AUTHOR=Denezine Matheus , Adôrno Rodrigo Rodrigues , Do Carmo Dermeval Aparecido , Guimarães Edi Mendes , Walde Detlef Hans Gert , De Alvarenga Carlos José Souza , Germs Gerard , Antonietto Lucas Silveira , Valdivia Rodríguez Christian Gianfranco , Nunes Junior Osvaldo De Oliveira TITLE=Methodological Development of a Combined Preparation for Micropaleontological and Sedimentological Studies of Samples From the Proterozoic Record JOURNAL=Frontiers in Earth Science VOLUME=10 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.810406 DOI=10.3389/feart.2022.810406 ISSN=2296-6463 ABSTRACT=
The recovery of microfossils from Proterozoic rocks is commonly challenging because of metamorphism. In this study, an application of different methods usually applied on Phanerozoic rocks to test efficiency on recovering microfossil from Proterozoic units is presented. Chemical, physical, and biological factors can influence the recovery of microfossils, thereby becoming a barrier for biostratigraphic and paleoecological studies. Furthermore, low-cost projects with a reduced amount of sample collected, such as drill core sampling, need to optimize the preparation time and sample needed for different analyses. To overcome this challenge, the classical procedure of mineralized microfossil preparation, the palynological technique, and the study of clay mineralogy with the analyses of diagenetic alteration and the search for possible microfossils in thin sections were combined. Three Proterozoic lithostratigraphic units were selected to develop an integrated procedure for preparing samples for micropaleontologic and sedimentologic studies: the Paranoá Group, Mesoproterozoic, and the Bambuí Group, Ediacarian-Cambrian, Brazil, and Nama Group, Ediacaran-Cambrian, Namibia. Recovering individual microfossils from the Paranoá and Bambuí groups has been a challenge for paleontologists. Therefore, most micropaleontological studies have been done as a part of microbiofacies analyses in thin sections. All sediment fractions were studied in trial for the examination (and picking) of mineralized microfossils, even the finest ones. The microfossil picking was conducted using a stereomicroscope. Three species were recovered following this procedure: