Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9524402 Journal of South American Earth Sciences 2005 21 Pages PDF
Abstract
The Ischigualastian represents a key land vertebrate faunachron for the correlation of Late Triassic terrestrial deposits worldwide, based on the abundant and diverse tetrapod fauna of the Ischigualasto Formation, NW Argentina. The first appearance data of the rhynchosaur Hyperodapedon and the dicynodont Jachaleria define its lower and upper limits, respectively. Fossil taxa that characterize the Ischigualastian include Hyperodapedon, the cynodont Exaeretodon, the aetosaur Aetosauroides, and herrerasaurid dinosaurs. On the basis of faunal similarities, the Ischigualastian can be traced throughout south Pangea to encompass the fossil assemblages of the Hyperodapedon assemblage zone, Santa Maria Formation, south Brazil; the Pebbly Arkose Formation, Zimbabwe; and the Lower Maleri Formation, India. This correlation contradicts tetrapod-based Late Triassic biochronologies that divide the Carnian epoch into two land vertebrate faunachrons, Otischalkian and Adamanian, on the basis of the succession of faunas in some North American continental sequences. However, the extension of these biochronologic units into south Pangea is based mainly on dubious records of index fossils, the taxonomic status of which are not clearly understood. By reassessing the taxonomic status and distribution of tetrapod taxa, this article defines an updated correlation basis for the Late Triassic of Pangea.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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