I SIMPOSIO - PALEONTOLOGÍA EN CHILE 2-3 De Octubre 2008
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JVP 26(3) September 2006—ABSTRACTS
Neoceti Symposium, Saturday 8:45 acid-prepared osteolepiforms Medoevia and Gogonasus has offered strong support for BODY SIZE AND CRYPTIC TROPHIC SEPARATION OF GENERALIZED Jarvik’s interpretation, but Eusthenopteron itself has not been reexamined in detail. PIERCE-FEEDING CETACEANS: THE ROLE OF FEEDING DIVERSITY DUR- Uncertainty has persisted about the relationship between the large endoskeletal “fenestra ING THE RISE OF THE NEOCETI endochoanalis” and the apparently much smaller choana, and about the occlusion of upper ADAM, Peter, Univ. of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA; JETT, Kristin, Univ. of and lower jaw fangs relative to the choana. California, Davis, Davis, CA; OLSON, Joshua, Univ. of California, Los Angeles, Los A CT scan investigation of a large skull of Eusthenopteron, carried out in collaboration Angeles, CA with University of Texas and Parc de Miguasha, offers an opportunity to image and digital- Marine mammals with homodont dentition and relatively little specialization of the feeding ly “dissect” a complete three-dimensional snout region. We find that a choana is indeed apparatus are often categorized as generalist eaters of squid and fish. However, analyses of present, somewhat narrower but otherwise similar to that described by Jarvik. It does not many modern ecosystems reveal the importance of body size in determining trophic parti- receive the anterior coronoid fang, which bites mesial to the edge of the dermopalatine and tioning and diversity among predators. We established relationships between body sizes of is received by a pit in that bone. The fenestra endochoanalis is partly floored by the vomer extant cetaceans and their prey in order to infer prey size and potential trophic separation of and the dermopalatine, restricting the choana to the lateral part of the fenestra. -
1.1 První Chobotnatci 5 1.2 Plesielephantiformes 5 1.3 Elephantiformes 6 1.3.1 Mammutida 6 1.3.2 Elephantida 7 1.3.3 Elephantoidea 7 2
MASARYKOVA UNIVERZITA PŘÍRODOVĚDECKÁ FAKULTA ÚSTAV GEOLOGICKÝCH VĚD Jakub Březina Rešerše k bakalářské práci Využití mikrostruktur klů neogenních chobotnatců na příkladu rodu Zygolophodon Vedoucí práce: doc. Mgr. Martin Ivanov, Dr. Brno 2012 OBSAH 1. Současný pohled na evoluci chobotnatců 3 1.1 První chobotnatci 5 1.2 Plesielephantiformes 5 1.3 Elephantiformes 6 1.3.1 Mammutida 6 1.3.2 Elephantida 7 1.3.3 Elephantoidea 7 2. Kly chobotnatců a jejich mikrostruktura 9 2.1 Přírůstky v klech chobotnatců 11 2.1.1 Využití přírůstků v klech chobotnatců 11 2.2 Schregerův vzor 12 2.2.1 Stavba Schregerova vzoru 12 2.2.2 Využití Schregerova vzoru 12 2.3 Dentinové kanálky 15 3 Sedimenty s nálezy savců v okolí Mikulova 16 3.1 Baden 17 3.2 Pannon a Pont 18 1. Současný pohled na evoluci chobotnatců Současná systematika chobotnatců není kompletně odvozena od jejich fylogeneze, rekonstruované pomocí kladistických metod. Diskutované skupiny tak mnohdy nepředstavují monofyletické skupiny. Přestože jsou taxonomické kategorie matoucí (např. Laurin 2005), jsem do jisté míry nucen je používat. Některým skupinám úrovně stále přiřazeny nebyly a zde této skutečnosti není přisuzován žádný význam. V této rešerši jsem se zaměřil hlavně na poznatky, které následovaly po vydání knihy; The Proboscidea: Evolution and Paleoecology of Elephants and Their Relatives, od Shoshaniho a Tassyho (1996). Chobotnatci jsou součástí skupiny Tethytheria společně s anthracobunidy, sirénami a desmostylidy (Shoshani 1998; Shoshani & Tassy 1996; 2005; Gheerbrant & Tassy 2009). Základní klasifikace sestává ze dvou skupin. Ze skupiny Plesielephantiformes, do které patří čeledě Numidotheriidae, Barytheriidae a Deinotheridae a ze skupiny Elephantiformes, do které patří čeledě Palaeomastodontidae, Phiomiidae, Mammutida, Gomphotheriidae, tetralofodontní gomfotéria, Stegodontidae a Elephantidae (Shoshani & Marchant 2001; Shoshani & Tassy 2005; Gheerbrant & Tassy 2009). -
Isthminia Panamensis, a New Fossil Inioid (Mammalia, Cetacea) from the Chagres Formation of Panama and the Evolution of ‘River Dolphins’ in the Americas
Isthminia panamensis, a new fossil inioid (Mammalia, Cetacea) from the Chagres Formation of Panama and the evolution of ‘river dolphins’ in the Americas Nicholas D. Pyenson1,2, Jorge Velez-Juarbe´ 3,4, Carolina S. Gutstein1,5, Holly Little1, Dioselina Vigil6 and Aaron O’Dea6 1 Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA 2 Departments of Mammalogy and Paleontology, Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Seattle, WA, USA 3 Department of Mammalogy, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA, USA 4 Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA 5 Comision´ de Patrimonio Natural, Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales, Santiago, Chile 6 Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic of Panama ABSTRACT In contrast to dominant mode of ecological transition in the evolution of marine mammals, different lineages of toothed whales (Odontoceti) have repeatedly invaded freshwater ecosystems during the Cenozoic era. The so-called ‘river dolphins’ are now recognized as independent lineages that converged on similar morphological specializations (e.g., longirostry). In South America, the two endemic ‘river dolphin’ lineages form a clade (Inioidea), with closely related fossil inioids from marine rock units in the South Pacific and North Atlantic oceans. Here we describe a new genus and species of fossil inioid, Isthminia panamensis, gen. et sp. nov. from the late Miocene of Panama. The type and only known specimen consists of a partial skull, mandibles, isolated teeth, a right scapula, and carpal elements recovered from Submitted 27 April 2015 the Pina˜ Facies of the Chagres Formation, along the Caribbean coast of Panama. -
Petrology and Geochemistry of Volcanic Rocks Behind the Cenozoic Arc Front in the Andean Cordillera, Central Chile (33°50'S) Andean Geology, Vol
Andean Geology ISSN: 0718-7092 [email protected] Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería Chile Muñoz, Marcia; Fuentes, Francisco; Vergara, Mario; Aguirre, Luis; Olov Nyström, Jan; Féraud, Gilbert; Demant, Alain Abanico East Formation: petrology and geochemistry of volcanic rocks behind the Cenozoic arc front in the Andean Cordillera, central Chile (33°50'S) Andean Geology, vol. 33, núm. 1, enero, 2006, pp. 109-140 Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería Santiago, Chile Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=173918422005 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative Abanico East Formation: petrology and geochemistry of volcanic rocks behind the Cenozoic arc front in the Andean Cordillera, central Chile (33°50'S) Marcia Muñoz Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Chile, Casilla 13518, Correo 21, Santiago, Chile [email protected] Francisco Fuentes [email protected] Mario Vergara [email protected] Luis Aguirre [email protected] Jan Olov Nyström Swedish Museum of Natural History, SE-10405 Stockholm, Sweden [email protected] Gilbert Féraud UMR Géosciences Azur, CNRS-UNSA, Université de Nice- Sophia Antipolis, 06108 Nice Cedex 02, France [email protected] Alain Demant Laboratoire de Pétrologie Magmatique Université Aix-Marseille III, 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France [email protected] ABSTRACT The stratigraphy, chemistry and age of rocks assigned to the eastern portion of the Abanico Formation exposed along the El Volcán river valley, Principal Cordillera east of Santiago (30º50'S/70º12'-70º5'W), are reported and discussed. -
Southward-Directed Subduction of the Farallon–Aluk Spreading Ridge and Its Impact on Subduction Mechanics and Andean Arc Magmatism: Insights From
feart-08-00121 May 7, 2020 Time: 11:30 # 1 ORIGINAL RESEARCH published: 08 May 2020 doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.00121 Southward-Directed Subduction of the Farallon–Aluk Spreading Ridge and Its Impact on Subduction Mechanics and Andean Arc Magmatism: Insights From Edited by: Marina Manea, Geochemical and Seismic National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico Tomographic Data Reviewed by: 1,2 1,2 1,2 1,2 Luca Ferrari, Sofía B. Iannelli *, Lucía Fernández Paz , Vanesa D. Litvak , Guido Gianni , Geosciences Center, National Lucas M. Fennell1,2, Javiera González3, Friedrich Lucassen4, Simone Kasemann4, Autonomous University of Mexico, Verónica Oliveros3 and Andrés Folguera1,2 Mexico 1 2 Jiashun Hu, Departamento de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Instituto de Estudios 3 California Institute of Technology, Andinos ‘Don Pablo Groeber’, CONICET- Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Departamento 4 United States de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile, MARUM - Center for Marine Environmental Sciences and Faculty of Geosciences, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany *Correspondence: Sofía B. Iannelli sofi[email protected] Since the initial proposal of the past existence of a southward-directed mid-ocean ridge–subduction interaction in the Andes during Late Cretaceous–Paleogene times, Specialty section: This article was submitted to several studies have been devoted to uncover the tectonomagmatic evidence of this Structural Geology and Tectonics, process. The collision of a spreading ridge against a subduction margin provokes a section of the journal important tectonomagmatic changes, including, between them, variations in arc-related Frontiers in Earth Science magmatic activity and in the plate-margin stress regime. -
