INVESTIGADORES
ORTIZ JAUREGUIZAR Edgardo
artículos
Título:
The tectonic setting of the Caribbean region and the K/T turnover of the South American land-mammal fauna
Autor/es:
ORTIZ JAUREGUIZAR, EDGARDO; PASCUAL, ROSENDO
Revista:
BOLETIN GEOLOGICO Y MINERO
Editorial:
Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (IGME)
Referencias:
Lugar: Madrid; Año: 2011 vol. 122 p. 333 - 344
ISSN:
0366-0176
Resumen:
According to the fossil record, a biotic interchange of land vertebrates (e.g. booid snakes, dinosaurs and mammals) occurred between the Americas during the Late Cretaceous-Early Palaeocene. The arrival of North American immigrants (particularly marsupials and placentals) during the latest Cretaceous-earliest Palaeocene had a profound influence on the composition of the South American mammal communities. During the Late Cretaceous these communities were dominated by native groups of Pangeic lineages, which represented more than 95% of the known genera, but during the Early Palaeocene 70% of South American mammals were derived from North American immigrants that had arrived during the Late Cretaceous-earliest Palaeocene, and by the Late Palaeocene all the South American mammals (with the possible exception of the xenarthrans) were descendants of these North American immigrants. In spite of the fact that no geological evidence is currently available to support the existence of a continuous land connection between the Americas during the Late Cretaceous-early Palaeocene, the fossil record is substantial enough to point to a temporary inter-American connection that permitted the beginning of a land-mammal exchange by the end of the Cretaceous. This interpretation is supported by recent geographic reconstructions of the Caribbean region.