The caviomorph rodents from the San Andres Formation, east-central Argentina, and global Late Pliocene climatic change [An article from: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology]
Book Details
Author(s)D.H. Verzi, C.A. Quintana
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR4UTS
ISBN-13978B000RR4UT0
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
The caviomorph rodents from the San Andres Formation are revisited. The fossiliferous stratigraphic unit outcrops in the coastal cliffs of the Chapadmalal area (east-central Argentina), and represents the Late Pliocene (Upper Marplatan Stage, Sanandresian Substage). A new species of Cavia (Caviidae) and unpublished materials of Dolichotis salinicola (Caviidae) and Abrocoma (Abrocomidae) are described, and the taxonomic status of the previously described taxa is briefly discussed. The living taxa Cavia, D. salinicola and Abrocoma are first recorded in the San Andres Formation, and the extinct Abalosia (Octodontidae) is exclusive of this formation. The specimens of Abrocoma represent the single undoubted record of the living genus. The record of D. salinicola, Abalosia, Abrocoma and the octodontid Ctenomys represents an immigration event to east-central Argentina. This fauna from San Andres is the extinct caviomorph assemblage most clearly indicative of arid environments so far recorded. Its episodic character and composition, and the available palaeomagnetic data, reinforce the hypothesis that it is probably coeval with the profound Late Pliocene cooling and drying pulse detected worldwide around 2.5 Ma. The Sanandresian immigrant taxa would have inhabited the emergent semi-deserts of western Argentina, and may have reached the more eastern Chapadmalal area during an expansion of such arid environments triggered by this Late Pliocene cooling and drying pulse.
Description:
The caviomorph rodents from the San Andres Formation are revisited. The fossiliferous stratigraphic unit outcrops in the coastal cliffs of the Chapadmalal area (east-central Argentina), and represents the Late Pliocene (Upper Marplatan Stage, Sanandresian Substage). A new species of Cavia (Caviidae) and unpublished materials of Dolichotis salinicola (Caviidae) and Abrocoma (Abrocomidae) are described, and the taxonomic status of the previously described taxa is briefly discussed. The living taxa Cavia, D. salinicola and Abrocoma are first recorded in the San Andres Formation, and the extinct Abalosia (Octodontidae) is exclusive of this formation. The specimens of Abrocoma represent the single undoubted record of the living genus. The record of D. salinicola, Abalosia, Abrocoma and the octodontid Ctenomys represents an immigration event to east-central Argentina. This fauna from San Andres is the extinct caviomorph assemblage most clearly indicative of arid environments so far recorded. Its episodic character and composition, and the available palaeomagnetic data, reinforce the hypothesis that it is probably coeval with the profound Late Pliocene cooling and drying pulse detected worldwide around 2.5 Ma. The Sanandresian immigrant taxa would have inhabited the emergent semi-deserts of western Argentina, and may have reached the more eastern Chapadmalal area during an expansion of such arid environments triggered by this Late Pliocene cooling and drying pulse.
