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Featured researches published by Andrea Baucon.


Developments in sedimentology | 2012

A History of Ideas in Ichnology

Andrea Baucon; Emese M. Bordy; Titus Brustur; Luis A. Buatois; Tyron Cunningham; Chirananda De; Christoffer Duffin; Fabrizio Felletti; Christian Gaillard; Bin Hu; Lei Hu; Sören Jensen; Dirk Knaust; Martin G. Lockley; Pat Lowe; Adrienne Mayor; Eduardo Mayoral; Radek Mikuláš; Giovanni Muttoni; Carlos Neto de Carvalho; S. George Pemberton; John E. Pollard; Andrew K. Rindsberg; Ana Santos; Koji Seike; Huibo Song; Susan Turner; Alfred Uchman; Yuanyuan Wang; Gong Yi-ming

Abstract Although the concept of ichnology as a single coherent field arose in the nineteenth century, the endeavor of understanding traces is old as civilization and involved cultural areas worldwide. In fact, fossil and recent traces were recognized since prehistoric times and their study emerged from the European Renaissance. This progression, from empirical knowledge toward the modern concepts of ichnology, formed a major research field which developed on a global scale. This report outlines the history of ichnology by (1) exploring the individual cultural areas, (2) tracing a comprehensive bibliographic database, and (3) analyzing the evolution of ichnology semiquantitatively and in a graphical form (“tree of ichnology”). The results form a review and synthesis of the history of ichnology, establishing the individual and integrated importance of the different ichnological schools in the world.


PALAIOS | 2016

STARS OF THE AFTERMATH: ASTERIACITES BEDS FROM THE LOWER TRIASSIC OF THE CARNIC ALPS (WERFEN FORMATION, SAURIS DI SOPRA), ITALY

Andrea Baucon; Carlos Neto de Carvalho

Abstract Trace fossils are important evidence of benthic activity, but they have received less study than body fossils for investigating the aftermath of the end-Permian extinction. There is therefore a need to document Lower Triassic ichnofaunas to understand their significance with respect to the end-Permian crisis. In light of this need, this paper describes a novel Lower Triassic ichnosite at Mount Pallone (Carnic Alps, Italy), where the Campil Member (Smithian) of the Werfen Formation (Griesbachian–Spathian) presents an abundant ichnofauna characterized by excellent preservation and low diversity. Documented ichnogenera include Asteriacites lumbricalis, Gyrochorte comosa, Diplocraterion habichi and Planolites beverleyensis. The ichnofaunal composition and the bioturbation style suggest a marginal marine paleoenvironment ranging from intertidal to shallow subtidal settings. Storm influence, hydrodynamic energy, sedimentation rate, freshwater input and/or water temperature played an important role in structuring the benthic ecosystem. Dense (300 specimens/m2) aggregations of the trace fossil Asteriacites lumbricalis reveals social behavior of their inferred brittlestar producers (Echinodermata, Ophiuroidea). In line with modern brittlestar beds, social behavior provided significant advantage because raised arms of brittlestars dampened hydrodynamic energy. This study suggests that Asteriacites beds may be considered ichnological proxies for marine settings, low bioturbation intensity, shallow tiering, high sedimentation rate and/or event-bed deposition, significant levels of hydrodynamic energy, and low predation pressure. The studied ichnofauna reflects stressed environmental conditions, but it is unclear whether this reflects local brackish conditions (‘Gazpacho model’) or global hot temperatures (‘Hot Soup model’).


Geosphere | 2015

Behaviors mapped by new geographies: Ichnonetwork analysis of the Val Dolce Formation (lower Permian; Italy-Austria)

Andrea Baucon; Corrado Venturini; Carlos Neto de Carvalho; Fabrizio Felletti; Giovanni Muttoni

