INVESTIGADORES
GONZALEZ RIGA Bernardo Javier
artículos
Título:
Preservation of large titanosaur sauropods in overbank fluvial facies: A case study in the Cretaceous of Argentina
Autor/es:
GONZÁLEZ RIGA, BERNARDO J.; ASTINI, RICARDO A.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF SOUTH AMERICAN EARTH SCIENCES
Editorial:
ELSEVIER
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2007 p. 290 - 303
ISSN:
0895-9811
Resumen:
(Trabajo aceptado en el año 2006, publicado en el 2007) Patagonia exhibits a particularly abundant record of Cretaceous dinosaurs with worldwide relevance. Although paleontological studies are relatively numerous, few include taphonomic information about these faunas. This contribution provides the first detailed sedimentological and taphonomical analyses of a dinosaur bone quarry from northern Neuquén Basin. At Arroyo Seco (Mendoza Province, Argentina), a large parautochthonous/autochthonous accumulation of articulated and disarticulated bones that represent several sauropod individuals has been discovered. The fossil remains, assigned to Mendozasaurus neguyelap González Riga, correspond to a large (18–27 m long) sauropod titanosaur collected in the strata of the Río Neuquén Subgroup (late Turoronian–late Coniacian). A taphonomic viewpoint recognizes a two-fold division into biostratinomic and fossil-diagenetic processes. Biostratinomic processes include (1) subaerial biodegradation of sauropod carcasses on well-drained floodplains, (2) partial or total skeletal disarticulation, (3) reorientation of bones by sporadic overbank flows, and (4) subaerial weathering. Fossil-diagenetic processes include (1) plastic deformation of bones, (2) initial permineralization with hematite, (3) fracturing and brittle deformation due to lithostatic pressure; (4) secondary permineralization with calcite in vascular canals and fractures, and (5) post-fossilization bone weathering. This type of bone concentration, also present in Rincón de los Sauces (northern Patagonia), suggests that overbank facies tended to accumulate large titanosaur bones. This taphonomic mode, referred to as " overbank bone assemblages," outlines the potential of crevasse splay facies as important sources of paleontological data in Cretaceous meandering fluvial systems.