CICYTTP   12500
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION CIENTIFICA Y DE TRANSFERENCIA TECNOLOGICA A LA PRODUCCION
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
capítulos de libros
Título:
Los Estudios Fitolíticos en América del Sur, una Visión Retrospectiva.
Autor/es:
ZUCOL A.F., BREA, M. Y E. PASSEGGI.
Libro:
Matices Interdisciplinarios en Estudios Fitolíticos y de otros Microfósiles/ Interdisciplinary Nuances in Phytolith and other Microfossil Studies.
Editorial:
BAR Internacional Series (Oxford, Inglaterra).
Referencias:
Año: 2007; p. 1 - 18
Resumen:
The first phytolith studies in South America were developed by Ehrenberg (nineteen century). Ehrenberg elaborates the first morphological phytolith classification from siliceous elements of vegetable and animal origin from different places of the world, many of which come from samples of Charles Darwin’s collection. Among them, there are sediments from Monte Hermoso (Bahía Blanca), limes associated to fossil mammals (Bahía Blanca), dental pieces of a Mastodon (Santa Fe) and plant roots from Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. Between 1925 and 1955, Joaquín Frenguelli mentions, for the first time, the presence of gramineous silica cells in Argentinian sediments dating from the Tertiary, Quaternary and Recent periods. Later, between 1969 and 1983, Hetty Bertoldi de Pomar makes her first studies in the subject, which contributes to the morphological silicophytolith classification including a Graminae, Cyperaceae, Equisetaceae, Arecaceae and Podostemaceae phytolith classification. During those years, Andreis, Spalletti and Mazzoni also record for the first time pytholiths coming from Cenozoic sediments from Patagonia. From 1990 onwards, this activity increased considerably. In Argentina, there are phytholithic characterizations of Tertiary continental sedimentary sequences from San Luis, Quaternary coastal sequences and paleosoils from Tandilia range (Buenos Aires), Miocene and Pleistocene marine and continental Neogene sediments from the Paraná and Uruguay basins (Entre Ríos), as well as Paleogene sediments from Patagonia. In this same period, phytolith studies contributing to palaeoecological (Amazon basin), phytosociological (Colombian Páramo), limnological (Panamá and Uruguay lagoons), ethnobotanical (Argentina, Uruguay and Colombia) and archaelogical (Ecuador, Perú, Argentina and Uruguay) studies stand out in Latin America.