CICYTTP   12500
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION CIENTIFICA Y DE TRANSFERENCIA TECNOLOGICA A LA PRODUCCION
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
THE BADLANDS FROM MENDOZA AND THE HUAYQUERIAN AGE. INSIGHTS INTO THE LATE MIOCENE
Autor/es:
FORASIEPI, ANALÍA M.; PREVOSTI, F. J.; VERA, BÁRBARA; TURAZZINI, G.; ECHARRI, S. ; GARRIDO, A. C. ; VERZI, D. ; RASIA, L.; SCHMIDT, GABRIELA I.; ESTEBAN, G. ; KRAPOVIKAS, V.
Lugar:
Mendoza
Reunión:
Congreso; 4th International Palaeontological Congress; 2014
Institución organizadora:
IANIGLA-CCT-CONICET-MENDOZA
Resumen:
The badlands exposed in central-northern Mendoza, Argentina, have been the subject of paleontological studies in the first half of the 20th Century. The area is a large faulted anticline with the Huayquerías Formation outcropping in the East. This formation is estimated to date from less than 10.5/9.5 Ma. (dating included in the lower stratigraphic formation) to 5.8 Ma. The Huayquerian Age (late Miocene) was defined on the basis of a small mammalian association from the Huayquerías Formation and currently includes: Megatheriops rectidens (Megatheriidae), Proscelidodon gracillimus (Mylodontidae), Hemihegetotherium achataleptum (Hegetotheriinae), "Proterotherium" sp. (Proterotheriidae), Huayqueriana cristata (Macraucheniidae), Cyonasua pascuali (Procyonidae), and Lagostomus pretrichodactyla (Chinchillidae). Consequently, the Huayquerian Age is currently characterized by other associations from South America that are considered to be equivalent in time. This grouping, along with inclusion of taxa with controversial geographical and stratigraphical location renders the definition of the Huayquerian Age imprecise. New field work has been conducted in the Huayquerías Formation with the aim of characterizing this Age with the faunal content from the type locality. The new findings include Macrochorobates? sp., Chasicotatus cf. Ch. ameghinoi, and Chorobates sp. (Dasypodidae), Paedotherium sp. and Tremacyllus sp. (Pachyrukhinae), a probable new Macraucheniidae (Litopterna), cf. Cyonasua larger than C. pascuali (Procyonidae), Pseudoplataeomys aff. P. formosus, Pithanotomys?, and Palaeoctodon sp. (Octodontidae), aff. Palaeocavia (Caviidae), and Lagostomus pretrichodactyla (Chinchillidae). Also recovered were vertebrae of Boidae indet. (Serpentes), a maxilla referred to cf. Ceratophrys sp. (Anura), large tridactyl footprints referred to Macrauchenichnus rector created by litopterns, and small tridactyl footprints produced by rodent-like mammals, possibly small notoungulates. These include the first footprints found in the Huayquerías Formation and 13 new taxa, elevating the taxonomic list from seven to 20. This association is currently accepted to be largely congruent with other late Miocene faunas referred to the Huayquerian Age. Uncertainties exist with the rodent Pseudoplataeomys aff. P. formosus. Previously, only the holotype of P. formosus has been known, collected from Monte Hermoso (Buenos Aires, type locality of the Montehermosan Age, lower Pliocene), lacking precise stratigraphic data. Although this recent work has expanded the taxonomic list, the association remains small compared to other assemblages. Further work should append many more taxa to the list with the potential to improve the definition of the Huayquerian Age and its calibration in the biostratigraphic chart of the late Neogene.