the distal part of some
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tunnels, arched branches radiate from a single point somewhat resembling an umbel (Fig. 4C–
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G). The termination of some branches is pointed in a lanceolate (leaflike) shape (Fig. 4D).
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Cross sections of branches are visible as groups of dark, fusiform to elliptical dots. Densely
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packed tunnels of this trace fossil may occur in fillings of Thalassinoides isp. (Fig. 4E, F) (the
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Bandchondriten morphology sensu Ehrenberg, 1942; see Uchman, 2007). The preferential
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burrowing inside Thalassinoides may be caused by lower sediment consistency and higher
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organic matter content within the burrow infill than in the host sediment (Uchman and
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Wetzel, 1999).
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Chondrites ?affinis Sternberg, 1833 (Fig. 4I) consists of fragmentarily preserved,
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straight, flattened, branched tunnels at least 56 mm long and 4 mm wide. The branch runs
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under acute angle (45°) in respect to the master tunnel. The filling is darker than the host rock. Chondrites isp. (Fig. 4J) consists of straight, flattened tunnels (1 mm wide and 9–12
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mm long) with first and second-order branches that ramify at acute angles (10–45°) from the
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same points located approximately 1 mm apart and show pointed terminations. The branches
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run in opposite directions more or less perpendicularly to the master tunnel. Some of them
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gently meander in their distal part. The perpendicular arrangement of branches resembles
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Chondrites patulus Fisher-Ooster, 1858.
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Chondrites has commonly been interpreted as a fodinichnion of an unknown deposit
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feeder (e.g., Osgood, 1970), but more recently it has been considered as a chemichnion
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(Bromley, 1996) whose trace maker feeds on chemosymbiotic microbes at the aerobic-
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anaerobic interface (Seilacher, 1990). The Chondrites trace maker is not precisely identified
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but it is considered to be a low-oxygen-tolerant organism (Bromley & Ekdale, 1984).
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Cf. Pilichnus isp. (Fig. 5I) is a horizontal, straight, sinusoidal or irregularly winding, probably branched, filamentous tunnel, 0.1–0.4 mm in diameter, and filled with darker
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material than the surrounding rock. It is observed on parting surfaces. Individual cylinders
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may cross one another. The specimens differ from Pilichnus dichotomus Uchman, 1999 in the
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absence of the distinct, dichotomous branches which are diagnostic of this ichnogenus.
Pilichnus is a fodinichnion produced by vermiform organisms (Buatois and Mángano,
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2012). Recent burrows resembling Pilichnus are produced by the polychaetes Heteromastus
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filiformis (Claparède) and Capitella cf. aciculata (Hartman) in marine deposits (Hertweck et
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al., 2007).
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Planolites isp. A (Fig. 5B) is a horizontal or oblique, straight or gently curved,
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cylindrical, smooth tube, elliptical in cross-section, preserved as a full-relief exichnion with a
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fairly constant width (2–4 mm) and filled with dark clayey material.
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Planolites isp. B (Fig. 5A) is a horizontal, gently tortuous cylindrical tube, elliptical in cross-section, 3–4.5 mm wide, filled with darker material than the host rock and traced for a
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maximum distance of 56 mm. Its surface is slightly wavy, locally smooth.
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Planolites is an actively filled fodinichnion produced by eurybathic vagile “worm”like deposit-feeders (e.g., Fillion and Pickerill, 1990; Keighley and Pickerill, 1995; Osgood,
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1970; Pemberton and Frey, 1982). In contrast, Locklair and Savrda (1998) interpreted
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Planolites as a previously open burrow that was passively filled with overlying sediment.
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?Teichichnus isp. (Fig. 5C, D) was observed only on a polished surface of calcareous
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marlstone as a vertical series of parallel, retrusive, U-shaped spreite laminae, which are an
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only part of a larger structure. The spreites are 3–9 mm wide. The entire structure is 13 mm
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high. Teichichnus is an equilibrium and feeding structure (e.g., Bromley, 1996; Droser et al.,
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2002), produced by “worms” or arthropods (Pickerill et al., 1984).
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Thalassinoides isp. (Fig. 6) is a horizontal, rarely slightly oblique, mostly straight or slightly curved, occasionally strongly curved, flattened tunnel with common Y- and T-shaped
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branches. The tunnel width changes from 8 to 26 mm even within burrows. Enlargements at
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branching points are common (Fig 6C). In cross section, Thalassinoides is visible as oval or
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round spots (Fig. 6B, D). Margins of the tunnel are smooth, locally uneven and undulating
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(Fig 6B). The distance between branch points is 18–170 mm, mainly approximately 50 mm.
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The longest observed length of tunnels is 250 mm. Colour and texture of Thalassinoides differ
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from the surrounding rock, and may be rusty brown, locally beige. It is composed of a poorly
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sorted mixture of clay minerals and micrite with foraminiferal tests, ostracods, ?faecal pellets
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(<1 mm), quartz (<1 mm) and glauconite grains (<1 mm). Fairly to well-preserved tests of the
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Maastrichtian planktic foraminifera such as Rosita contusa (Cushman, 1926),
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Racemiguembelina fructicosa (Egger, 1900), Globotruncanita stuarti (de Lapparent, 1918)
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and Globigerinelloides sp. (Cushman and Ten Dam, 1948) (Fig. 6E, F) are the most abundant
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bioclasts. They may be occasionally corroded, crushed, partly micritized or ?pyritized.
