Mammal track assemblages from the early tertiary of China, Peru, Europe and North America

Citation
Mg. Lockley et al., Mammal track assemblages from the early tertiary of China, Peru, Europe and North America, PALAIOS, 14(4), 1999, pp. 398-404
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
PALAIOS
ISSN journal
08831351 → ACNP
Volume
14
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
398 - 404
Database
ISI
SICI code
0883-1351(199908)14:4<398:MTAFTE>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Recent discovery of small, tridactyl vertebrate tracks in a remote region o f northwestern China has expanded the data set for the interpretation of si milar trackways elsewhere in the world. Previously, similar tracks reported found in Peru from the Formation des Couches Rouges, were attributed to or nithopod dinosaurs, and then used to reinterpret the age of the section as Late Cretaceous. Similarly, the Chinese trackways were, prior to this study , assigned to the very broad chronological interval Cretaceous through Olig ocene. Comparison with the similar ichnofaunas in North America and Europe where the age of the tracks is well constrained to Paleogene, and where the tracks are attributed to odd-toed ungulates (perissodactyls), necessitates careful analysis of the affinity and age of the Chinese and Peruvian track ways. In all regions the track assemblages are mammalian (i.e, of ungulate affinity). The Northern hemisphere tracks maybe be attributed to perissodac tyls, but the South American tracks probably represent native ungulate grou ps such as the Notungulata and Litopterna, that show convergent foot morpho logy. Even at the high taxonomic level of odd toed ungulate such broad bios tratigraphic (palichno-stratigraphic) correlations are useful in providing insights into the geologic and tectonic history of terrestrial successions, where the age and faunas are pearly known.