Random Formation

Random Formation
Stratigraphic range: Early Cambrian
Type Formation
Underlies Bonavista Fm
Overlies Chapel Island Fm
Location
Region Newfoundland
Country Canada

The Random Formation is a near-shore rock unit dating to the early Cambrian period, incorporating quartzites, glauconitic and mud-cracked mudstones (now shales), and red channel sandstones.[1] It was deposited quickly and isn't super thick - 175m perhaps at a max.[2] The Blue Pinion Formation was originally recognized as a separate formation, but is now interpreted as an expression of the Random Fm.[3]

Age

The Stage 2 - Stage 3 bounrdary (Tommotian/Atdabanian) is thought to lie within the Random formation, or possibly in the overlying Bonavista Fm; the Smith Point Fm above that hosts the first trilobites.[4]

Palaeontology

The triolobite-like trace fossils Rusophycus & Cruziana occur in the Random Fm, alongside a range of other ichnofissils including Diplocraterion, Paleodictyon, Scolicia, and Squamodictyon.[4] Body fossils include the SSF Aldanella attleborensis assemblage.[5]

Refereces

  1. Hiscott, Richard N. (1982). "Tidal deposits of the Lower Cambrian Random Formation, eastern Newfoundland: Facies and paleoenvironments". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 19 (10): 2028. doi:10.1139/e82-180.
  2. Crimes, Thomas Peter (1992). "The Record of Trace Fossils across the Proterozoic—Cambrian Boundary". Origin and Early Evolution of the Metazoa. Topics in Geobiology. 10. p. 177. doi:10.1007/978-1-4899-2427-8_6. ISBN 978-1-4899-2429-2.
  3. Anderson, M. M. (1981). "The Random Formation of southeastern Newfoundland; a discussion aimed at establishing its age and relationship to bounding formations". American Journal of Science. 281 (6): 807. doi:10.2475/ajs.281.6.807.
  4. 1 2 Peter Crimes, T. (1987). "Trace fossils and correlation of late Precambrian and early Cambrian strata". Geological Magazine. 124 (2): 97–119. doi:10.1017/S0016756800015922.
  5. Bengtson, Stefan; Fletcher, Terence P. (1983). "The oldest sequence of skeletal fossils in the Lower Cambrian of southeastern Newfoundland". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 20 (4): 525. doi:10.1139/e83-050.
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