(GSSP) for the base of the Ediacaran System The Ediacaran Period (c. 635–538.8 Mya) represents the time from the end of global
Marinoan glaciation to the first appearance worldwide of somewhat complicated trace fossils (
Treptichnus pedum (Seilacher, 1955)). Although the Ediacaran Period does contain soft-bodied
fossils, it is unusual in comparison to later periods because its beginning is not defined by a change in the fossil record. Rather, the beginning is defined at the base of a chemically distinctive
carbonate layer that is referred to as a "
cap carbonate", because it caps glacial deposits. This bed is characterized by an unusual depletion of 13
C that indicates a sudden climatic change at the end of the
Marinoan ice age. The lower
global boundary stratotype section (GSSP) of the Ediacaran is at the base of the cap carbonate (Nuccaleena Formation), immediately above the Elatina
diamictite in the
Enorama Creek section, Brachina Gorge, within the
Ikara–Flinders Ranges National Park, Flinders Ranges, South Australia. The
GSSP of the upper boundary of the Ediacaran is the lower boundary of the Cambrian on the SE coast of Newfoundland approved by the International Commission on Stratigraphy as a preferred alternative to the base of the
Tommotian Stage in
Siberia which was selected on the basis of the ichnofossil
Treptichnus pedum (Seilacher, 1955). In the history of stratigraphy it was the first case of usage of bioturbations for the System boundary definition. Nevertheless, the definitions of the lower and upper boundaries of the Ediacaran on the basis of chemostratigraphy and
ichnofossils are disputable. Cap carbonates generally have a restricted geographic distribution (due to specific conditions of their precipitation) and usually siliciclastic sediments laterally replace the cap carbonates in a rather short distance but cap carbonates do not occur above every tillite elsewhere in the world. The C-isotope chemostratigraphic characteristics obtained for contemporaneous cap carbonates in different parts of the world may be variable in a wide range owing to different degrees of secondary alteration of carbonates, dissimilar criteria used for selection of the least altered samples, and, as far as the C-isotope data are concerned, due to primary lateral variations of δ l3Ccarb in the upper layer of the ocean. Furthermore,
Oman presents in its stratigraphic record a large negative carbon isotope excursion, within the Shuram strongly questioning systematic association of negative δ l3Ccarb excursion and glacial events. Also, the
Shuram excursion is prolonged and is estimated to last for ~9.0 Myrs. As to the
Treptichnus pedum, a reference ichnofossil for the lower boundary of the Cambrian, its usage for the stratigraphic detection of this boundary is always risky, because of the occurrence of very similar trace fossils belonging to the Treptichnids group well below the level of
T. pedum in
Namibia,
Spain and
Newfoundland, and possibly, in the
western United States. The stratigraphic range of
T. pedum overlaps the range of the Ediacaran fossils in Namibia, and probably in Spain. == Subdivisions ==