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Ostracods are scarce and poorly preserved. The pellets are spherical and ovoid micritic grains.
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The bioclasts may be locally concentrated. Occasional accumulations, elliptical in cross
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section, composed of densely packed foraminiferal tests and subordinate quartz grains, could
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be bromalites (?coprolite, ?regurgitalite) (Fig. 6F). In places, the longer axes of the bioclasts,
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especially foraminiferal tests, are preferentially orientated parallel to the tunnel margins
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forming semi-circular smears (Fig. 6E).
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Thalassinoides is interpreted mostly as a fodinichnion-domichnion (e.g., Bromley, 1996) produced mainly by decapod crustaceans, especially the callianassid or thalassinidean
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shrimps (e.g., Bromley and Frey, 1974), which have a wide behavioural plasticity.
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Thalassinoides occurs in several marine facies (e.g., Monaco et al., 2007).
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Trichichnus linearis Frey, 1970 (Fig. 5F) is a straight, filamentous oblique cylinder in marlstones, 0.4 mm in diameter, up to 39 mm long, filled with material similar to the
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surrounding host sediment. The infilling material displays slight differences in grain packing
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and contains dispersed dark and rusty iron compounds.
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Cf. Trichichnus isp. (Fig. 5E, G, H) is horizontal, straight or almost straight, smooth
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cylinder, circular or elliptical in cross-section, 0.1–3 mm wide, up to 64 mm long, with rare
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Y-shaped branches. It is filled with ferruginous material with closely packed framboidal
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aggregates and surrounded by a ferruginous halo. The framboids are circular, 15–60 µm in
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diameter. In some specimens, the internal structure of the framboidal aggregates has been
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obliterated by partial recrystallization. Chemical analysis under SEM with EDS showed that
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the framboidal aggregates consist of iron oxides (?magnetite, ?hematite), which are probably
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pseudomorphoses after framboidal pyrite.
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Trichichnus occurs in both shallow- and deep-marine fine-grained deposits (Frey, 1970; Wetzel, 1983). Trichichnus is produced by opportunistics deeply burrowing organisms
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with higher tolerance for dysoxia than Chondrites (Kotlarczyk and Uchman, 2012; McBride
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and Picard, 1991; Uchman, 1995). The trace maker was originally considered as a “worm”-
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like or crustacean meiofaunal organism (Frey, 1970) and later was referred to
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chemosymbiotic feeding (Uchman, 1999), but Kędzierski et al. (2014) reinterpreted
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Trichichnus as fossilized filaments of sulphur bacteria living in the transition from anoxic to
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dysoxic sediments, closely resembling the extant Thioploca.
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Zoophycos isp. (Figs. 3D; 7) is a helicoidal spreite structure, 16–35 cm high,
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andcomposed of whorls and lobes (Fig. 7E), whose width progressively increases downward.
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Margins of the basal whorls protrude alongside as long, horizontal, or subhorizontal, tongue-
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lobes are generally straight, occasionally with irregularly tortuous margins. The top of the
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whorl is prolonged in a vertical shaft, which downwardly forms a helical spiral resembling the
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Archimedes screw, whose tightly coiled, contiguous whorls screw into the host marlstones.
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The lobes show spreite structure composed of alternating light and dark lamellae, 0.25 to 1.5
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mm wide, which are less visible in the whorls. The lamellae are located 0.2–1 mm apart and
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show a crescentic course, with curvature mostly concordant to the distal part of the lobes but
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in some parts, they are slightly winding and discontinuous. The lobes are encircled by a
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marginal tunnel which is 1–6 mm wide and has a greyish-brown, clayey or ferruginous filling
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(Fig. 7A). The ferruginous filling contains densely packed microspheres that are 100–500 µm
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in diameter (Fig. 7B–D). SEM studies with EDS analysis reveal that they consist of iron
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hydroxides (?goethite). The spheres are probably pseudomorphic after framboidal pyrite.
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Pyrite framboids within the marginal tube of Zoophycos were described for the first time by
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Gong et al. (2007) and later interpreted as pyritized microorganismal colonies cultivated by
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the Zoophycos producer (Zhang et al., 2015). However, pyrite is also common in other trace
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fossils, not only within Zoophycos (Gallego-Torres et al. 2015; Reolid, 2014).
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Zoophycos displays several morphological varieties, probably constructed in different
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ways by different organisms (e.g., Monaco et al., 2016; Oliviero, 2007), which may include
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sipunculids (Wetzel and Werner, 1980), echiurans (Kotake, 1992) or polychaetes (Knaust,
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2009). Various ethologic models of Zoophycos have been proposed, including the strip-mine
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model, detritus-feeding model (Kotake, 1991), gardening model, refuse-dump model and
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cache model (Bromley, 1991). Since the Mesozoic, Zoophycos has shown a tendency to occur
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in deeper environments than in the Palaeozoic, from below the shelf to abyssal depths (Zhang
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et al., 2015).
