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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Biostratigraphy, taphonomy, and paleoecology of vertebrates from the Sucker Creek Formation (Miocene) of southeastern Oregon.

Downing, Kevin Francis. January 1992 (has links)
The Sucker Creek Formation exposures at Devils Gate in southeastern Oregon have yielded a significant small mammal fauna of at least thirty small mammal taxa from five stratigraphic horizons. The mammal-bearing portion of the Devils Gate section is more than 200 m thick. Fossil mammals occur in lacustrine and marginal lacustrine deposits lower in the section and occur in overbank and paleosol deposits higher in the section. ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar single-crystal laser-fusion dates on three Devils Gate ashes shows that the age of the mammal-bearing sequence at Devils Gate spans the late early Barstovian land-mammal age with possible overlap into the late Barstovian, as currently defined. Duration of the entire mammal-bearing portion of the Devils Gate section was less than a million years. Both a new ash date from the type section and biostratigraphic correlations between Devils Gate and the type section support considerable temporal overlap between the two exposures. The Devils Gate Local Fauna includes several new taxa: a phyllostomatid bat; two "flying squirrels", Petauristodon sp. A and Petauristodon sp. B; and an eomyid rodent, Leptodontomys sp. A. Several fossil occurrences represent the first record of a taxon in the northern Great Basin and/or in the Barstovian land-mammal age, including: Blackia sp., Schaubeaumys grangeri, Protospermophilus quatalensis, and Pseudadjidaumo stirtoni. The Stagestop locality produced two new taxa, Copemys sp. aff C. esmeraldensis and Mystipterus sp. The Stagestop local fauna is Clarendonian in age. Concretions are an important source of fossil mammals in exposures of the Sucker Creek Formation. Geochemical analyses show that concretions formed through a complex interaction between bone and surrounding volcaniclastic material. Although some superficial bone was consumed during concretion diagenesis, concretion development reduced the chance of prolonged chemical and physical destruction of bone during later soil development. The broad ecological diversity of small mammals recovered from Devils Gate supports an interpretation of the local paleoecology as a mosaic of grassland, forest, and pond/lake-bank environments. Sequential small mammal faunas across a prominent ash event show a generally stable composition with no pronounced ecomorphic differences in pre- and post-volcanic disturbance intervals. Therefore, small mammals do not show analogous ecological patterns to disturbance-driven plant successions in the Sucker Creek Formation. I infer that the local ecosystem recovered from volcanic blasts at a temporal scale below the resolution of time-averaged, post-disturbance paleosols.
52

Changements paléoenvironnementaux dans la Parathéthys Centrale pendant le Samartien (Miocène moyen) : étude paléontologique de microfaunes et analyses géochimiques / Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Sarmatian (Middle Miocene) Central Parathethys based on microfaunal and geochemical analyses

Toth, Emoke 25 June 2009 (has links)
Les changements paléoenvironnementaux se produisant pendant le Sarmatien dans la Paratéthys Centrale ont été reconstitués par l’étude des foraminifères (36 espèces) et des ostracodes (28 espèces) de deux forages, combinée à une analyse géochimique de leurs squelettes calcitiques, des coquilles aragonitiques de gastéropodes et des dents phosphatiques de rongeurs.La composition de la microfaune indique que la connexion entre la Paratéthys et la Méditerranée est interrompue ou réduite à la base du Sarmatien mais qu’un bras de mer persiste entre Paratéthys Centrale et Paratéthys Orientale jusqu’à la fin du Sarmatien. Le Sarmatien inférieur est caractérisé par des eaux saumâtres peu profondes (maximum 80 m), bien ventilées, des températures stables (~ 15°C), un riche couvert végétal (algues et/ou phanérogames) et des efflorescences phytoplanctoniques périodiques. Un événement transgressif y est observé (TST de 3ème ordre; TB 2.6 du cycle global). Les changements faunistiques qui se produisent à la limite entre Sarmatien inférieur et moyen sont expliqués par un évènement de type HST accompagné de conditions dysoxiques. A la fin du Sarmatien moyen, une baisse du niveau marin relatif d’environ 50 m se produit et des eaux tempérées chaudes, plus saumâtres (17-23‰) et bien ventilées se mettent en place. Après un court épisode régressif, une connexion est rétablie entre la Paratéthys et la Méditerranée au début du Sarmatien supérieur. Des eaux chaudes (15-21° C), bien ventilées, correspondant à des lagunes marines et des marécages avec de fortes variations de la salinité (15-43 ‰) s’installent alors avant un isolement ultime de la Paratéthys qui se produit à la fin du Sarmatien. / Palaeoenvironmental changes in the Sarmatian Central Paratethys were reconstructed by studying foraminifers (36 species) and ostracods (28 species) from two boreholes coupled with geochemical analyses of their calcite skeletons and of aragonite gastropod shells and phosphate rodent teeth.The composition of the microfauna suggests that the connection between the Central Paratethys and the Mediterranean was interrupted or limited at the base of the Sarmatian, but that a seaway between the Eastern and Central Paratethys existed until the end of the Sarmatian. The early Sarmatian is characterized by brackish littoral seawater (maximum 80 m), well ventilated, stable temperatures (~ 15°C), with rich algae and/or seagrass vegetation and periodic phytoplankton blooms. A transgressive event can be observed as part of a 3rd order transgressive systems tract (TST) corresponding roughly to the TB 2.6 global cycle. The faunal changes occurring at the boundary between the lower and the middle Sarmatian can be explained by a sea-level highstand with dysoxic conditions. A relative sea-level fall with a maximum depth of about 50 m, and well ventilated, warm temperate and more brackish (17-23‰) conditions is documented at the end of the middle Sarmatian. After a short regressive event, a marine connection between the Paratethys and the Mediterranean was established at the beginning of the upper Sarmatian. Warm (15-21°C), well-ventilated, corresponding to marine shallow lagoon and marsh environments with high fluctuations in salinity (15-43 ‰) then prevailed before a final isolation of the Central Paratethys that occurred at the end of the Sarmatian.
53

