scholarly journals An Early Hemingfordian (Early Miocene) fossil vertebrate fauna from Boron, western Mojave Desert, California

1984 ◽  
Vol 355 ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
David P. Whistler
1999 ◽  
Vol 21 (21) ◽  
pp. 139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Torra

Four years of sedimentological detailled study led me to reinterpretate the Upper Terriry Mesopotamia region stratigraphic squeme. Upon a detailed sedimentary environment analysis of the Mesopotamia – Chaco Paraná basin, I made a different interpretation about previous ideas of the several units present at this morphostructural domain. The Ituzaingo Formation was interpretated as continental (fluvial) in origin by several researchers based on an insecure fossil fauna of invertebrates, always present at the top of the layers. These fossil fauna his a broad and extend biochron over the Cenozoic time. The Paraná Formation infralies the Ituzaingó Formation. The idea of an erosion uncorformity between them was strongly proposed. The Paraná Formation carries marine fossil fauna of invertebrates dated as Middle Miocene. It generally is accepted that Toropí and Yupoí Formations rest over Ituzaingó Formation elsewhere. The structural contact was assumed as an erosional unconformity surface. Paraná Formation was dated by fossil invertebrate fauna as Middle Miocene. Topoí and Yupoí Formations were dated as of Midlle to Upper Pleistocene based on fossil vertebrate fauna. I assumed that the position of these fossils vertebrate fauna of is ofaloctonous for the Toropí and Yupoí muddy formations and I propose that the fossil vertebrate fauna is in Holocene sediments. I carried out detailled studies which include: architectural, granulometric and morphoscopic analysis, petrographic data, paleocurrent measurements, scanning electron microscopy, diffractometric x-ray measurements, detailled sedimentologic profiles, drill hole correlations and remote sensing digital processing image analysis. Architectural analysis me to distinguish the following internal sedimentary structures: hummocky cross stratification, tidal bundles, herringbone cross stratification, lenticular bedding, flaser bedding, bipolar cross stratification and several types of wavy stratifications. These studies led me to realize that the sedimentary environments and specially the relationship between these units are different from previously proposed studies. I propose a common shallow littoral marine origin (intertidal) for all these units in a Middle Miocene age, sincronous with the Paranense Sea ingression (12-14 MA) and an interdigitation between sand and mud lithofacies. A subsurface unit, near Paraná Formation, the Puelches Formatioin, is interpretated as belonging to this sandy-muddy typical shallow marine lithofacies, desoite of a previous work, that accepted a fluvial origin for this unit. An erosion unconformity was also proposed between Paraná and Puelches Formation. The Paraná and Ituzaingó Formations are composed by some 80% friable arenaceous facies and of about 20% of muddy facies. This is a typical heterolithic successioin. A neat but irregular ferricretization forehead is present, specially, in the sandy lithofacies. This physico-chemical phenomena led previous authors to a misinterpretation of the stratigraphic scheme. My results show that the contacts between forehead ferricretization in the sandy lithofacies was assumed as an erosion unconformity, which is not the case. In some place, the ferricretization formed ferrigenous sandstones, which I called ferrigenous duricrust. This is os a very recent age of about Upper Pleistocene-Holocene times. Calcretizatioin is also present in the outcrops. All these secondary processes hid the primary physical structures and chemical composition of the sandy-muddy lithofacies. Paraná, Ituzaingó, Toropí, Yupoí and Puelches Formations are suggested to have the same origin (intertidal) and the same age, Middle Miocene. They constitute a blanket body of about 1500 kilometers in extension at the northeastern portion of Argentina and have approximately 300 meters of thickness. They are composed only by medium, fine to very fine white sands and grey to beige mud lithofacies. When alternation is present (ferricretization), the sediments change its colours to reddish or yellowist, sometimes purple, brown or black. In a few cases the alternation (ferricretization) is very intense, then sands are converted into reddish to black sandstones. In this case, primary sedimentary tractive structures were always recognized. These units, Paraná and Ituzaingó Formations are sincronous and may be correlated with other similar outcrops at Uruguay, Brazil, Paraguay, Bolivia, Perú, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and Guyanas. They were formed during Paranense-Amazon Seas.


2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1861) ◽  
pp. 20171278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel T. Turvey ◽  
Jennifer J. Crees ◽  
James Hansford ◽  
Timothy E. Jeffree ◽  
Nick Crumpton ◽  
...  