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4.2. Distribution of trace fossils and bioturbation structures
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In the highly bioturbated (ichnofabric index 6 of Droser and Bottjer, 1986) upper Maastrichtian calcareous marlstones and marlstones belonging to the Plummerita
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hantkeninoides Biozones two trace fossil generations differing in colour of filling (light and
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overprinting dark) have been differentiated. Light-filled (grey to creamy) trace fossils and
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diffuse bioturbation structures are interpreted as Maastrichtian in age, whilst the dark (dark
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grey) trace fossil assemblage is dated as the earliest Danian (Rodríguez-Tovar et al., 2004,
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2006). The light bioturbation structures are indistinct because of their diffuse margins and
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similar colours to the host rock. The light trace fossils include Zoophycos, Chondrites,
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Thalassinoides and ?Planolites (Fig. 3M). Therefore, we focused the analysis in the dark-
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filled trace fossils.
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The dark trace fossils strongly contrast with surrounding host marlstones. They
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include all the above described ichnotaxa, such as Chondrites ?affinis, Chondrites targionii,
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Chondrites isp., cf. Pilichnus isp., Planolites isp. A, Planolites isp. B, ?Teichichnus isp.,
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Thalassinoides isp., and Zoophycos isp. (Fig. 2). The dark trace fossils crosscut the rusty layer
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(well seen in Zoophycos, Fig. 3B) and plunge below it into the Maastrichtian marlstones as
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much as 45 cm (Fig. 2); their colonization surface was above the K-Pg boundary. The dark
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infilling material derives from the dark boundary layer as evidenced by geochemical studies
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(Rodríguez-Tovar et al., 2004, 2006), as well as from the rusty layer as revealed by the
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presence of ferruginous spherules in the infilling of Thalassinoides (Rodríguez-Tovar, 2005).
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In the polished slab made through the K-Pg boundary, the rusty layer at the top of the
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Maastrichtian marlstones overlain by the dark boundary layer is disrupted by trace fossils
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whose filling definitely supports that this material comes from both the rusty layer and the
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT dark boundary layer (Fig. 3C). The same material fills unidentifiable bioturbation structures
299
found just underneath the K-Pg boundary. The dark Planolites crosscuts the rusty layer,
300
occurring commonly within the uppermost centimetre of the Maastrichtian marlstones, and
301
less commonly extending downward to 14 cm (doubtful occurrences at 25 cm) below the
302
rusty layer. Well-developed, horizontal and oblique branched tunnels of dark Thalassinoides
303
(Fig. 6A), coming from the lower Danian materials, range from the rusty layer to 8 cm below
304
the boundary. The deepest tunnels were recorded 15 cm below the boundary. One specimen
305
of dark ?Teichichnus (Fig. 5C, D) and several specimens of Pilichnus (Fig. 5I) were found
306
between 3 to 4 cm below the rusty layer. The dark Zoophycos and Chondrites are abundant
307
and have the most extended record. The dark Zoophycos crosscuts the rusty layer and extends
308
downward as much as 35 cm below (Fig. 3B). Chondrites shows a continuous distribution
309
from the rusty layer as much as 40 cm below it being most abundant in the interval from 10 to
310
20 cm below the boundary. Chondrites is often present within fillings of light (Maastrichtian)
311
and dark (Danian) Thalassinoides (Fig. 3H, K–M). A crisp Trichichnus linearis is noted 35
312
cm below the boundary, while Trichichnus isp. extends downward to 45 cm below the
313
boundary, occasionally cutting dark Zoophycos and Chondrites. Therefore, it is regarded as a
314
Danian trace.
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The light Maastrichtian bioturbation structures are crosscut by dark Danian bioturbation structures (Fig. 3L, M). Within the dark (Danian) trace fossil assemblage,
317
Chondrites crosscuts Thalassinoides (Figs. 3K; 4C), Planolites and Zoophycos. Zoophycos
318
crosscuts Thalassinoides, while Trichichnus crosscuts Zoophycos and Chondrites. Any
319
crosscutting between Thalassinoides and Planolites has been observed.
320
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The dark boundary layer (Guembelitria cretacea Biozone, Agost Formation according
321
to Chacón and Martín-Chivelet, 2005) is represented by fully bioturbated, olive-grey
322
calcareous claystones (ichnofabric index 6 of Droser and Bottjer, 1986). Within the mottled
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324
differences in colours and colour saturation (Fig. 3F–J). Based on their colours, three
325
generations of ichnofabrics have been distinguished. The first generation consists of
326
unidentifiable bioturbation structures and Chondrites, Planolites and Thalassinoides filled
327
with olive-grey material slightly darker than the surrounding rock (Fig. 3F, H). Planolites and
328
Thalassinoides are observed mainly in cross sections, which are elliptical in outline. Their
329
fillings are often reworked with dark-grey Chondrites observed as concentrations of fusiform
330
to elliptical dots (Fig. 3H). The second generation consists of bioturbation structures filled
331
with creamy material that most probably derives from the creamy calcareous marlstones
332
overlying the dark boundary layer. These light-coloured bioturbation structures are seen as
333
dots, smears and deformed rings (Fig. 3I). Moreover, similarly filled light Zoophycos (Fig.
334
3J), and ?Planolites are recognized. The third generation consists of dark grey, unidentifiable
335
bioturbation structures and similarly filled Zoophycos, Chondrites, and ?Planolites (Fig. 3F–
336
I). Zoophycos is slightly plastically deformed (Fig. 3G), suggesting a low consistency of the
337
burrowed sediments. The layer from which the filling material derives has not been
338
recognized within the analysed section. The dark-coloured bioturbation structures crosscut the
339
preexisting olive and creamy bioturbation structures of the first and second generations (Fig.
