TY - JOUR
T1 - Computed reconstruction of spatial ammonoid-shell orientation captured from digitized grinding and landmark data.
AU - Lukeneder, Alexander
AU - Lukeneder, Susanne
AU - Weber, Gerhard
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the Austrian Science Fund ( FWF, P 22109-B17 ). The authors thank Yeşim Islamoğlu (Ankara) and the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (Ankara) for the digging permission and the organization of two field trips. We are grateful to Mathias Harzhauser (Vienna), Philipp Strauss (Vienna) and Leopold Krystyn (Vienna) for providing material from previous field trips. Special thanks go to Franz Topka (Vienna) for his help during field trips and for grinding the reference-block. The authors thank Robert Marschallinger (Salzburg) and Christian Klug (Zurich) for constructive reviews of the manuscript. We thank Michael Schwaiger (Linz) and Martin Mayrhofer (Waldegg) for fruitful discussions concerning mathematical questions as well as Ulrike Exner (Vienna) for the possibility of using the software package Amira on her high-capacity PC. Andreas Kroh (Vienna) helped with useful advices concerning the digitization of the slices. Eckart Wallbrecher (Graz) is thanked for advice on statistical questions concerning the stereographic projection. Additionally, we acknowledge Simon Schneider (Cambridge) for his support in collecting hardly obtainable literature. The authors thank Maarten Voorn (Vienna) for the introduction to the software package Avizo as well as Martin Dockner (Vienna) for hardware-advices. Michael Klein (Vienna) from 7reasons Media Corporation is thanked for the help with the final animation clip-rendering.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - The internal orientation of fossil mass occurrences can be exploited as useful source of information about their primary depositional conditions. A series of studies, using different kinds of fossils, especially those with elongated shape (e.g., elongated gastropods), deal with their orientation and the subsequent reconstruction of the depositional conditions (e.g., paleocurrents and transport mechanisms). However, disk-shaped fossils like planispiral cephalopods or gastropods were used, up to now, with caution for interpreting paleocurrents. Moreover, most studies just deal with the topmost surface of such mass occurrences, due to the easier accessibility. Within this study, a new method for three-dimensional reconstruction of the internal structure of a fossil mass occurrence and the subsequent calculation of its spatial shell orientation is established. A 234 million-years-old (Carnian, Triassic) monospecific mass occurrence of the ammonoid Kasimlarceltites krystyni from the Taurus Mountains in Turkey, embedded in limestone, is used for this pilot study. Therefore, a 150×45×140mm
3 block of the ammonoid bearing limestone bed has been grinded to 70 slices, with a distance of 2mm between each slice. By using a semi-automatic region growing algorithm of the 3D-visualization software Amira, ammonoids of a part of this mass occurrence were segmented and a 3D-model reconstructed. Landmarks, trigonometric and vector-based calculations were used to compute the diameters and the spatial orientation of each ammonoid. The spatial shell orientation was characterized by dip and dip-direction and aperture direction of the longitudinal axis, as well as by dip and azimuth of an imaginary sagittal-plane through each ammonoid. The exact spatial shell orientation was determined for a sample of 675 ammonoids, and their statistical orientation analyzed (i.e., NW/SE). The study combines classical orientation analysis with modern 3D-visualization techniques, and establishes a novel spatial orientation analyzing method, which can be adapted to any kind of abundant solid matter.
AB - The internal orientation of fossil mass occurrences can be exploited as useful source of information about their primary depositional conditions. A series of studies, using different kinds of fossils, especially those with elongated shape (e.g., elongated gastropods), deal with their orientation and the subsequent reconstruction of the depositional conditions (e.g., paleocurrents and transport mechanisms). However, disk-shaped fossils like planispiral cephalopods or gastropods were used, up to now, with caution for interpreting paleocurrents. Moreover, most studies just deal with the topmost surface of such mass occurrences, due to the easier accessibility. Within this study, a new method for three-dimensional reconstruction of the internal structure of a fossil mass occurrence and the subsequent calculation of its spatial shell orientation is established. A 234 million-years-old (Carnian, Triassic) monospecific mass occurrence of the ammonoid Kasimlarceltites krystyni from the Taurus Mountains in Turkey, embedded in limestone, is used for this pilot study. Therefore, a 150×45×140mm
3 block of the ammonoid bearing limestone bed has been grinded to 70 slices, with a distance of 2mm between each slice. By using a semi-automatic region growing algorithm of the 3D-visualization software Amira, ammonoids of a part of this mass occurrence were segmented and a 3D-model reconstructed. Landmarks, trigonometric and vector-based calculations were used to compute the diameters and the spatial orientation of each ammonoid. The spatial shell orientation was characterized by dip and dip-direction and aperture direction of the longitudinal axis, as well as by dip and azimuth of an imaginary sagittal-plane through each ammonoid. The exact spatial shell orientation was determined for a sample of 675 ammonoids, and their statistical orientation analyzed (i.e., NW/SE). The study combines classical orientation analysis with modern 3D-visualization techniques, and establishes a novel spatial orientation analyzing method, which can be adapted to any kind of abundant solid matter.
KW - Amira 3D-software
KW - Destructive 3D-visualization
KW - Mass occurrences
KW - Spatial shell orientation
KW - Stereographic analyses
KW - Triassic ammonoids
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84892516192&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.cageo.2013.11.008
DO - 10.1016/j.cageo.2013.11.008
M3 - Article
SN - 0098-3004
VL - 64
SP - 104
EP - 114
JO - Computers & Geosciences
JF - Computers & Geosciences
ER -