From the Middle Eocene of Belgium
[Palaeontology, Vol. 53, Part 2, 2010, pp. 365–376] BONY-TOOTHED BIRDS (AVES: PELAGORNITHIDAE) FROM THE MIDDLE EOCENE OF BELGIUM by GERALD MAYR* and THIERRY SMITH *Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Sektion Ornithologie, Senckenberganlage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany; e-mail [email protected] Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Department of Paleontology, Rue Vautier 29, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium; e-mail [email protected] Typescript received 7 April 2009; accepted in revised form 19 July 2009 Abstract: We describe well-preserved remains of the Pelag- deidae (albatrosses) in overall morphology, but because ornithidae (bony-toothed birds) from the middle Eocene of bony-toothed birds lack apomorphies of the Procellariifor- Belgium, including a sternum, pectoral girdle bones and mes, the similarities are almost certainly owing to conver- humeri of a single individual. The specimens are tentatively gence. Bony-toothed birds were often compared with the assigned to Macrodontopteryx oweni Harrison and Walker, ‘Pelecaniformes’ by previous authors, who especially made 1976, which has so far only been known from the holotype comparisons with the Sulidae (gannets and boobies). How- skull and a referred proximal ulna. Another species, about ever, the coracoid distinctly differs from that of extant ‘pelec- two times larger, is represented by an incomplete humerus aniform’ birds, and the plesiomorphic presence of a foramen and tentatively identified as Dasornis emuinus (Bowerbank, nervi supracoracoidei as well as the absence of a well- 1854). The fossils provide critical new data on the osteology delimited articulation facet for the furcula supports a of the pectoral girdle of bony-toothed birds. For the first position outside the Suloidea, the clade to which the Sulidae time, the sternum of one of the smaller species is preserved, belong. -
Exhumation and Uplift of the Western Main Cordillera Between 33° and 34°5
6th International Symposium on Andean Geodynamics (ISAG 2005, Barcelona), Extended Abstracts: 273-276 Exhumation and uplift of the western Main Cordillera between 33° and 34°5 Andrés Fock" Reynaldo Charrier 2, Marcelo Fadas 3, Victor Maksaev 4, Mark Fanning 5, & Pamela Alvarez 6 1 Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile ([email protected]); 2 Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile ([email protected]); 3 Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile, and LMTG-IRD, Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France ([email protected]); 4 Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile ([email protected]); 5 Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University, Camberra, Australia ([email protected]); 6 SIPETROL, Santiago, Chile ([email protected]) KEYWORDS: Central Chile, Andes, Apatite fission-track ages, Neogene mountain building INTRODUCTION ln this paper we discuss the control of major structures in the exhumation of Cenozoic rocks and surface uplift in the Andean Main Cordillera based on new apatite fission tracks age analysis and the study of geological cross -sections. Fig. 1: Principal morphostructural Units. The box shows de Study Region The study area is segmented in the following N-S oriented morphostructural units (Fig. 1), from west to east: Coastal Cordillera, Central Depression, Western and Eastern Main Cordil1era (WMC and EMC, respectively), and Frontal Cordillera. The Coastal Cordillera consists mainly of volcanic and sedirnentary Mesozoic rocks, the Aptian - Albian Las Chilcas and Maastrichtian La Valle formations and Late Mesozoic intrusive bodies (Sellés and Gana, 2001), which are in contact with Cenozoic rocks through west vergent thrust faults located in the Central Depression and the western border of the WMC. -