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3G, I).
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According to the above observations, trace fossils located in the dark boundary layer
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belong to three generations, but show a common feature: All are distinctly smaller in
343
comparison with the late Maastrichtian light trace fossils and the early Danian dark trace
344
fossils dug into the Maastrichtian calcareous marlstones (Fig. 8).
345
Above the dark boundary layer, the creamy calcareous marlstones (Guembelitria
346
cretacea Biozone) are totally bioturbated (Fig. 2). Aside from unrecognizable olive-grey
347
bioturbation structures, identifiable Chondrites, ?Planolites and Thalassinoides are present
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT (Fig. 3E). The overlying rose marly limestones are also totally bioturbated. In the rose mottled
349
background, bioturbation structures are visible as dots, elliptical smears, some with serrate
350
outlines. Moreover, ?Planolites shows a continuous record and Zoophycos is locally observed
351
(Fig. 3D). Both ?Planolites and Zoophycos are filled with material slightly lighter or darker
352
than the surrounding rock.
353 354
5. Discussion
355 356
5.1. The Maastrichtian ichnoassemblage
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With respect to the ichnoassemblage produced during the latest Maastrichtian, as can be
359
deduced from the crosscutting relationships, the Zoophycos and Chondrites producers
360
probably occupied the deepest tiers, whilst the Thalassinoides and ?Planolites trace makers
361
inhabited shallower tiers, similarly to trace fossil assemblages from the Upper Cretaceous
362
marls of Denmark (Ekdale and Bromley, 1991). The coexistence of ichnotaxa representing
363
different tiers at the same level suggests continuous or nearly continuous long-term
364
colonization of the substrate by the same community of bioturbators and upward shift of tiers
365
due to normal aggradation of sediment (Taylor et al., 2003). This is evidence of relatively
366
stable depositional environment during the late Maastrichtian, for at least the 50 ka calculated
367
using sedimentation rate estimated by Groot et al. (1989).
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5.2. The early Danian ichnoassemblage
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The early Danian dark trace fossils from the Agost section were previously analysed by
371
Rodríguez-Tovar and Uchman (2004a, b), focusing on the dark traces within the uppermost
372
20 cm of the Maastrichtian marlstones. Four tiers were distinguished. Now, the new high-
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT resolution ichnological analysis of the K-Pg boundary interval, embracing an interval 100 cm
374
below and 30 cm above the K-Pg boundary, shows the presence of dark, early Danian trace
375
fossils as low as 45 cm below the K-Pg boundary (Fig. 2). It has allowed the improvement of
376
the vertical distribution ranges of particular ichnotaxa, as well as higher detail in the structure
377
of the macrobenthic tracemaker community by the distinction of no less than five tiers
378
developed during the Danian (Fig. 9).
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The uppermost tier (A) during the earliest Danian was colonized by unknown
380
organisms responsible for intensive bioturbation of well-oxygenated poorly cohesive
381
sediments just below the seafloor. Intensive burrowing near the surface of well-oxygenated
382
sediments resulted in homogeneous background in the uppermost Maastrichtian deposits. The
383
upper tier (B) is represented by distinct, dark Thalassinoides and Planolites (the dominant
384
ichnotaxon). The colonized sediment was well-oxygenated, soft; locally very soft, as marked
385
by Thalassinoides showing uneven margins. In the intermediate tier (C), a higher diversity of
386
trace fossils is recorded from 3 to 15 cm below the K-Pg boundary. They include
387
Thalassinoides (branched burrows, most abundant from 3 to 8 cm below the boundary),
388
Planolites, and subordinate Pilichnus and ?Teichichnus. Thalassinoides is dominant.
389
Planolites and Thalassinoides are distinctly flattened, locally with their clayey infilling
390
squeezed out into surrounding marlstones (Fig. 6B). This is evidence of soft substrate at the
391
time of burrowing; the sediment was later dewatered and compacted. The presence of burrows
392
that are not permanently connected to the sea floor (Planolites) indicates high oxygenation of
393
pore waters. Chondrites and Zoophycos that crosscut other trace fossils of this tier were
394
produced probably after upward shifting of tiers caused by normal aggradation of sediment.
395
This concerns densely packed Chondrites, usually with sharp margins, in dark and light
396
Thalassinoides whose filling was already dewatered and compacted (Figs. 4C; 6E, F). The
397
deeper tier D is represented by Zoophycos and Chondrites. Chondrites crosscuts Zoophycos,
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT suggesting that the Chondrites-producer burrowed in a deeper level than the Zoophycos
399
maker. This is confirmed by the deeper position of dark Chondrites (as much as 40 cm below
400
the K-Pg boundary) than Zoophycos (as much as 35 cm below). The distinct margins of the
401
marginal tube and distinct spreites in Zoophycos and distinct tunnels in Chondrites indicate
402
highly cohesive sediment during colonization (stiffground). The deepest tier E contains only
403
Trichichnus (as much as 45 cm below the boundary), which crosscuts the dark Zoophycos and
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Chondrites. Tiers D and E evidently had pore water of low oxygen content.
