Abstract
Carbonate quartz-sandstone intrusions, penetrating the brecciated limestone of the Volkhov and Kunda Stages (Dapingian–early Darriwilian) in the northwestern part of Estonia have been posing questions about their genesis for more than a century. The intrusions contain a rich, diverse and well preserved ostracod fauna, which is extremely heterogeneous and shows associations of species from different habitats or facies zones. The ostracod fauna in the intrusions refers to rapid horizontal mixing and displacement of a thick layer of bottom sediments, possibly resulting from a yet unknown impact event.
Acknowledgements
The study was supported by Estonian Science Foundation grants 8049 (T. Meidla and L. Ainsaar), 7087 (O. Tinn) and target funding program project SF0180051s08.This study is a contribution to the IGCP project 503.The authors thank the two anonymous reviewers for useful remarks.