Abstract Precambrian organic-walled microfossils are not only a source for studying evolution but also increasingly associated with stratigraphic correlation, based on key fossils and assemblage composition. For this reason, two… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Precambrian organic-walled microfossils are not only a source for studying evolution but also increasingly associated with stratigraphic correlation, based on key fossils and assemblage composition. For this reason, two drill cores from north-eastern Estonia have been studied for their content and stratigraphic distribution of organic-walled microfossils (OWM), analysing samples from the Precambrian Gdov, Kotlin, and Voronka formations. The recovered assemblages are generally well-preserved and diverse consisting of abundant sphaeromorphs, such as Leiosphaeridia spp. and Pterospermopsimorpha spp., filamentous cyanobacteria, e.g. Cephalonyx geminatus and Palaeolyngbya catenata, and different types of cellular/colonial aggregates. In contrast, acanthomorphic acritarchs are rare with only a few unidentified examples present. The presence of taxa such as Pomoria rhomboidalis and Primoflagella speciosa in combination with the absence of large acanthomorphs suggests a late Ediacaran age of the studied samples. All in all, 38 species within 22 different genera are described herein, as are 9 taxa of unknown taxonomic affiliation. Another 11 taxa are briefly mentioned and depicted in order to provide for a better overview of the diversity of the assemblage. The stratigraphic distribution of the recognized taxa and assemblages can provide a powerful tool for correlation on the East European Platform as well as between Baltica and other palaeogeographic regions during the Ediacaran.
               
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