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A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans Robert W. BOESSENECKER Department of Geology, University of Otago, 360 Leith Walk, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054 (New Zealand) and Department of Earth Sciences, Montana State University 200 Traphagen Hall, Bozeman, MT, 59715 (USA) and University of California Museum of Paleontology 1101 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA, 94720 (USA) [email protected] Boessenecker R. W. 2013. — A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans. Geodiversitas 35 (4): 815-940. http://dx.doi.org/g2013n4a5 ABSTRACT e newly discovered Upper Miocene to Upper Pliocene San Gregorio assem- blage of the Purisima Formation in Central California has yielded a diverse collection of 34 marine vertebrate taxa, including eight sharks, two bony fish, three marine birds (described in a previous study), and 21 marine mammals. Pinnipeds include the walrus Dusignathus sp., cf. D. seftoni, the fur seal Cal- lorhinus sp., cf. C. gilmorei, and indeterminate otariid bones. Baleen whales include dwarf mysticetes (Herpetocetus bramblei Whitmore & Barnes, 2008, Herpetocetus sp.), two right whales (cf. Eubalaena sp. 1, cf. Eubalaena sp. 2), at least three balaenopterids (“Balaenoptera” cortesi “var.” portisi Sacco, 1890, cf. Balaenoptera, Balaenopteridae gen. et sp. indet.) and a new species of rorqual (Balaenoptera bertae n. sp.) that exhibits a number of derived features that place it within the genus Balaenoptera. is new species of Balaenoptera is relatively small (estimated 61 cm bizygomatic width) and exhibits a comparatively nar- row vertex, an obliquely (but precipitously) sloping frontal adjacent to vertex, anteriorly directed and short zygomatic processes, and squamosal creases. -
Matheus Souza Lima Ribeiro
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 392 (2013) 546–556 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/palaeo Climate and humans set the place and time of Proboscidean extinction in late Quaternary of South America Matheus Souza Lima-Ribeiro a,b,⁎, David Nogués-Bravo c,LeviCarinaTerribilea, Persaram Batra d, José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho e a Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Campus Jataí, Cx. Postal 03, 75804-020 Jataí, GO, Brazil b Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia e Evolução, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Cx. Postal 131, 74001-970 Goiânia, GO, Brazil c Centre for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, 2100, Denmark d Department of Geology, Greenfield Community College, Greenfield, MA 01301, USA e Departamento de Ecologia, ICB, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Cx. Postal 131, 74001-970 Goiânia, GO, Brazil article info abstract Article history: The late Quaternary extinctions have been widely debated for a long time, but the varying magnitude of Received 18 April 2013 human vs. climate change impacts across time and space is still an unresolved question. Here we assess Received in revised form 7 October 2013 the geographic range shifts in response to climate change based on Ecological Niche Models (ENMs) and Accepted 21 October 2013 modeled the timing for extinction under human hunting scenario, and both variables were used to explain Available online 30 October 2013 the extinction dynamics of Proboscideans during a full interglacial/glacial cycle (from 126 ka to 6 ka) in South America. We found a large contraction in the geographic range size of two Proboscidean species stud- Keywords: Late Quaternary extinctions ied (Cuvieronius hyodon and Notiomastodon platensis) across time. -
A Rhinopristiform Sawfish (Genus Pristis) from the Middle Eocene (Lutetian) of Southern Peru and Its Regional Implications
Carnets Geol. 20 (5) E-ISSN 1634-0744 DOI 10.4267/2042/70759 A rhinopristiform sawfish (genus Pristis) from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of southern Peru and its regional implications Alberto COLLARETA 1, 2 Luz TEJADA-MEDINA 3, 4 César CHACALTANA-BUDIEL 3, 5 Walter LANDINI 1, 6 Alí ALTAMIRANO-SIERRA 7, 8 Mario URBINA-SCHMITT 7, 9 Giovanni BIANUCCI 1, 10 Abstract: Modern sawfishes (Rhinopristiformes: Pristidae) are circumglobally distributed in warm wa- ters and are common in proximal marine and even freshwater habitats. The fossil record of modern pristid genera (i.e., Pristis and Anoxypristis) dates back to the early Eocene and is mostly represented by isolated rostral spines and oral teeth, with phosphatised rostra representing exceptional occurren- ces. Here, we report on a partial pristid rostrum, exhibiting several articulated rostral spines, from middle Eocene strata of the Paracas Formation (Yumaque Member) exposed in the southern Peruvian East Pisco Basin. This finely preserved specimen shows anatomical structures that are unlikely to leave a fossil