Historical patterns of diversity, biogeography and faunal turnover remain poorly understood for Wallacea, the biologically and geologically complex island region between the Asian and Australian continental shelves. A distinctive Quaternary vertebrate fauna containing the small-bodied hominin Homo floresiensis , pygmy Stegodon proboscideans, varanids and giant murids has been described from Flores, but Quaternary faunas are poorly known from most other Lesser Sunda Islands. We report the discovery of extensive new fossil vertebrate collections from Pleistocene and Holocene deposits on Sumba, a large Wallacean island situated less than 50 km south of Flores. A fossil assemblage recovered from a Pleistocene deposit at Lewapaku in the interior highlands of Sumba, which may be close to 1 million years old, contains a series of skeletal elements of a very small Stegodon referable to S. sumbaensis , a tooth attributable to Varanus komodoensis , and fragmentary remains of unidentified giant murids. Holocene cave deposits at Mahaniwa dated to approximately 2000–3500 BP yielded extensive material of two new genera of endemic large-bodied murids, as well as fossils of an extinct frugivorous varanid. This new baseline for reconstructing Wallacean faunal histories reveals that Sumba's Quaternary vertebrate fauna, although phylogenetically distinctive, was comparable in diversity and composition to the Quaternary fauna of Flores, suggesting that similar assemblages may have characterized Quaternary terrestrial ecosystems on many or all of the larger Lesser Sunda Islands.


2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 383
Author(s):  
José I. Cuitiño ◽  
Sergio F. Vizcaíno ◽  
M. Susana Bargo ◽  
Inés Aramendía

Lago Posadas is located at the foot of the Southern Patagonian Andes, in southwestern Argentina, where the early Miocene Santa Cruz Formation (SCF) shows thick and laterally continuous exposures. This region has been scarcely explored for fossil vertebrates since the first efforts by J.B. Hatcher in 1898-99. In this contribution, we performed sedimentologic and paleontological studies in order to reconstruct depositional environments and the associated fossil vertebrate fauna. Sedimentologic data suggest that the sedimentary record begins with restricted marine-estuarine deposits grading upward to fluvial floodplains and fluvial channels. Extensive floodplains, occasionally interrupted by low-sinuosity, sand-dominated channels, show dominant reddish coloration, moderate to low paleosol development, abundant crevasse splay sandstones and lack of vegetal remains, suggesting deposition in a low gradient, oxygenated setting under elevated sedimentation rates. Vertical stratigraphic trends are subtle, suggesting little paleoenvironmental changes during deposition of the whole SCF in this region. Paleocurrent directions, sandstone composition and paleogeographic reconstructions all indicate that deposition of the SCF was strongly associated to the contemporaneous uplift of the Andes. Fossil vertebrates analyzed are the result of our collecting effort and revision of museum collections. The faunal assemblage includes 31 taxa: 28 mammals and three birds. Mammals belong to the main groups recorded in other areas of the SCF (metatherians, xenarthrans, notoungulates, litopterns, astrapotheres and rodents). The assemblage allows a Santacrucian Age sensu lato assignment for the fauna at Lago Posadas. Taxonomic revisions of several taxa are necessary to further adjust the biostratigraphic significance of this association. The combined record of arboreal, browser and frugivores, on one side, and grazer mammals and rheas, on the other, suggest the presence of both trees and open environments. Frugivores, among primary consumers, and the secondary consumers guild are under-represented due to sample and fossil remain size biases. The sedimentologic and paleontological record of the SCF in Lago Posadas suggests that the uplift of the Southern Patagonian Andes acted as a primary control on basin subsidence and sediment supply, providing a special signature for sub-andean localities. However, previously registered climatic changes are poorly recorded in this study.


1940 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 418-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothea M. A. Bate

A study of the fossil vertebrate fauna of the Wady el-Mughara caves was published in 1937 (Bate, 1937), but at that time it had not been found possible to carry out an intensive examination of the antelope remains, except for the purpose of making the first record of a fossil hartebeest in Palestine. This omission was due partly to lack of sufficient time and partly to the fact that the specimens were generally in a very fragmentary state of preservation. Nevertheless, since remains of gazelles, together with those of Dama mesopotamica, occurred throughout the cave leveis and were more plentiful than those of other species it was found practical to make use of these two types as climatic indicators, while other species were used as a control (Bate, 1937, fig. 1).


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