Conodonts from the Moscovian-Kasimovian boundary beds of the Usolka section (southern Ural Mountains) are studied. Morphological features of conodont elements are analyzed and the main taxo nomically significant characters of conodonts from the Moscovian-Kasimovian boundary are revealed. These characters are intended for the establishment of reliable determination of index species of the lower boundary of the Kasimovian Stage of the International Stratigraphic Chart. The most promising species marking this border is apparently "Streptognathodus" subexcelsus Alekseev et Goreva.
The selection of the global biomarker of the lower boundary of the Moscovian stages is one of the pressing issues of Carboniferous stratigraphy. Several solutions are suggested for this problem: Diplognathodus ellesmerensis Bender, Streptognathodus expansus (Igo & Koike) and Idiognathoides postsulcatus Nemirovskaya. The conodont species Declinognathodus donetzianus Nemirovskaya is one of the most prospective. It was detected in the rock sections of west Europe, the Donets Basin, the Moscow Syneclise, south Ural and the Appalachian Basin. The Volga region is also one of the places where Declinognathodus donetzianus Nemirovskaya is often met and this article is dedicated to detailed analysis of this species.
The base-Artinskian Stage GSSP is defined at 0.6 m above the base of bed 4b at the Dal'ny Tulkas section in the southern Urals of Russia (53.88847N and 056.51615E). This point corresponds to the First Appearance Datum of the conodont Sweetognathus asymmetricus, which is part of a well-defined and widely distributed lineage. Additional markers for correlation include a radioisotopic age interpolated between 290.1 and 290.5 Ma, a strontium isotopic ratio of .70767, and many additional fossils groups, particularly ammonoids and fusulines, but also including small foraminiferans, radiolarians, and palynomorphs. Finally, the boundary occurs within a transgressive succession, near, or at a maximum flooding surface in many sections, thereby forming a distinctive sequence stratigraphic signature in the field. The Artinskian Stage is the third stage of the Lower Permian or Cisuralian Series.
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