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      New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina

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          Evolving climates and mammal faunas in cenozoic South America

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            The Tinguiririca Fauna, Chile: biochronology, paleoecology, biogeography, and a new earliest Oligocene South American Land Mammal ‘Age’

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              Revised geochronology of the Casamayoran South American Land Mammal Age: climatic and biotic implications.

              Isotopic age determinations (40Ar/39Ar) and associated magnetic polarity stratigraphy for Casamayoran age fauna at Gran Barranca (Chubut, Argentina) indicate that the Barrancan "subage" of the Casamayoran South American Land Mammal "Age" is late Eocene, 18 to 20 million years younger than hitherto supposed. Correlations of the radioisotopically dated magnetic polarity stratigraphy at Gran Barranca with the Cenozoic geomagnetic polarity time scale indicate that Barrancan faunal levels at the Gran Barranca date to within the magnetochronologic interval from 35.34 to 36.62 megannums (Ma) or 35. 69 to 37.60 Ma. This age revision constrains the timing of an adaptive shift in mammalian herbivores toward hypsodonty. Specifically, the appearance of large numbers of hypsodont taxa in South America occurred sometime between 36 and 32 Ma (late Eocene-early Oligocene), at approximately the same time that other biotic and geologic evidence has suggested the Southern high latitudes experienced climatic cooling associated with Antarctic glaciation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Museum Novitates
                American Museum Novitates
                American Museum of Natural History (BioOne sponsored)
                0003-0082
                1937-352X
                March 31 2009
                March 31 2009
                : 3638
                :
                : 1-43
                Article
                10.1206/577.1
                14b62b05-d551-45a3-b299-c8c3c97d1c1f
                © 2009
                History

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