Paleontología
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Annotated Checklist of Fossil Fishes from the Smoky Hill Chalk of the Niobrara Chalk (Upper Cretaceous) in Kansas
Lucas, S. G. and Sullivan, R.M., eds., 2006, Late Cretaceous vertebrates from the Western Interior. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 35. 193 ANNOTATED CHECKLIST OF FOSSIL FISHES FROM THE SMOKY HILL CHALK OF THE NIOBRARA CHALK (UPPER CRETACEOUS) IN KANSAS KENSHU SHIMADA1 AND CHRISTOPHER FIELITZ2 1Environmental Science Program and Department of Biological Sciences, DePaul University,2325 North Clifton Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60614; and Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University, 3000 Sternberg Drive, Hays, Kansas 67601;2Department of Biology, Emory & Henry College, P.O. Box 947, Emory, Virginia 24327 Abstract—The Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the Niobrara Chalk is an Upper Cretaceous marine deposit found in Kansas and adjacent states in North America. The rock, which was formed under the Western Interior Sea, has a long history of yielding spectacular fossil marine vertebrates, including fishes. Here, we present an annotated taxo- nomic list of fossil fishes (= non-tetrapod vertebrates) described from the Smoky Hill Chalk based on published records. Our study shows that there are a total of 643 referable paleoichthyological specimens from the Smoky Hill Chalk documented in literature of which 133 belong to chondrichthyans and 510 to osteichthyans. These 643 specimens support the occurrence of a minimum of 70 species, comprising at least 16 chondrichthyans and 54 osteichthyans. Of these 70 species, 44 are represented by type specimens from the Smoky Hill Chalk. However, it must be noted that the fossil record of Niobrara fishes shows evidence of preservation, collecting, and research biases, and that the paleofauna is a time-averaged assemblage over five million years of chalk deposition. -
Papers in Press
Papers in Press “Papers in Press” includes peer-reviewed, accepted manuscripts of research articles, reviews, and short notes to be published in Paleontological Research. They have not yet been copy edited and/or formatted in the publication style of Paleontological Research. As soon as they are printed, they will be removed from this website. Please note they can be cited using the year of online publication and the DOI, as follows: Humblet, M. and Iryu, Y. 2014: Pleistocene coral assemblages on Irabu-jima, South Ryukyu Islands, Japan. Paleontological Research, doi: 10.2517/2014PR020. doi:10.2517/2018PR013 Features and paleoecological significance of the shark fauna from the Upper Cretaceous Hinoshima Formation, Himenoura Group, Southwest Japan Accepted Naoshi Kitamura 4-8-7 Motoyama, Chuo-ku Kumamoto, Kumamoto 860-0821, Japan (e-mail: [email protected]) Abstract. The shark fauna of the Upper Cretaceous Hinoshima Formation (Santonian: 86.3–83.6 Ma) of the manuscriptHimenoura Group (Kamiamakusa, Kumamoto Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan) was investigated based on fossil shark teeth found at five localities: Himedo Park, Kugushima, Wadanohana, Higashiura, and Kotorigoe. A detailed geological survey and taxonomic analysis was undertaken, and the habitat, depositional environment, and associated mollusks of each locality were considered in the context of previous studies. Twenty-one species, 15 genera, 11 families, and 6 orders of fossil sharks are recognized from the localities. This assemblage is more diverse than has previously been reported for Japan, and Lamniformes and Hexanchiformes were abundant. Three categories of shark fauna are recognized: a coastal region (Himedo Park; probably a breeding site), the coast to the open sea (Kugushima and Wadanohana), and bottom-dwelling or near-seafloor fauna (Kugushima, Wadanohana, Higashiura, and Kotorigoe). -
Proceedings of SDAS 1997
Proceedings of the South Dakota Academy of Science Volume 76 1997 Published by the South Dakota Academy of Science Academy Founded November 22, 1915 Editor Kenneth F. Higgins Terri Symens, Wildlife & Fisheries, SDSU provided secretarial assistance Tom Holmlund, Graphic Designer We thank former editor Emil Knapp for compiling the articles contained in this volume. TABLE OF CONTENTS Minutes of the Eighty-Second Annual Meeting of the South Dakota Academy of Science........................................................................................1 Presidential Address: Can we live with our paradigms? Sharon A. Clay ..........5 Complete Senior Research Papers presented at The 82nd Annual Meeting of the South Dakota Academy of Science Fishes of the Mainstem