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5.3. The dark boundary layer
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The presence of ichnofabric generations differing in colour indicates that the dark boundary layer has been reburrowed many times, confirming different phases of colonization
410
as previously interpreted (Rodríguez-Tovar et al., 2004, 2006). The order of colonization by
411
trace makers after the K-Pg boundary event is difficult to determine. Most probably, the olive-
412
grey ichnofabric generation, slightly darker than hosting claystones, is the oldest. The
413
ichnofabric generation filled with creamy material coming from the overlying creamy
414
limestones is an evidence of bioturbation just after deposition of the dark boundary layer. The
415
observed plastic deformation and the commonly diffuse margins of unidentifiable light-
416
coloured bioturbation structures suggest that the olive-grey claystones were still soft during
417
this phase of development. Judging from the crosscutting relationships, the dark-grey
418
ichnofabric generation reflects the latest phase of infaunal colonization of the dark boundary
419
layer, still in a substrate of low consistencyas inferred from the slightly plastically deformed
420
Zoophycos. No layer from which the dark grey infilling material could derive has been
421
recognized within the analysed section. The absence of such a layer may reflect a minor
422
erosion, though no discontinuity which might be evidence of this has been observed. It is
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possible that this layer of dark grey sediment was completely mixed with the surrounding
424
sediment (as indicated by the biodeformational structures), and that the only evidence of its
425
original content is recorded as the infilling material of the trace fossils.
426
The lack of well-defined relationships between the analysed bioturbation structures recorded in the dark boundary layer impedes a conclusive interpretation of the tiering pattern.
428
Nevertheless, continuous colonization of the dark boundary layer, mainly by deposit-feeders,
429
is evident. The absence of primary lamination in the dark boundary layer at Agost is its
430
principal difference from the Caravaca section, the other of the best two preserved sections
431
worldwide, located in the same region, where two laminated horizons are present in the dark
432
boundary layer (Rodríguez-Tovar and Uchman, 2006). This suggests diverse colonization of
433
the dark boundary layer and its bioturbational reworking at Agost. However, we cannot
434
definitively reject the possibility of brief periods without burrowing activity in the dark
435
boundary layer in Agost that are not recorded in the ichnofabrics because of subsequent
436
bioturbation.
439 440
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5.4. The influence of the K-Pg event on the trace makers and the Lilliput Effect
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The ichnological analysis conducted by Rodríguez-Tovar and Uchman (2004a, b) revealed that after deposition of the rusty layer, in the earliest Danian, the uppermost
442
Maastrichtian marlstones were colonized by a well-developed suite of endobenthic organisms.
443
New, high-resolution ichnological analysis showed that the suite of trace makers was more
444
diverse and complex and their depth of burrowing was greater. The observed ichnotaxa may
445
be referred to different levels (tiers) occupied by deposit-feeders and trace makers of
446
chemichnia, probably sipunculid worms, crustaceans and polychaetes. The iron spherules
447
within Thalassinoides fillings in the Agost section are convincing evidence that the
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT marlstones were colonized during deposition of the rusty layer, when the marlstones were
449
highly cohesive and the open tunnels of Thalassinoides were gravitationally filled
450
(Rodríguez-Tovar, 2005). A new micro- and macroscopic analysis of the dark Thalassinoides
451
fill has revealed the presence of Cretaceous foraminifera mixed with olive-grey clayey
452
material coming from the dark boundary layer. This indicates that Thalassinoides could be at
453
least partly actively filled and that the Cretaceous material was incorporated in the fill, e.g.,
454
during reburrowing of partly filled tunnels, or that the Cretaceous material was distributed on
455
the seafloor during the earliest Danian by excavation of burrows. The undulating
456
Thalassinoides tunnels with uneven margins suggest at least locally low cohesion of sediment
457
(Fig. 6B). The filling of dark Thalassinoides is the same as in the olive-grey marlstone
458
ichnofabric generations in the dark boundary layer, showing that they belong to the same
459
stage of colonization, which lasted as long as deposition of the dark boundary layer. This was
460
confirmed by the 13C/14C isotopic analysis of the dark trace fossil fillings (Rodríguez-Tovar et
461
al., 2004, 2006). The dark boundary layer, which is maximally of 10 cm, was deposited
462
during 12 ka if the accumulation rate of 0.83 cm/ka estimated for the early Danian (Groot et
463
al., 1989) is accepted.
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The dark Thalassinoides is reworked with Chondrites filled by material slightly darker
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than the Thalassinoides fill and having sharply bounded tunnels. This suggests that the trace
466
maker of Chondrites burrowed into already dewatered fill of relatively high cohesivity (Figs.
467
3K; 6C).
468
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Comprehensive studies have revealed no significant differences in composition of the
469
Maastrichtian and early Danian trace fossil assemblages. This confirms minor only impact of
470
the environmental perturbations across the K-Pg boundary on the burrowing organisms in
471
deep-marine hemipelagic settings. The persistence of the same trace fossils immediately
472
before and after the K-Pg event reflects greater adaptation or wide tolerance of the trace-
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT maker community (mostly of deposit feeders and chemichnia) to changing environmental
474
conditions, together with rapid reestablishment of pre-event environmental conditions.
