BECAS
ARNOL Jonatan Ariel
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Plant remains from the Devonian of San Juan, Argentina.
Autor/es:
ELIANA COTUREL; JONATAN ARIEL ARNOL
Lugar:
Paris
Reunión:
Congreso; 5th International Paleontological Congress; 2018
Institución organizadora:
International Palaeontological Association
Resumen:
Throughout the Devonian occurred the most important stages of plant propagation on land and their subsequent evolution, yet the extent of this process is far from being completely understood, mainly by the scarcity of the register. The fossiliferous localities of the Devonian of Precordillera, in Argentina, have provided sterile or poorly preserved remains of fossil plants. Associations of low diversity have been described, composed of primitive vascular plants and herbaceous, leafless lycophytes. Here we present new samples from the Punta Negra Formation, collected from the Precordillera of San Juan province. Punta Negra Formation lays over the marine sediments of the Lower Devonian Talacasto Formation with a transitional limit and reaches 1000 m thick. Plants come from four localities, the stratigraphical relations between them being not clear. Sandstones from the Río San Juan locality yielded a compression of stem with petiolate, divided microphylls, assignable to Haskinsia Grierson and Banks 1983. It is noteworthy that this is the first record of a lycopsid with preserved leaves from this unit. Nearby Puesto Bachongo were found fossil remains comparable with the bryophyte Sporogonites Halle 1916. These samples consist in a stalk that ends in an ovoid-globose capsule which shows longitudinal costae in the middle sector, which resembles Sporogonites excellens Frenguelli 1951. Sterile lycophyte stems were found in both localities. Plant debris, consisting in smooth and ridged sterile axes, putative sporangia and isotomous bifurcated stems, was also found. The association is in general consistent with the previously described for the unit, and the discovery of better preserved taxa allow us a more detailed comparison to elucidate the age of the deposits. Sporogonites was found in the Lower Devonian from Argentina, Australia, Belgium, and Brazil, and younger strata from Spain. Bryophytes are a morphological conservative group, so a priori we won?t recall a Lower Devonian age for the Sporogonites - bearing beds of Punta Negra Formation only because of its presence. The lycophyte Haskinsia, on the other hand, was widespread in the Middle Devonian, with a species also found in Sierra de la Ventana (Buenos Aires Province, Argentina). The presence of both taxa is coherent with the no younger than Middle Devonian age given to Punta Negra Formation, and could help in the stratigraphic correlation between localities. Lastly, the finding of these new material encourages us to continue the research in this large unit, which could lead to a better understanding of the expansion of the early land plants.