Cheyenne River in South Dakota. Douglas R. Hampton and Charles R. Berry, Jr. ...........................................11 Impacts of the John Morrell Meat Packing Plant on Macroinvertebrates in the Big Sioux River in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Craig N. Spencer, Gwen Warkenthien, Steven F. Lehtinen, Elizabeth A. Ring, and Cullen R. Robbins ...................................................27 Winter Survival and Overwintering Behavior in South Dakota Oniscidea (Crustacea, Isopoda). Jonathan C. Wright ................................45 Fluctuations in Daily Activity of Muskrates in Eastern South Dakota. Joel F. Lyons, Craig D. Kost, and Jonathan A. Jenks..................................57 Occurrence of Small, Nongame Mammals in South Dakota’s Eastern Border Counties, 1994-1995. Kenneth F. Higgins, Rex R. Johnson, Mark R. Dorhout, and William A. Meeks ....................................................65 Use of a Mail Survey to Present Mammal Distributions in South Dakota. Carmen A. Blumberg, Jonathan A. Jenks, and Kenneth F. Higgins ................................................................................75 A Survey of Natural Resource Professionals Participating in Waterfowl Hunting in South Dakota. Jeffrey S. Gleason and Jonathan A. -
(Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) from the Upper Cretaceous of South America
A ptychodontid (Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) from the Upper Cretaceous of South America Paulo M. BRITO Departamento de Biologia Animal e Vegetal, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, rua São Francisco Xavier, 524, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) [email protected] Philippe JANVIER UMR 8569 du CNRS, Département Histoire de la Terre, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 8 rue Buffon, F-75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) [email protected] Brito P. M. & Janvier P. 2002. — A ptychodontid (Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) from the Upper Cretaceous of South America. Geodiversitas 24 (4) : 785-790. ABSTRACT An articulated assemblage of chondrichthyan teeth remain, previously described by Larrazet (1886) as selachian dermal scutes from the Carboniferous of New Granada, is re-described as a Ptychodus sp. and turns out to be Cretaceous in age, presumably from the La Luna Formation of Colombia or Venezuela. This Ptychodus species seems to differ from all the other known ptychodon- KEY WORDS tids by its homodontous dentition, tooth morphology and ornamentation, Chondrichthyes, however we prefer not to erect a new taxon here until tooth morphology Ptychodontidae, Upper Cretaceous, morphoclines become better known and help in the understanding of the South America. phylogenetic relationships among chondrichthyans. RÉSUMÉ Un ptychodontidé (Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) du Crétacé supérieur d’Amérique du Sud. Une plaque dentaire de Chondrichthyes, précédemment décrite par Larrazet (1886) comme des plaques dermiques d’un Sélacien du Carbonifère de la Nouvelle -
Upper Cretaceous Chondrichthyes Teeth Record in Phosphorites of the Loma Gorda Formation•
BOLETIN DE CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA http://www.revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/rbct Upper Cretaceous chondrichthyes teeth record in phosphorites of the • Loma Gorda formation Alejandro Niño-Garcia, Juan Diego Parra-Mosquera & Peter Anthony Macias-Villarraga Departamento de Geociencias, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Exactas, Universidad de Caldas, Manizales, Colombia. [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Received: April 26th, 2019. Received in revised form: May 17th, 2019. Accepted: June 04th, 2019. Abstract In layers of phosphorites and gray calcareous mudstones of the Loma Gorda Formation, in the vicinity of the municipal seat of Yaguará in Huila department, Colombia, were found fossils teeth of chondrichthyes, these were extracted from the rocks by mechanical means, to be compared with the species in the bibliography in order to indentify them. The species were: Ptychodus mortoni (order Hybodontiformes), were found, Squalicorax falcatus and Cretodus crassidens (order Lamniformes). This finding constitutes the first record of these species in the Colombian territory; which allows to extend its paleogeographic distribution to the northern region of South America, which until now was limited to Africa, Europe, Asia and North America, except for the Ptychodus mortoni that has been described before in Venezuela. Keywords: first record; sharks; upper Cretaceous; fossil teeth; Colombia. Registro de dientes de condrictios del Cretácico Superior en fosforitas de la formación Loma Gorda Resumen En capas de fosforitas y lodolitas calcáreas grises de la Formación Loma Gorda, en cercanías de la cabecera municipal de Yaguará en el departamento del Huila, Colombia, se encontraron dientes fósiles de condrictios; estos fueron extraídos de la roca por medios mecánicos, para ser comparados con las especies encontradas en la bibliografía e identificarlos. -
