Data from: A new global palaeobiogeographical model for the late Mesozoic and early Tertiary

Late Mesozoic palaeobiogeography has been characterized by a distinction between the northern territories of Laurasia and the southern landmasses of Gondwana. The repeated discovery of Gondwanan lineages in Laurasia has led to the proposal of alternative scenarios to explain these anomalous occurren...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ezcurra, Martín D., Agnolín, Federico L.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5015618
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d47h94c9
Description
Summary:Late Mesozoic palaeobiogeography has been characterized by a distinction between the northern territories of Laurasia and the southern landmasses of Gondwana. The repeated discovery of Gondwanan lineages in Laurasia has led to the proposal of alternative scenarios to explain these anomalous occurrences. A new biogeographical model for late Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems is here proposed, in which Europe and 'Gondwanan' territories possessed a common Eurogondwanan fauna during the earliest Cretaceous. Subsequently, following the Hauterivian, Europe severed from Africa and connected to Asiamerica resulting in a faunal interchange. This model explains the presence of 'Gondwanan' taxa in Laurasia and the absence of Laurasian forms in the southern territories during the Cretaceous. In order to test this new palaeobiogeographical model, tree reconciliation analyses (TRAs) were performed based on biogeographical signals provided by a supertree of late Mesozoic archosaurs. The TRAs found significant evidence for the presence of an earliest Cretaceous Eurogondwanan fauna, followed by a relatively short-term Gondwana-Laurasia dichotomy. The analysis recovered evidence for a biogeographical re-connection of the European territories with Africa and South America-Antarctica during the Campanian to Maastrichtian time-slice. This biogeographical scenario appears to continue through the early Tertiary and sheds light on the trans-Atlantic disjunct distributions of several extant plant and animal groups. Ezcurra and Agnolin Appendix 1 R2Archosaur Semi-strict Supertree construction, Time Slicing Pruning criteria, Archosaur Geographic and Temporal Distribution, and TNT Semi-strict Supertree File.Ezcurra and Agnolin Appendix 2 R1Late Jurassic-Cretaceous Archosaur Semi-strict Supertree.Ezcurra and Agnolin Appendix 3 R2Treatment of the Widespread Taxa Problem, Optimal Area Cladograms Search Parameters, Randomisation Test Analyses, Test of Biogeographical Hypotheses on the Phylogeny of Archosaur Tetrapods, and Linkage between Sea ...