475
Recently, ultra-high-resolution geochemical analysis in the nearby Caravaca section suggests
476
a reestablishment of oxygen conditions on the order of 104–105 years, and rapid recovery of
477
deep-sea ecosystems at the bottom and in intermediate waters, allowing the immediate
478
colonization by the macrobenthic tracemaker community (Sosa-Montes de Oca et al., 2013,
479
2016). One of the beneficial environmental factors potentially supporting their survivorship
480
was the high food concentration on the sea floor due to the increased detritus supply caused
481
by mass mortality shortly after the boundary event (Coccioni and Galeotti, 1994; Sheehan and
482
Hansen, 1986). Another important factor allowing survivorship was the feeding strategy of
483
most bioturbating organisms (see Labandeira et al., in press). According to Sheehan and
484
Hansen (1986) and several other researches (e.g., Arthur et al., 1987), marine animals within a
485
food chain starting with dead organic matter (detrital food chain), such as scavengers and
486
deposit feeders, did not experience severe extinction at the K-Pg boundary. Conversely, filter
487
and suspension feeders dependent on plankton suspended in the water column suffered more
488
significantly. Non-deposit feeders such as filter-feeding brachiopods, bryozoans and bivalves
489
and predatory ammonites experienced severe extinction across the K-Pg boundary (Arthur et
490
al., 1987). Similarly, deposit-feeding bivalves survived the K-Pg extinction event with little
491
loss, unlike suspension-feeding bivalves (Jablonski and Raup, 1995; Lockwood, 2003).
492
Decline in the number of filter- and suspension-feeding species is commonly ascribed to the
493
reduction or suppression of primary productivity after the K-Pg boundary event (e.g., Arthur
494
et al., 1987; Bernaola and Monechi, 2007; Hsü et al., 1982; Sheehan and Hansen, 1986; Zachos
495
et al., 1989). This led to reduction of food availability and caused loss of organisms strictly
496
depending on organic matter flux from the photic zone (Arthur et al., 1987).
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT The absence of differences in ichnotaxonomic composition through the boundary
498
interval does not exclude an influence of the K-Pg event on the trace makers as recorded
499
different ways than a discontinuity in occurrences or extinctions. The same ichnotaxa from
500
the dark boundary layer (Guembelitria cretacea Biozone) are distinctly smaller than those in
501
underlying calcareous marlstones of the uppermost Maastrichtian (Plummerita hantkeninoides
502
Biozone). The reduction in burrow size is particularly evident for Chondrites, Planolites and
503
Thalassinoides. Burrow diameter reflects the trace-maker size and the fact that burrowing
504
organisms cannot be wider than their burrow (Twitchett and Barras, 2004). The reduction in
505
size of trace makers in the Agost section did not occur immediately after the K-Pg event,
506
when the olive-grey traces were produced in the uppermost Maastrichtian marlstones during
507
the earliest Danian, but later. Thus, the reaction of burrowing organisms to the K-Pg boundary
508
event was delayed compared to other groups of organisms. The size decrease of surviving
509
organisms within specific taxa after the extinction event is called the Lilliput Effect (Urbanek,
510
1993). This phenomenon is temporary and occurs during the so-called survival interval (sensu
511
Kauffman and Erwin, 1995).
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Dwarfism of trace makers might be caused by environmental stress conditions resulted from food shortage, dysoxia or low pH (Twitchett, 2007). Initially, no significant changes in
514
size of trace makers might be attributed to the beneficial environmental conditions following
515
the large influx of organic matter to the sea floor generated by high mortality (Coccioni and
516
Galeotti, 1994). After the initial ”food rain”, food supply to the bottom declined substantially
517
because of the collapse of primary production. It appears that one response of trace makers to
518
the chronic food shortage during the survival interval was decrease in body size. Another
519
possible cause of dwarfism among trace makers could be stress caused by the ocean
520
acidification which took place after the end-Cretaceous asteroid impact (e.g., Tyrrell et al.,
521
2015). In modern acidified shallow waters near CO2 seeps, two marine gastropod species
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were smaller than the same species living in normal pH seawaters and had lower metabolic
523
demands (Garillli et al., 2015). The reported dwarfism among gastropods exposed over
524
multiple generations to higher CO2 levels was their adaptation strategy to acidic conditions
525
(Garillli et al., 2015). Burrow size is known to decrease after mass extinctions and it has been documented
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aftermath of the Late Devonian (Morrow and Hasiotis, 2007), Permian-Triassic (e.g.,
528
Twitchett, 2007) and end-Triassic extinctions (Twitchett and Barras, 2004). Burrow size
529
reduction after the K-Pg boundary event was also documented in Thalassinoides within the
530
Thalassinoides-dominated assemblage from shallow-marine siliciclastic, carbonate and
531
glauconite-dominated deposits of the Gulf Coastal Plain in Alabama and Texas and in the
532
Atlantic Coastal Plain of New Jersey, USA (Wiest et al., 2015, 2016). The data from the
533
Agost section support the response of trace makers to changing environmental conditions
534
after the K-Pg impact event. The diminishment of body size (Lilliput Effect) after the K-Pg
535
boundary event was noticed by Wiest et al. (2015, 2016) in respect to the trace makers of
536
Alabama and Texas in the USA, but the data from the Agost section shows that this
537
phenomenon concerns not only Thalassinoides but extends also to the trace makers of
538
Chondrites and Planolites.