Dr. Kenshu Shimada: Peer-Reviewed Published Articles [Last Updated 04/26/2019]
Dr. Kenshu Shimada: Peer-Reviewed Published Articles [last updated 04/26/2019] [* = undergraduate student; ** = graduate student] 2019 [105] Shimada, K. In press. A new species and biology of the Late Cretaceous 'blunt-snouted' bony fish, Thryptodus (Actinopterygii: Tselfatiiformes), from the United States. Cretaceous Research. [104] Cronin, T. J.*, and K. Shimada . In press. New anatomical information on the Late Cretaceous bony fish, Micropycnodon kansasensis (Actinopterygii: Pycnodontiformes), from the Niobrara Chalk of western Kansas, U.S.A. Transactions of Kansas Academy of Science. [103] Pimiento, C., J. L. Cantalapiedra, K. Shimada , D. J. Field, and J. B. Smaers. 2019. Evolutionary pathways towards shark gigantism. Evolution, 73(3):588–599. 2018 [102] Johnson-Ransom, E. D.*, E. V. Popov, T. A. Deméré, and K. Shimada. 2018. The Late Cretaceous chimaeroid fish, Ischyodus bifurcatus Case (Chondrichthyes: Holocephali), from California, USA, and its paleobiogeographical significance. Paleontological Research, 2(4):364-372. [101] Guinot, G., S. Adnet, K. Shimada , C. J. Underwood, M. Siversson, D. J. Ward, J. Kriwet, and H. Cappetta. 2018. On the need of providing tooth morphology in descriptions of extant elasmobranch species. Zootaxa, 4461(1):118–126. [100] Jacobs, P. K.*, and K. Shimada . 2018. Ontogenetic growth pattern of the extant smalltooth sandtiger shark, Odontaspis ferox (Lamniformes: Odontaspididae)— application from and to paleontology. Journal of Fossil Research, 51(1):23–29. [99] Guzzo, F.*, and K. Shimada . 2018. A new fossil vertebrate locality of the Jetmore Chalk Member of the Upper Cretaceous Greenhorn Limestone in north-central Kansas, U.S.A. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, 121(1-2):59-68. -
Selachian Fauna from the Upper Cretaceous Dalton Sandstone, Middle Rio Puerco Valley, New Mexico Sally C
New Mexico Geological Society Downloaded from: http://nmgs.nmt.edu/publications/guidebooks/54 Selachian fauna from the Upper Cretaceous Dalton Sandstone, middle Rio Puerco Valley, New Mexico Sally C. Johnson and Spencer G. Lucas, 2003, pp. 353-358 in: Geology of the Zuni Plateau, Lucas, Spencer G.; Semken, Steven C.; Berglof, William; Ulmer-Scholle, Dana; [eds.], New Mexico Geological Society 54th Annual Fall Field Conference Guidebook, 425 p. This is one of many related papers that were included in the 2003 NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebook. Annual NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebooks Every fall since 1950, the New Mexico Geological Society (NMGS) has held an annual Fall Field Conference that explores some region of New Mexico (or surrounding states). Always well attended, these conferences provide a guidebook to participants. Besides detailed road logs, the guidebooks contain many well written, edited, and peer-reviewed geoscience papers. These books have set the national standard for geologic guidebooks and are an essential geologic reference for anyone working in or around New Mexico. Free Downloads NMGS has decided to make peer-reviewed papers from our Fall Field Conference guidebooks available for free download. Non-members will have access to guidebook papers two years after publication. Members have access to all papers. This is in keeping with our mission of promoting interest, research, and cooperation regarding geology in New Mexico. However, guidebook sales represent a significant proportion of our operating budget. Therefore, only research papers are available for download. Road logs, mini-papers, maps, stratigraphic charts, and other selected content are available only in the printed guidebooks. -
Do Trissico Superior Do Rio Grande Do
