New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina

Two new fossil mammal localities from the Paleogene of central-western Patagonia are preliminarily described as the basis for a new possible biochronological unit for the early Eocene of Patagonia, correlated as being between two conventional SALMAs, the Riochican (older) and the Vacan subage of the...

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Published in:American Museum Novitates
Main Authors: Marcelo F. Tejedor, Francisco J. Goin, Javier N. Gelfo, Guillermo López, Mariano Bond, Alfredo A. Carlini, Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané, Michael O. Woodburne, Laura Chornogubsky, Eugenio Aragón, Marcelo A. Reguero, Nicholas J. Czaplewski, Sergio Vincon, Gabriel M. Martin, Martín R. Ciancio
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: American Museum of Natural History 2009
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1
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spelling ftbioone:10.1206/577.1 2024-06-02T07:58:28+00:00 New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina Marcelo F. Tejedor Francisco J. Goin Javier N. Gelfo Guillermo López Mariano Bond Alfredo A. Carlini Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané Michael O. Woodburne Laura Chornogubsky Eugenio Aragón Marcelo A. Reguero Nicholas J. Czaplewski Sergio Vincon Gabriel M. Martin Martín R. Ciancio Marcelo F. Tejedor Francisco J. Goin Javier N. Gelfo Guillermo López Mariano Bond Alfredo A. Carlini Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané Michael O. Woodburne Laura Chornogubsky Eugenio Aragón Marcelo A. Reguero Nicholas J. Czaplewski Sergio Vincon Gabriel M. Martin Martín R. Ciancio world 2009-03-31 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1 en eng American Museum of Natural History doi:10.1206/577.1 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1 Text 2009 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1 2024-05-07T01:03:04Z Two new fossil mammal localities from the Paleogene of central-western Patagonia are preliminarily described as the basis for a new possible biochronological unit for the early Eocene of Patagonia, correlated as being between two conventional SALMAs, the Riochican (older) and the Vacan subage of the Casamayoran SALMA. The mammal-bearing strata belong to the Middle Chubut River Volcanic-Pyroclastic Complex (northwestern Chubut Province, Argentina), of Paleocene-Eocene age. This complex includes a variety of volcaniclastic, intrusive, pyroclastic, and extrusive rocks deposited after the K-T boundary. Geochronological data taken from nearby volcanic deposits that underlie and overlie the mammal-bearing levels indicate that both faunas are of late early Eocene age (Ypresian-Lutetian boundary). In addition to more than 50 species of mammals, including marsupials, ungulates, and xenarthrans, two lower molars are the oldest evidence of bats in South America. Paleobotanical and palynological evidence from inferred contemporary localities nearby indicate subtropical environments characterized by warm and probably moderately humid climate. Remarkably, this new fauna is tentatively correlated with Eocene mammals from the La Meseta Formation in the Antarctic Peninsula. We conclude that the two localities mentioned above are part of a possible new biochronological unit, but the formal proposal of a new SALMA awaits completion of taxonomic analysis of the materials reported upon here. If the La Meseta fauna is correlated biochronologically to western Patagonia, this also suggests a continental extension of the biogeographic Weddelian Province as far north as central-western Patagonia. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula BioOne Online Journals Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Argentina Chubut ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-76.100,-76.100) Patagonia Salma ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817) The Antarctic American Museum Novitates 3638 1 43
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description Two new fossil mammal localities from the Paleogene of central-western Patagonia are preliminarily described as the basis for a new possible biochronological unit for the early Eocene of Patagonia, correlated as being between two conventional SALMAs, the Riochican (older) and the Vacan subage of the Casamayoran SALMA. The mammal-bearing strata belong to the Middle Chubut River Volcanic-Pyroclastic Complex (northwestern Chubut Province, Argentina), of Paleocene-Eocene age. This complex includes a variety of volcaniclastic, intrusive, pyroclastic, and extrusive rocks deposited after the K-T boundary. Geochronological data taken from nearby volcanic deposits that underlie and overlie the mammal-bearing levels indicate that both faunas are of late early Eocene age (Ypresian-Lutetian boundary). In addition to more than 50 species of mammals, including marsupials, ungulates, and xenarthrans, two lower molars are the oldest evidence of bats in South America. Paleobotanical and palynological evidence from inferred contemporary localities nearby indicate subtropical environments characterized by warm and probably moderately humid climate. Remarkably, this new fauna is tentatively correlated with Eocene mammals from the La Meseta Formation in the Antarctic Peninsula. We conclude that the two localities mentioned above are part of a possible new biochronological unit, but the formal proposal of a new SALMA awaits completion of taxonomic analysis of the materials reported upon here. If the La Meseta fauna is correlated biochronologically to western Patagonia, this also suggests a continental extension of the biogeographic Weddelian Province as far north as central-western Patagonia.
author2 Marcelo F. Tejedor
Francisco J. Goin
Javier N. Gelfo
Guillermo López
Mariano Bond
Alfredo A. Carlini
Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané
Michael O. Woodburne
Laura Chornogubsky
Eugenio Aragón
Marcelo A. Reguero
Nicholas J. Czaplewski
Sergio Vincon
Gabriel M. Martin
Martín R. Ciancio
format Text
author Marcelo F. Tejedor
Francisco J. Goin
Javier N. Gelfo
Guillermo López
Mariano Bond
Alfredo A. Carlini
Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané
Michael O. Woodburne
Laura Chornogubsky
Eugenio Aragón
Marcelo A. Reguero
Nicholas J. Czaplewski
Sergio Vincon
Gabriel M. Martin
Martín R. Ciancio
spellingShingle Marcelo F. Tejedor
Francisco J. Goin
Javier N. Gelfo
Guillermo López
Mariano Bond
Alfredo A. Carlini
Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané
Michael O. Woodburne
Laura Chornogubsky
Eugenio Aragón
Marcelo A. Reguero
Nicholas J. Czaplewski
Sergio Vincon
Gabriel M. Martin
Martín R. Ciancio
New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
author_facet Marcelo F. Tejedor
Francisco J. Goin
Javier N. Gelfo
Guillermo López
Mariano Bond
Alfredo A. Carlini
Gustavo J. Scillato-Yané
Michael O. Woodburne
Laura Chornogubsky
Eugenio Aragón
Marcelo A. Reguero
Nicholas J. Czaplewski
Sergio Vincon
Gabriel M. Martin
Martín R. Ciancio
author_sort Marcelo F. Tejedor
title New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
title_short New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
title_full New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
title_fullStr New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
title_full_unstemmed New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina
title_sort new early eocene mammalian fauna from western patagonia, argentina
publisher American Museum of Natural History
publishDate 2009
url https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1
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long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-76.100,-76.100)
ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Argentina
Chubut
Patagonia
Salma
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Argentina
Chubut
Patagonia
Salma
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
op_source https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1
op_relation doi:10.1206/577.1
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1206/577.1
container_title American Museum Novitates
container_volume 3638
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op_container_end_page 43
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