The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena?
The history of South American mammals has been episodic, apparently "stratified", and the "strata" relatively few in number and, as a rule, sharply and clearly separable. This is a consequence of the physical history of the continent. The fossil record shows that there were two g...
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ftunivlaplata:oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/117178 2023-05-15T13:43:43+02:00 The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? Pascual, Rosendo Balarino, María Lucía Udrizar Sauthier, Daniel Edgardo 2001 application/pdf 151-156 http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/117178 https://www.peapaleontologica.org.ar/index.php/peapa/article/view/234 en eng http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/117178 https://www.peapaleontologica.org.ar/index.php/peapa/article/view/234 issn:0328-347X http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) CC-BY-NC Paleontología South American land-mammals K-T. Tertiary-Pleistocene Dispersal Turnover Extinction Survival Articulo 2001 ftunivlaplata 2021-04-18T00:04:46Z The history of South American mammals has been episodic, apparently "stratified", and the "strata" relatively few in number and, as a rule, sharply and clearly separable. This is a consequence of the physical history of the continent. The fossil record shows that there were two great episodes characterized by drastic turnovers of mammal communities; both appear related to two of the most drastic physical changes withstood by the continent. The oldest episode is related to the separation of Africa from the other Gondwanan continents (shaping the primordial outlines of the eastern cost of the incipient Southern Atlantic Ocean), and to a sporadic connection of the South American plate with the North American plate. This led to the first great turnover: with the exception of two Gondwanan taxa (Monotremes and Gondwanatheres), and probably another one (Dryolestida), all the Gondwanan mammals (all non-tri- bosphenic taxa) became extinct, and were "replaced" by Laurasian tribosphenic marsupial and placental immigrants. Because of the early extinction (early Paleocene) of the Gondwanan non-tribosphenic survivors, and the subsequent isolation of the continent (including, at least, the Antarctic Peninsula) unique communities solely composed of quite endemic (native) marsupials and placentals were built up. As a consequence of the inter-American connection via the newborn Central America, an increasing biotic interchange began. The second great turnover, involving dispersal, extinction and survival, built up quite peculiar mammalian communities. These are the new basic mammal communities that, after the "Megafaunal Extinction" and the addition of a few and selected immigrants, distinguish the present Neotropical Region. Apparently this second great turnover was accomplished by replacement, not by displacement, as long thought. The failure to find mammals in rocks representing the K-T transition, has no record to analyze the modus operandi of the transcendental first turnover. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP): SeDiCI (Servicio de Difusión de la Creación Intelectual) Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula The Antarctic |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP): SeDiCI (Servicio de Difusión de la Creación Intelectual) |
op_collection_id |
ftunivlaplata |
language |
English |
topic |
Paleontología South American land-mammals K-T. Tertiary-Pleistocene Dispersal Turnover Extinction Survival |
spellingShingle |
Paleontología South American land-mammals K-T. Tertiary-Pleistocene Dispersal Turnover Extinction Survival Pascual, Rosendo Balarino, María Lucía Udrizar Sauthier, Daniel Edgardo The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
topic_facet |
Paleontología South American land-mammals K-T. Tertiary-Pleistocene Dispersal Turnover Extinction Survival |
description |
The history of South American mammals has been episodic, apparently "stratified", and the "strata" relatively few in number and, as a rule, sharply and clearly separable. This is a consequence of the physical history of the continent. The fossil record shows that there were two great episodes characterized by drastic turnovers of mammal communities; both appear related to two of the most drastic physical changes withstood by the continent. The oldest episode is related to the separation of Africa from the other Gondwanan continents (shaping the primordial outlines of the eastern cost of the incipient Southern Atlantic Ocean), and to a sporadic connection of the South American plate with the North American plate. This led to the first great turnover: with the exception of two Gondwanan taxa (Monotremes and Gondwanatheres), and probably another one (Dryolestida), all the Gondwanan mammals (all non-tri- bosphenic taxa) became extinct, and were "replaced" by Laurasian tribosphenic marsupial and placental immigrants. Because of the early extinction (early Paleocene) of the Gondwanan non-tribosphenic survivors, and the subsequent isolation of the continent (including, at least, the Antarctic Peninsula) unique communities solely composed of quite endemic (native) marsupials and placentals were built up. As a consequence of the inter-American connection via the newborn Central America, an increasing biotic interchange began. The second great turnover, involving dispersal, extinction and survival, built up quite peculiar mammalian communities. These are the new basic mammal communities that, after the "Megafaunal Extinction" and the addition of a few and selected immigrants, distinguish the present Neotropical Region. Apparently this second great turnover was accomplished by replacement, not by displacement, as long thought. The failure to find mammals in rocks representing the K-T transition, has no record to analyze the modus operandi of the transcendental first turnover. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Pascual, Rosendo Balarino, María Lucía Udrizar Sauthier, Daniel Edgardo |
author_facet |
Pascual, Rosendo Balarino, María Lucía Udrizar Sauthier, Daniel Edgardo |
author_sort |
Pascual, Rosendo |
title |
The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
title_short |
The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
title_full |
The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
title_fullStr |
The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
title_full_unstemmed |
The K-T and Tertiary-Pleistocene South American mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
title_sort |
k-t and tertiary-pleistocene south american mammalian turnovers: similar phenomena? |
publishDate |
2001 |
url |
http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/117178 https://www.peapaleontologica.org.ar/index.php/peapa/article/view/234 |
geographic |
Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula The Antarctic |
geographic_facet |
Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula The Antarctic |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula |
op_relation |
http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/117178 https://www.peapaleontologica.org.ar/index.php/peapa/article/view/234 issn:0328-347X |
op_rights |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) |
op_rightsnorm |
CC-BY-NC |
_version_ |
1766192336536076288 |