Ano 23 - Edição especial VI Simpósio Brasileiro de Paleontologia de Vertebrados Ribeirão Preto - Maio/2008 Paleontologia em Destaque. Edição Especial VI Simpósio Brasileiro de Paleontologia de Vertebrados Editores para esta edição especial: Max C. Langer, Jonathas S. Bittencourt e Mariela C. Castro Tiragem: 200 exemplares. Distribuídos em 27 de maio de 2008. Impressão: Gráfica Martingraf Endereço: Laboratório de Paleontologia, FFCLRP-USP. Av. Bandeirantes 3.900. 14040-901, Ribeirão Preto-SP E-mail: [email protected] Web: http://www.sbpbrasil.org/ Paleontologia em Destaque: boletim informativo da Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia. -- Vol. 1, no 1 (1984) - ISSN: 1516-1811 1. Geociências. 2. Paleontologia. 3. Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia SOCIEDADE BRASILEIRA DE PALEONTOLOGIA (GESTÃO 2007-2009) Presidente: João Carlos Coimbra (UFRGS) Vice-Presidente: Ana Maria Ribeiro (FZB/RS) 1° Secretário: Marina Bento Soares (UFRGS) 2ª Secretária: Soraia Girardi Bauermann (ULBRA) 1ª Tesoureira: Patrícia Hadler Rodrigues (FZB/RS) 2ª Tesoureira: Karin Elise Bohns Meyer (UFMG) Diretora de Publicações: Carla B. Kotzian (UFSM) 2 VI Simpósio Brasileiro de Paleontologia de Vertebrados Boletim de Resumos Editores Max C. Langer Jonathas S. Bittencourt Mariela C. Castro FFCLRP-USP, Ribeirão Preto-SP 2008 3 Logotipo: A concepção tripartida do logotipo do VI Simpósio Brasileiro de Paleontologia de Vertebrados reflete as três eras do Fanerozóico e suas denominações populares: Paleozóico ou “Era dos Peixes” (representado pelo tubarão Tribodus limae, apesar deste ser do Mesozóico), Mesozóico ou “Era dos Répteis” (representado pelo dinossauro Staurikosaurus pricei) e Cenozóico ou “Era dos Mamíferos” (representado pelo tigre dentes-de-sabre Smilodon populator). Ainda, os três táxons escolhidos são representativos dos, talvez, três mais importantes, ou ao menos mais famosos, depósitos fossilíferos contendo vertebrados no Brasil: a Formação Santana, Cretáceo inferior do sul do Ceará (representada por T. -
Biology and Conservation of Freshwater Elasmobranchs
Biology and Conservation of Freshwater Elasmobranchs SYMPOSIUM PROCEEDINGS R. Aidan Martin Don MacKinlay International Congress on the Biology of Fish Tropical Hotel Resort, Manaus Brazil, August 1-5, 2004 Copyright © 2004 Physiology Section, American Fisheries Society All rights reserved International Standard Book Number(ISBN) 1-894337-46-8 Notice This publication is made up of a combination of extended abstracts and full papers, submitted by the authors without peer review. The formatting has been edited but the content is the responsibility of the authors. The papers in this volume should not be cited as primary literature. The Physiology Section of the American Fisheries Society offers this compilation of papers in the interests of information exchange only, and makes no claim as to the validity of the conclusions or recommendations presented in the papers. For copies of these Symposium Proceedings, or the other 20 Proceedings in the Congress series, contact: Don MacKinlay, SEP DFO, 401 Burrard St Vancouver BC V6C 3S4 Canada Phone: 604-666-3520 Fax 604-666-0417 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.fishbiologycongress.org ii CONGRESS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This volume is part of the Proceedings of the 6th International Congress on the Biology of Fish, held in Manaus, Brazil in August, 2004. Ten years have passed since the first meeting in this series was held in Vancouver, BC, Canada. Subsequent meetings were in San Francisco, California; Baltimore, Maryland; Aberdeen, Scotland; and again in Vancouver, Canada. From those meetings, colleagues from over 30 countries have contributed more than 2,500 papers to the Proceedings of over 80 Congress Symposia, all available for free viewing on the internet. -
(1929–2000) EV Popov
Proceedings of the Zoological Institute RAS Vol. 320, No. 1, 2016, рр. 25–49 УДК 567.1/.5(01) + 597.2/.5(01) + 929Гликман AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE SOVIET PALAEOICHTHYOLOGIST LEONID GLICKMAN (1929–2000) E.V. Popov Saratov State University, Astrakhanskaya Str. 83, 410012 Saratov, Russia; e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT The paper presents a short biography and an annotated bibliography of the well-known Soviet palaeoichthyologist and evolutionary morphologist Leonid S. Glickman (1929–2000). His bibliography consists of 46 titles, including 2 monographs, 3 book chapters, 33 research papers, 4 popular papers, and 4 unpublished research reports and dissertations, devoted mainly to Cretaceous and Cenozoic elasmobranchs (principally Lamniformes). The publi- cations cover a period of time between the years 1952 and 1998. Key words: bibliography, biography, evolution, functional morphology, Glickman Leonid Sergeevich, sharks, skates, teeth АННОТИРОВАННАЯ БИБЛИОГРАФИЯ СОВЕТСКОГО ПАЛЕОИХТИОЛОГА ЛЕОНИДА СЕРГЕЕВИЧА ГЛИКМАНА (1929–2000) Е.