Apport de l’étude des paléosols carbonatés et des climofonctions spécifiques aux reconstitutions paléoenvironnementales et paléoclimatiques : application aux séries alluviales oligo-miocènes d’Europe occidentale / Input of the study of carbonate-rich paleosols and specific climofunctions to paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic reconstructions : application to the oligo-miocene alluvial successions of Western Europe

Gillot, Thomas 08 July 2014 (has links)
A travers l'étude des Calcisols alluviaux des bassins de Digne-Valensole (SE France) et de Loranca (Espagne centrale), l'objectif de cette thèse est de développer des approches spécifiques à ce type de profils paléopédologiques, et de proposer de nouvelles données paléoenvironnementales et paléoclimatiques pour l'Europe occidentale.Ces paléosols ont été investigués par des méthodes pédologiques, sédimentologiques, minéralogiques et géochimiques, qui mettent en avant la lixiviation et la fersiallitisation comme des processus majeurs dans leur formation, ainsi qu'une influence non négligeable des variations latérales des matériaux parentaux sur leurs caractéristiques. L'étude couplée des paléosols et des dépôts sédimentaires associés permet également d'intégrer les dépôts dans un modèle de stratigraphie séquentielle à haute résolution, et ouvre une discussion sur les biais d'estimation du taux d'aggradation à partir des séries alluviales.De nouvelles climofonctions basées sur les teneurs et distributions des éléments majeurs au sein de ces profils sont proposées à partir de l'analyse d'analogues actuels du Nord-Est de l'Espagne. Celles-ci prennent en compte l'hétérogénéité des dépôts soumis à l'altération, en comparant la composition des horizons de subsurface à celle de la partie superficielle du matériau parental. Elles apparaissent complémentaires des climofonctions précédemment développées pour estimer les précipitations et leur saisonnalité à partir de la morphologie de l'horizon d'accumulation du carbonate de calcium, en apportant la possibilité d'estimer les températures et les précipitations annuelles moyennes, y compris à partir de paléosols tronqués par l'érosion, fréquents dans ces séries.Leur application aux paléosols étudiés permet de mettre en évidence un climat relativement chaud à fort contraste saisonnier en termes de précipitations, similaire au climat méditerranéen actuel. Ces données remettent en cause la vision soutenue par les études paléontologiques d'un climat humide à cette période, et pose la question de l'enregistrement du signal climatique selon l'objet considéré. En effet, si la préservation des fossiles est généralement liée à des conditions humides, les sols se développent sur l'ensemble des parties émergées et enregistrent des conditions et périodes plus sèches, ce qui justifie la nécessité de prendre davantage en compte les paléosols dans ces reconstitutions. / Through the study of alluvial Calcisols from the Digne-Valensole (SE France) and the Loranca (central Spain) basins, the aim of this thesis is to develop specific methods and to propose new paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic data for Western Europe.These paleosols were investigated by pedological, sedimentological, mineralogical and geochemical methods. These highlight leaching and fersiallitisation as major processes in the formation of these profiles, and the influence of the lateral variations of parent materials on paleosols features. Moreover, the cross study of paleosols and sedimentary deposits allows their integration in a high-resolution sequence stratigraphy model, and opens a discussion about the estimation of aggradation rate from alluvial successions.New climofunctions based on major elements contents and distributions through these profiles are also proposed from the study of modern analogs from NE Spain. These functions include a ratio between the subsurface horizon and the upper part of parent material to avoid bias due to the strong heterogeneity of the altered deposits. These are complementary to previous methods developed from the morphological study of calcium carbonate accumulation horizon, which permit to estimate mean annual precipitations and their seasonality, bringing the possibility to quantify mean annual temperatures and precipitations even with truncated profiles, frequent in such successions.Their application to the studied paleosols reveals a relatively hot climate with a strong seasonal contrast in terms of precipitations, similar to the modern Mediterranean climate. These data improve our knowledge of this period that paleontological studies qualify as more humid, and raise the question about the recording of climatic signal according to the considered object. Indeed, if the preservation of fossils is usually linked to humid conditions, soils form over the emerged parts of environment and record drier conditions, which justify the need to enhance the use of paleopedological studies in such reconstructions.
54