record, e.g., the paracentral grooves that extend along the ventral surface of the rostrum. Ba- sed on the morphology of the rostral spines, this fossil sawfish is here identified as belonging to Pristis. To our knowledge, this discovery represents the geologically oldest known occurrence of Pristidae from the Pacific Coast of South America. Although the fossil record of pristids from the East Pisco Basin spans from the middle Eocene to the late Miocene, sawfishes are no longer present in the modern cool, upwelling-influenced coastal waters of southern Peru. Given the ecological preferences of the extant members of Pristis, the occurrence of this genus in the Paracas deposits suggests that middle Eocene nearshore waters in southern Peru were warmer than today. -
Discusión Estratigráfica De Las Formaciones Quiriquina, Pilpílco, Curanilahue, Cosmito Y Cerro Alto De La Provincia De Concepción Y Norte De La Provincia De Arauco
UNIVERSIDAD DE CONCEPCIÓN FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS QUÍMICAS DEPARTAMENTO CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA DISCUSIÓN ESTRATIGRÁFICA DE LAS FORMACIONES QUIRIQUINA, PILPÍLCO, CURANILAHUE, COSMITO Y CERRO ALTO DE LA PROVINCIA DE CONCEPCIÓN Y NORTE DE LA PROVINCIA DE ARAUCO. REGIÓN DEL BIOBÍO, CHILE Memoria para optar al Título de Geólogo Alex Danitt Inostroza Amigo Profesor Patrocinante: Sr. Ramiro Ulises Bonilla Parra Profesores Comisión: Msc. Abraham Elías González Martínez Dr. Luis Arturo Quinzio Sinn Concepción, 2018 ÍNDICE Página RESUMEN 1. INTRODUCCIÓN ............................................................................ 1 1.1. OBJETIVOS .…............................................................................................ 1 1.1.1. Objetivo General ….….…………………..…………….................... 1 1.1.1. Objetivos Específicos …...……………..……………….................... 1 1.2. UBICACIÓN ÁREA DE ESTUDIO ...……….…………………………… 2 1.3. TRABAJOS ANTERIORES ………...……………………………………. 3 1.4. METODOLOGÍA …………………………………………………...…….. 6 1.5. CLIMA, FLORA Y FAUNA ……..……………………………………….. 6 1.6. AGRADECIMIENTOS ……………………………...……………………. 9 2. MARCO GEOLÓGICO ……………………..……………………..……. 10 2.1. ROCAS METAMÓRFICAS ...……………………………..……………... 10 2.1.1. Edad del protolito ……….…………………..………….................... 11 2.2. ROCAS INTRUSIVAS ……………………………..…………...………... 12 2.3. ROCAS ESTRATIFICADAS ……………………………..……...………. 13 2.3. 1. Formación Quiriquina ………………………..…………................ 13 2.3. 2. Formación Pilpílco ………………………..…………..................... 14 2.3. 3. Formación Curanilahue ………………………….………….……. -
Guía Geoturística Y Patrimonial GMLDB
2018 ÍNDICE. CONTENTS. PROYECTO INTRODUCCIÓN. INTRODUCTION. El proyecto Geoparque Minero Litoral del Biobío, pretende ser un referente a nivel nacional, con el reconocimiento que otorga la UNESCO, bajo el programa oficial, Geoparques Mundiales de la UNESCO, al promover la preservación del patrimonio geológico, histórico y cultural presente en el litoral del Biobío, mediante el desarrollo turístico sustentable, la educación y generando un vínculo de compromiso, respeto y conservación entre la comunidad y su entorno. The Geoparque Minero Litoral del Biobío project aims to be a benchmark at the national level, with the recognition granted by UNESCO, under the official program, UNESCO Global Geoparks, to promote the preservation of the geological, historical and cultural heritage present in the coastal Biobío region, through sustainable tourism, development, education and generating a bond of commitment, respect and conservation between the community and its environment. Interior de la mina Chiflón del Diablo (Lota). 9 HISTORIA. HISTORY. El proyecto Geoparque Minero Litoral del Biobío, surge a través de la detección sobre la necesidad y voluntad del territorio, en desarrollarse en materia turística y económica, mediante la puesta en valor de su patrimonio geológico, histórico y cultural, enfocado en gran parte en la historia de la minería del carbón. En 2016, la Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción (de ahora en adelante UCSC), se adjudica un concurso de Bienes Públicos Estratégicos Regionales con financiamiento de la Corporación de Fomento de la Producción (CORFO). Es de esta forma como la UCSC en conjunto con SERNATUR, el Ministerio de Minería, Corparauco, el CFT Lota-Arauco y la colaboración de la Universidad de Concepción, Universidad Andrés Bello, Municipalidades y comunidad en general, da comienzo a la puesta en marcha del proyecto a largo plazo, con la misión de cumplir con los requerimientos solicitados por la UNESCO, para poder ser reconocido como Geoparque Mundial de la UNESCO.