The Pramollo Basin (Italy-Austria) is one of the richest body and trace fossil sites of the Alps, and exhibits a well-preserved Permian–Carboniferous fluvio-deltaic to marginal-marine sedimentary succession. Despite the exceptionally abundant and well-preserved ichnological heritage, the trace fossils of the Pramollo Basin are not well studied, particularly those of Permian units. This study focuses on the ichnofauna of the Val Dolce Formation (Permian; partly Asselian to partly Sakmarian), with the goal of documenting its ichnological heritage and reconstructing its paleoenvironment. These research questions are addressed by applying network theory, an emerging field of complexity science that focuses on web-like systems made of interconnected entities. An ichnological system can be seen as a set of interlinked ichnotaxa, the topology of which depends on the organism-environment interactions. In addition, traditional paleontological and sedimentological observations are used to reconstruct the paleoenvironment. The following ichnotaxa are documented from the Val Dolce Formation: Archaeonassa isp., Curvolithus simplex , Cylindrichnus isp., Helminthoidichnites tenuis , Nereites missouriensis , Planolites isp., Phymatoderma isp., Pramollichnus pastae , Psammichnites plummeri , Taenidium isp., and Zoophycos isp. Network analysis indicates that the Val Dolce ichnological system is structured, with ichnotaxa organized in environment-driven ichnoassociations: Cylindrichnus - Planolites (proximal delta front), Phymatoderma - Zoophycos (prodelta with dysoxic porewaters), Cylindrichnus - Helminthoidichnites - Curvolithus - Zoophycos (distal delta front–proximal prodelta), and Helminthoidichnites - Taenidium - Curvolithus - Nereites - Zoophycos (prodelta). Furthermore, the delta front–prodelta gradient is accompanied by increasing bioturbation intensity and diversity, reflecting the decreasing intensity of major environmental stressors (hydrodynamics, freshwater input, turbidity). Centrality measures of network analysis allow the topological position of traces to be discerned within the studied system, detecting the paleoenvironmental resolution of individual ichnotaxa. As intersections of sets can be described by networks, the studied ichnoassociations can be considered as occupying intersecting behavioral niches. In analogy with the concept of a Hutchinsonian niche, an ichnotaxon’s niche exists in a multidimensional abstract space defined by environmental parameters, which are expressed as spatial variables in the paleolandscape. Consequently, ichnoassociations are not just association patterns, but represent spatial, environmental, and topological entities. This approach allows the reconstitution of spatial relationships between the geographical ranges of ichnotaxa and ichnoassociations, providing information on the physical arrangement of different subenvironments, that is, the structure of the paleoenvironment.


Archive | 2014

Multifractals and Capacity Dimension as Measures of Disturbance Patch Dynamics in Daedalus Ichnofabrics

Carlos Neto de Carvalho; Andrea Baucon

An ichnofabric includes all structure and textural changes of the sediment resulting from bioturbation (and bioerosion) at all scales. Abundance and distribution of burrows reflects the non-linear sorting effects of physical and biological parameters, resulting in a disturbance regime which generates patchiness. To analyze the patch dynamics of trace fossils as a result of environmental disturbance, this study quantifies bioturbation rates and spatial and temporal variation based on fractal geometry. Multifractal spectrum is used as a measure of spatial ichnofabric heterogeneities. The magnitude of the Daedalus ichnofabric fluctuations for the two stratigraphic sequences sampled shows that sandflat substrate colonization by the Daedalus halli worm producer after each storm event was opportunistic, mostly multigenerational, with an exclusive and significant occupation of emptied ecospace, for the purpose of meiofauna harvesting in clean sands.


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2014

Evolution of Crustaceans at the edge of the end-Permian crisis: Ichnonetwork analysis of the fluvial succession of Nurra (Permian–Triassic, Sardinia, Italy)

Andrea Baucon; Ausonio Ronchi; Fabrizio Felletti; Carlos Neto de Carvalho


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2013

Neoichnology of a barrier-island system: The Mula di Muggia (Grado lagoon, Italy)

Andrea Baucon; Fabrizio Felletti


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2013

The IchnoGIS method: Network science and geostatistics in ichnology. Theory and application (Grado lagoon, Italy)

Andrea Baucon; Fabrizio Felletti


Acta Geologica Polonica | 2010

Patterns of occurrence and distribution of crustacean ichnofossils in the Lower Jurassic-Upper Cretaceous of Atlantic occidental margin basins, Portugal

Carlos Neto de Carvalho; Nuno P.C. Rodrigues; Pedro Andrade Viegas; Andrea Baucon; Vanda Faria dos Santos


Comunicações Geológicas | 2016

Running crabs, walking crinoids, grazing gastropods: behavioral diversity and evolutionary implications in the Cabeço da Ladeira lagerstätte (Middle Jurassic, Portugal)

Carlos Neto de Carvalho; Bruno Claro Pereira; Adiel Klompmaker; Andrea Baucon; José António Moita; Pedro Pereira; Susana Machado; João Belo; Jorge M. F. Carvalho; Lia Mergulhão


VIII CNG 2010 | 2010

Nereites trails and other sandflat trace fossils from Portas de Almourão geomonument (Lower Ordovician, Naturtejo Geopark)

Carlos Neto de Carvalho; Andrea Baucon

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Annalisa Ferretti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Antonio Celani

International Centre for Theoretical Physics

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Claudio Tuniz

International Centre for Theoretical Physics

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