Middle Ordovician reefs of Norway
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Scandinavian University Press / Universitetsforlaget AS in Lethaia
- Vol. 14 (3) , 169-188
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3931.1981.tb01688.x
Abstract
The Middle Ordovician reefs of Norway were the first to develop in the western part of the Balto-scandian epicontinental sea and are the earliest coral-stromatoporoid reefs so far reported in Europe. Small patch reefs in the Steinvika Limestone, Langesund-Skien district, consist mainly of algae, echinoderms, corals and stromatoporoids. Bryozoans, mollusk, arthropods and brachiopods are also present. The reefs developed on pelmatozoan-rich substrates and are organically zoned, consisting of a pioneer community of stemmed echinoderms and sheet algae, a high-diversity intermediate community dominated by fasciculate corals and a low diversity climax community of massive corals and stromatoporoids. These communities are interpreted as the seral stages of an autogenic ecological succession. Small patch reefs are also present in the laterally equivalent Mjosa Limestone, Toten and Nes-Hamar districts. These are organically very similar to those in the Steinvika Limestone and developed in an identical way. A large complex, consisting of several reefs, also is present in the Mjosa Limestone. Unlike the reefs elsewhere, which developed within shallow inshore areas, this complex developed at the outer edge of the inshore shelf. The outstanding feature of the complex is the main reef forming the offshore limit which is totally dominated by stromatoporoids and lacks a sequential development. This is due to the influence of the harsher environment at the shelf edge.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crinoid holdfasts from the Silurian of GotlandLethaia, 1977
- Cyanophycean nature of stromatoporoidsNature, 1976
- A receptaculitid–echinoderm pioneer community in a Middle Ordovician reefLethaia, 1976
- Patch Reefs in the Carters Limestone (Middle Ordovician) in Tennessee, and Vertical Zonation in Ordovician ReefsGSA Bulletin, 1974
- Aspects of carbonate sedimentation in the Ordovician of BaltoscandiaLethaia, 1973
- Physiography, Ecology, and Sediments of Two Bermuda Patch ReefsThe Journal of Geology, 1971
- CERTAIN DATA ON THE GENESIS AND ECOLOGIC CHARACTER OF FRASNIAN REEFS OF THE ARDENNESInternational Geology Review, 1959
- Les Recifs Paleozoiques en BelgiqueInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1958
- Chapter 10: Niagaran Reefs in the Great Lakes AreaPublished by Geological Society of America ,1957
- Reefs or Bioherms?GSA Bulletin, 1932