541 542
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6. Conclusions
543
The Agost trace fossil assemblage, including Chondrites targionii, Chondrites ?affinis,
544
Chondrites isp., Pilichnus isp., Planolites isp., ?Teichichnus isp., Thalassinoides isp.,
545
Trichichnus linearis, Trichichnus isp., and Zoophycos isp., continues through the K-Pg
546
boundary interval,providing evidence of continuous habitation of the boundary interval
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT sediments. Detailed ichnofabric analysis, including colour infilling and diffusion of the
548
margins of the trace fossils, allows interpretation of different phases of colonization during
549
deposition of the dark boundary layer, just after the K-Pg boundary event. Size reduction of
550
some trace fossils within and just above the dark boundary illustrates the Lilliput Effect on
551
their tracemakers (e.g., Chondrites, Planolites and Thalassinoides producers) – a delayed
552
reaction of the burrowing organisms to the K-Pg boundary event resulting from lower food
553
supply due to collapse of primary production in the later phases of the event.
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554 Acknowledgements
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The authors would like to thank Andrew K. Rindsberg (University of West Alabama) and
558
Matias Reolid (Universidad de Jaén) for their constructive reviews. Research by R-T was
559
funded by Projects CGL2012-33281 and CGL2015-66835-P (Ministerio de Economía y
560
Competitividad), and Research Group RNM-178 (Junta de Andalucía). A.U. received a
561
support from the Jagiellonian University. W.Ł. was supported by the Jagiellonian University
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(DS/MND/WBiNoZ/ING/2016).
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Fig. 1. Location of the K-Pg boundary section at Agost and main tectonic units of the south-
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eastern Spain.
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Fig. 2. The studied interval with vertical distribution of trace fossils produced after K-Pg
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boundary event.
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Fig. 3. (A) The Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary section at Agost in general view. The red
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dash line marks the K-Pg boundary. The measurement tape is 50 cm long. (B) Detailed view
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of the Agost section. Yellow arrows indicate Zoophycos isp. coming from the dark boundary
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layer and disturbing the rusty layer. The hammer is 23 cm long. (C) Vertical cross section of
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the K-Pg boundary with the rusty layer at the base of the dark boundary layer; a few
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millimetres below the K-Pg boundary – redistributed the rusty layer and material from the
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dark boundary layer. Polished slab. Specimen used for the thin section, INGUJ247P/Ag-K-Pg.
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(D) Rose marly limestones, lower Danian, Agost Formation, INGUJ247P/Ag+14-16(5). (E)
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Creamy calcareous marlstones overlying the dark boundary layer, lower Danian, Agost
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Formation, Ag-60. (F–J) Polished slabs of the dark boundary layer (vertical section)
833
displaying 3 different trace fossil generations differing in colour. (F) Specimen used for the
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thin section, INGUJ247P/Ag+1.1. (G) Specimen used for the thin section,
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INGUJ247P/Ag+1.2. (H) INGUJ247P/Ag+1-5(2). (I) INGUJ247P/Ag+0-6(3b). (J)
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT INGUJ247P/ Ag+0-6(3c). (G) Plastically deformed Zoophycos isp. (K–M) Polished slabs of
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calcareous marlstones belonging to the Raspay Formation showing crosscutting relationships
838
between two trace fossil generations, Maastrichtian and lower Danian. Scale bar in all is 1 cm.
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(K, L) Horizontal cross section, 4 cm below the boundary. (K) Specimen used for the thin
840
section, INGUJ247P/ Ag-0-5.1. (L) INGUJ247P/Ag-10-20.1. (M) Interval from 30 to 40 cm
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below the K-Pg boundary, vertical cross section, Ag-50.
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Maastrichtian: Thalassinoides isp. (Thm), Zoophycos isp. (Zhm) Chondrites isp. (Chm);
843
Danian: Thalassinoides isp. (Thd), Zoophycos isp. (Zod), Chondrites isp. (Chd); ?Trichichnus
844
isp. (?Tr).
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Fig. 4. Early Danian trace fossils from the Agost section found within the upper Maastrichtian
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marlstones, Raspay Formation. Scale bar in all is 1 cm. (A) Chondrites targionii and
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Trichichnus isp. (Tr) oriented oblique to the bedding surface, INGUJ247P/Ag-20.1. (B)
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Chondrites targionii and Trichichnus isp. oriented on the parting surface, parallel to bedding
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surface, Ag-80. (C, D, G) Chondrites targionii showing well developed system of branching
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with arched branches resembling an umbel, exichnial forms oriented on the parting surface
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parallel to the bedding surface. (C) INGUJ247P/Ag-0-20.1A (D) Ag-81. (G) Ag-84. (E, F)
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Densely packed tunnels of Chondrites targionii within the Thalassinoides infilling,
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INGUJ247P/Ag-10-20.1. (H) Chondrites targionii with evident phobotaxis, Ag-82. (I)
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Chondrites ?affinis oriented oblique to the bedding surface, Trichichnus isp., INGUJ247P/Ag-
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25.1. (J) Oriented, exichnial Chondrites isp. resembling Chondrites patulus on a parting
857
surface parallel to the bedding, Ag-83.
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Fig. 5. Trace fossils from the K-Pg boundary interval in Agost. (A) Planolites isp. A,
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INGUJ247P/AG-25. Scale bar is 1 cm. (B) Planolites isp. B, Ag-70. Scale bar is 1 cm. (A, B)
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862
isp., exichnion visible on surface perpendicular to the bedding of the uppermost Maastrichtian
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marlstones, Raspay Formation, INGUJ247P/Ag-1.2. Scale bar is 0.5 cm. (D) U-shaped
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laminations called spreite highlighted by difference in colour and character of bioclast packing,
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view in optical microscope, plane polarized light, INGUJ247P/Ag-1.2. Scale bar is 1mm. (E) cf.
