Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9535272 Journal of African Earth Sciences 2005 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
At about 6.5 Ma, Diamantornis and elephant birds were replaced in East Africa by ostriches belonging to the genus Struthio. Three time-successive species of ostriches are identified in the fossil record of East Africa, beginning with Struthio. cf. karingarabensis (∼6.5-4.2 Ma), followed by S. kakesiensis (∼4.5-3.6 Ma) and then S. camelus (∼3.8 Ma onwards). A similar sequence of taxa has previously been recorded from localities in Namibia, but at these sites there is no possibility to precisely calibrate the ages of the different species using radiometric dating. Nevertheless, the broadly similar evolutionary sequence and the close correspondence in inferred ages for the succession of species in East Africa and Namibia suggest that ostrich eggshells are a very useful tool for biochronological correlation of paleontological sites in sub-Saharan Africa.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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