В. Попов Саратовский государственный университет, ул. Астраханская 83, 410012 Саратов, Россия; e-mail: [email protected] РЕЗЮМЕ В статье приводится краткая биографическая справка и аннотированная библиография известного Со- ветского палеоихтиолога и эволюционного морфолога Леонида Сергеевича Гликмана (1929–2000). Библиография содержит 46 наименований, включая 2 монографии, 3 раздела в коллективных монографиях, 33 научных и 4 популярных статьи, а также 3 неопубликованных квалификационных работы и один отчет НИР, посвященные меловым и кайнозойским эласмобранхиям (в основном, ламнообразным акулам). Время издания публикаций охватывает период с 1952 по 1998 г. Ключевые слова: библиография, биография, эволюция, функциональная морфология, Гликман Леонид Сергеевич, акулы, скаты, зубы INTRODUCTION where he worked: Leningrad, Saratov and Vladivo- stok (Fig. 1). In 1939 the family left Leningrad for A short biography1. -
Paleoenvironments and Paleoecology of the Vertebrate Fauna from a Late Cretaceous Marine Bonebed, Canada
Mesozoic Fishes 5 – Global Diversity and Evolution, G. Arratia, H.-P. Schultze & M. V. H. Wilson (eds.): pp. 509-524, 5 figs., 1 tab. © 2013 by Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, München, Germany – ISBN 978-3-89937-159-8 Paleoenvironments and Paleoecology of the Vertebrate Fauna from a Late Cretaceous Marine Bonebed, Canada Stephen L. CUMBAA, Charlie J. UNDERWOOD and Claudia J. SCHRÖDER-ADAMS Abstract Bonebeds – concentrations of bioclastic debris of vertebrates in geological strata – can accumulate under a variety of conditions. They are common in marine deposits of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of North America, and are often characterized as lag deposits. In general, these deposits represent unknown periods of accumulation and contain a mélange of taxa, possibly transported from a variety of habitats. As such, the contents of these marine bonebeds are often considered less useful for studies of paleoecology and paleoenvironments than are fossils recovered from rock units that represent continuous sedimentary deposition within one or more contiguous paleoenvironments. We examined the fossil contents of one particularly rich marine bonebed of “mid- dle” Cenomanian age to determine if useful conclusions can be drawn with respect to the habitats and probable interactions of its pre-depositional fauna. This bonebed occurs as discontinuous lenses in shales of the upper part of the Belle Fourche Member of the Ashville Formation in the Pasquia Hills of Saskatchewan, Canada. Acid preparation of these lenses revealed an assemblage containing: 20 chondrichthyan taxa: a chimaeri- form, hybodontiforms, diverse lamniforms and rare rajiforms; 15 actinopterygian taxa: a caturid, pycnodonts, an aspidorhynchid, a pachycormid, a plethodid, ichthyodectids, pachyrhizodontids, an albulid, a putative sal- moniform, enchodontids, and an acanthomorph; and nine tetrapods including turtles, pliosaurs and elasmosaurs, four marine bird taxa, a terrestrial bird, and a lizard. -
Family-Group Names of Fossil Fishes
European Journal of Taxonomy 466: 1–167 ISSN 2118-9773 https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2018.466 www.europeanjournaloftaxonomy.eu 2018 · Van der Laan R. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Monograph urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1F74D019-D13C-426F-835A-24A9A1126C55 Family-group names of fossil fishes Richard VAN DER LAAN Grasmeent 80, 1357JJ Almere, The Netherlands. Email: [email protected] urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:55EA63EE-63FD-49E6-A216-A6D2BEB91B82 Abstract. The family-group names of animals (superfamily, family, subfamily, supertribe, tribe and subtribe) are regulated by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. Particularly, the family names are very important, because they are among the most widely used of all technical animal names. A uniform name and spelling are essential for the location of information. To facilitate this, a list of family- group names for fossil fishes has been compiled. I use the concept ‘Fishes’ in the usual sense, i.e., starting with the Agnatha up to the †Osteolepidiformes. All the family-group names proposed for fossil fishes found to date are listed, together with their author(s) and year of publication. The main goal of the list is to contribute to the usage of the correct family-group names for fossil fishes with a uniform spelling and to list the author(s) and date of those names. No valid family-group name description could be located for the following family-group names currently in usage: †Brindabellaspidae, †Diabolepididae, †Dorsetichthyidae, †Erichalcidae, †Holodipteridae, †Kentuckiidae, †Lepidaspididae, †Loganelliidae and †Pituriaspididae. Keywords. Nomenclature, ICZN, Vertebrata, Agnatha, Gnathostomata.