While at the outcrop I collected a loose specimen that had obviously fallen off the outcrop. The specimen is comprised of the siltstone/mudstone layers and the friable layer. Below are two photographs of that specimen.
In the first photograph I’ve placed a magenta box around the texture that might be a fossil. I believe it to be a fossil (rather than dessication cracks) because the two sides of the item are the same width and arguably represents the cross-section of a conical shape. Further, the conical shape also arguably ends at an upper cap like shape.
In Eastern Ontario the base of the Potsdam Group is believed to be middle Cambrian in age.
There are numerous conical shaped fossils in the Cambrian (e.g., Volborthella, cephalopods, hyoliths), and the specimen may not be distinct enough to be identified.
Below I’ve provided a reference to a fairly recent paper by Hagadorn and Waggoner (2002) that is available over the internet and which contains a discussion of the fossil Volborthella.
I’ve also provided two references to a very recent paper on hyoliths.
Anyone wanting the specimen for research purposes should send me an email. Unfortunately it is one of those specimens where every time you pick it up another piece falls off.
Christopher Brett
Perth, Lanark County
References
Bettam, S., 2017
U of T undergrad leads team of paleontologists, classifying mysterious ancient cone-shaped sea creatures, U of T News, Global Lens Breaking Research, January 11, 2017
https://www.utoronto.ca/news/u-t-undergrad-leads-team-paleontologists-classifying-mysterious-ancient-cone-shaped-sea
Easton, R. M., 2015
Project Unit 15-014. Precambrian and Paleozoic Geology of the Perth Area, Grenville Province, in Summary of Field Work and Other Activities, 2015. Ontario Geological Survey, OFR 6313
at pages 18-1 to 18- 13
http://www.mndm.gov.on.ca/en/news/mines-and-minerals/summary-field-work-and-other-activities-2015
Hagadorn, J.W., and Waggoner, B.M., 2002
The Early Cambrian problematic fossil Volborthella: New insights from the Basin and Range, in F. A. Corsetti, ed., Proterozoic-Cambrian of the Great Basin and Beyond, Pacific Section SEPM Book 93, p. 135-150.
Moysiuk, J., Smith, M. R. and Caron, J.-B., 2017
Hyoliths are Palaeozoic lophophorates, Nature 541, 394–397 (19 January 2017) doi:10.1038/nature20804
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v541/n7637/abs/nature20804.html
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