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Article: Crossing the boundary: an elasmobranch fauna from Stevns Klint, Denmark

Publication: Palaeontology
Volume: 57
Part: 3
Publication Date: May 2014
Page(s): 591 629
Author(s): <p>Jan S. Adolfssen&nbsp;and David J. Ward</p>
Addition Information

How to Cite

ADOLFSSEN, J.S. and WARD, D.J., 2014, Crossing the boundary: an elasmobranch fauna from Stevns Klint, Denmark. Palaeontology57, 3, 591–629. doi: 10.1111/pala.12079

Author Information

  • Jan S. Adolfssen - Natural History Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen University, 1350, Copenhagen K, Denmark (email: (jsadolfssen@snm.ku.dk)
  • David J. Ward - Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, SW7 5BD, UK (email: djw@nhm.ac.uk)

Publication History

  • Issue published online: 7 MAY 2014
  • Article first published online: 11 NOV 2013
  • Manuscript Accepted: 9 AUG 2013
  • Manuscript Received: 21 NOV 2012

Funded By

Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation
GeoCenter Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark

Online Version Hosted By

Wiley Online Library
Get Article: Wiley Online Library [Pay-to-View Access] |

Abstract

The chondrichthyan faunas from the Danish Maastrichtian chalk and the K/T boundary clay, the Fiskeler, are described for the first time. The rich and diverse fauna discovered in the late Maastrichtian chalk experienced a massive drop in diversity prior to the boundary. However, the fauna started to recover immediately after the deposition of the impact layer during earliest Danian times and had regained much of its diversity during the first few millennia after the bolide impact. Precision sampling has made it possible to document the recovery of the fauna, which did not suffer an extinction event of the same magnitude, as apparently observed in Morocco. At Stevns Klint, only 33 per cent of the chondrichthyan fauna became extinct compared with the 96 per cent in Morocco. The drop in diversity before the boundary is attributed to a sudden change in sea level. Among the sharks found in the chalk and Fiskeler are rare species such as Parasquatina and Echinorhinus and the first representative of Nebrius in Europe.

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