866
Trichichnus isp., endichnial full relief on a parting surface, Maastrichtian marlstones, Raspay
867
Formation, INGUJ247P/Ag-40.1. Scale bar is 1 cm. (F) Trichichnus linearis, endichnion within
868
the marlstones bed, Raspay Formation, oriented oblique to bedding, INGUJ247P/Ag-35.1. (G, H)
869
Trichichnus isp. filled with framboidal aggregates, SEM view, INGUJ247P/Ag-24.1. (I) cf.
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Pilichnus isp., exichnion a parting surface in a marlstone bed, INGUJ247P/Ag-0-4.1.
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Fig. 6. Thalassinoides isp. from the Agost section, exichnial forms within the upper
873
Maastrichtian marlstones, Raspay Formation. (A) Complex system of horizontal and oblique
874
tunnels exposed on bedding surface. Scale bar is 2 cm. (B) Distinctly flattened
875
Thalassinoides, evident infilling material squeezing out into the surrounding marlstones,
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INGUJ247P/Ag-6-16.1. Scale bar is 1 cm. (C) Thalassinoides infilling reworked by
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Chondrites targionii, INGUJ247P/Ag-3-8.1. Scale bar is 1 cm. (D) Cross section through
878
tunnel showing active infilling, scan of the thin section, INGUJ247P/Ag-1.3. Scale bar is 0.5
879
cm. (E) Fragment of active infilling of Thalassinoides isp. with preferentially orientated
880
foraminifera tests parallel to the tunnel margins (yellow, dashed line), INGUJ247P/Ag-1.3.
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Scale bar is 0.25 cm. (F) Elliptical bioclast accumulations interpreted as possible bromalites,
882
INGUJ247P/Ag-1.4. Scale bar is 0.25 cm.
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Fig. 7. Zoophycos isp. from the Agost section, upper Maastrichtian calcareous marlstones,
885
Raspay Formation (A) Elongated tongue-like lobe surrounded by ferruginous marginal tube
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT fulfilled with densely packed spheres that are probably pseudomorphoses after framboidal
887
pyrite, Ag-90. Scale bar is 1 cm. (B, C) Ferruginous spheres within marginal tube, binocular
888
microscope view, INGUJ247P/Ag-0-15.1. Scale bar is 1mm. (D) SEM view of a ferruginous
889
sphere, INGUJ247P/Ag-0-15.1/SEM. (E) Distinct apex of the dark Zoophycos isp. Scale bar
890
is 10 cm.
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Fig. 8. Burrow diameters of Chondrites isp., Planolites isp. and Thalassinoides isp. from the
893
upper Maastrichtian to lower Danian (trace fossil generations filled with dark material coming
894
from the dark boundary layer found within upper Maastrichtian marlstones) and Danian
895
(generations measured within the dark boundary layer and overlying creamy marls) found at
896
the Agost section. Circles indicate mean values; standard deviations above and below mean
897
values are marked by vertical line; shaded region indicates range between the largest and
898
smallest recorded burrow sizes. The measurements and visual way of displaying data are
899
analogical to those of Twitchett (2007).
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Fig. 9. Tiering pattern and crosscutting relationships of the early Danian dark trace fossils
902
from the Agost section.
904 905
Appendix A. Supplementary data.
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10°W
t di
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o To N
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ica
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100 km
Internal Prebetic
Cretaceous
Eocene
External Prebetic
Paleocene
Quaternary
nt
0
0.5
1 km
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Chondrites isp. cf. Pilichnus isp. Planolites isp. ?Teichichnus isp. Thalassinoides isp. Trichichnus isp. Zoophycos isp.
[cm] ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
20
0
Abathomphalus mayaroensis
-20
dark-filled Thalassinoides
dark-filled Zoophycos
-30 dark-filled Chondrites
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light-filled Thalassinoides light-filled Zoophycos
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-60
K-Pg
SC
-10
MAASTRICHTIAN
RI PT
10
M AN U
Pv. eugubina G. cretacea
DANIAN
30
-70 -80
light-filled Chondrites
-90
Lithology marly limestones calcareous marlstones calcareous marlstones and marlstones
calcareous claystones (dark boundary layer) rusty layer
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
[mm]
Chondrites isp.
burrow diameter
3
2
1 ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
0
n = 22
66
47 early Danian
Maastrichtian [mm]
Planolites isp.
RI PT
5
SC M AN U
3
0
EP
TE D
2
AC C
burrow diameter
4
1
Danian
n= 9
Maastrichtian
[mm]
10 early Danian
26 Danian
Thalassinoides isp.
burrow diameter
30
20
10
0
n = 20 Maastrichtian
10 early Danian
26 Danian
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT No significant mortality of macrobenthic ichnofauna after the K-Pg event but their good adaptation to environmental changes: ichnotaxa in the upper Maastrichtian and lower Danian are almost the same.
•
Chondrites, Planolites and Thalassinoides in the dark boundary layer and just above are smaller than in the older and younger sediments evidencing the Lilliput effect on their tracemakers.
•
The Lilliput effect is delayed to the K-Pg event, probably because the primary production declined after the initial increase in supply of organic matter caused by the event.
AC C
EP
TE D
M AN U
SC
RI PT
•