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      Crustaceans from bitumen clast in Carboniferous glacial diamictite extend fossil record of copepods.

      Nature Communications
      Animals, Copepoda, Crustacea, Fossils, Oman

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          Abstract

          Copepod crustaceans are extremely abundant but, because of their small size and fragility, they fossilize poorly. Their fossil record consists of one Cretaceous (c. 115 Ma) parasite and a few Miocene (c. 14 Ma) fossils. In this paper, we describe abundant crustacean fragments, including copepods, from a single bitumen clast in a glacial diamictite of late Carboniferous age (c. 303 Ma) from eastern Oman. Geochemistry identifies the source of the bitumen as an oilfield some 100-300 km to the southwest, which is consistent with an ice flow direction from glacial striae. The bitumen likely originated as an oil seep into a subglacial lake. This find extends the fossil record of copepods by some 188 Ma, and of free-living forms by 289 Ma. The copepods include evidence of the extant family Canthocamptidae, believed to have colonized fresh water in Pangaea during Carboniferous times.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          20975721
          10.1038/ncomms1049

          Chemistry
          Animals,Copepoda,Crustacea,Fossils,Oman
          Chemistry
          Animals, Copepoda, Crustacea, Fossils, Oman

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