Interakce rostlin a hmyzu ve spodním miocénu střední Evropy v paleoklimatologických a paleoekologických souvislostech / Plant - insect interactions in lower Miocene of Central Europe: palaeoclimatological and palaeoecological implications

Knor, Stanislav January 2015 (has links)
The paleoecology of plant - arthropod herbivory associations constitute very important source of knowledge about the phylogeny and co-evolution of both groups. The traces of herbivory interactions between plants and arthropods on the fossil leaves are preserved as so called damaged types (DTs) clustered into distinct functional feeding groups (FFGs). The diversity and frequency of these damage traces also seem to have been strongly influenced by environmental and climatic conditions. This research has been focused on rich fossil plant assemblages from the area of the Most Basin in the north-western Bohemia. The undergoing work has comprised the diagnosis of the individual damages on the basis of their specific morphological traits as their number, size, shape and distributional pattern on the leaf surface. The next issue has involved the statistical analyses concerning the differences in the frequency and diversity of the types of damage and functional feeding groups between two separate fossiliferous layers, namely those of the stratigraphically older Bílina Delta and younger Břešťany Clay. Significant differences were confirmed in this regard, especially in connection with achieved frequency and proportional occurrences of distinct functional feeding groups in the Bílina Delta. The galls were the...
55

Fosilní mečouni (čeleď Istiophoridae) z lokality Piña (Panama; souvrství Chagres; Miocén) - morfologie a srovnání s příbuznými formami / Fossil marlins (family Istiophoridae) from the Piña locality (Panama; Chagres Formation; Miocene) - morphology and comparison with related forms

De Gracia Castro, Carlos Fernando January 2017 (has links)
The study of fossil istiophorids is limited by its fragmentary fossil record; the absence of osteological specimens for comparisons; the cryptic bibliography of several early works and the absence of more accurate comparative methods. Appling a data imputation model we took advantages of extant data for rostral and articular variables for istiophorid billfishes. We used this result to apply PCA analysis and we compared fossil and modern istiophorids together. With this analysis we present here two new istiophorid species: Makaira? sp. nov. 1 and Makaira sp. nov. 2. Makaira? sp. nov. 1 is the most complete fossil istiophorid ever discovered and represent that share characters in various genera. We hypothesize that characters in bones involved in alimentation process have phylogenetic importance as: rostrum shape, denticles, lower jaw, vomer, basioccipital and skull shape as well as orbital size. Our taxonomic reviews of fossil istiophorid reorganize its taxonomy and solve many conflicts about the classification of fossil species. The istiophorids are abundant macrovertebrate in the Chagres sediments and its presence suggests a water column with a minimum of 200m depths in an environment of short platform with oceanic influence. Given the high productivity inferred in this environment we suggest that...
56

Paleoceanographic variations through the study of rock magnetic properties: biogenic magnetite as a new paleoenvironmental indicator / Variações paleoceanograficas através do estudo das propriedades magnéticas: a magnetita biogênica como novo indicador paleoambiental

Rodelli, Daniel 12 September 2018 (has links)
The climatic history of the planet Earth is characterized by long- and short-term climatic variations. Oxygen isotopic data clearly shows how during the Cenozoic (from 65 Ma to the present) our planet shifted over time, from greenhouse to icehouse climate states up to the present. Along this progressive cooling, the record is dotted by rapid warming and cooling transient events, from which the causes are not yet fully understood. One problem with paleoceanographic reconstructions is that the older the event, the harder it is to find a sedimentary record in which the paleoclimatic proxies are preserved enough to be used with confidence. This work has the goal of illustrating the possibility to develop a new paleoenvironmental indicator based on the magnetic properties of magnetite crystals synthetized by magnetotactic bacteria. The sensibility of such crystals to small changes in dissolved oxygen content in the pore water and water column is well known, and can be exploited to reconstruct such changes from the sedimentary record. Qualitative information regarding this topic are defined in scientific literature, but, so far, no quantitative study has been performed. This is the first attempt to quantify the preservation of biogenic magnetite as a function of oxygenation state of waters, and is based on recent sediment extracted from cores collected in the coastal region of Rio de Janeiro (Saco do Mamanguá, Paraty). From these, where it was possible to obtain magnetic data relative to magnetite crystals together as well with as direct measurements of pore water chemistry. The results of this first attempt were used to analyze climatic and oceanographic conditions in two other sites, representative of key past environmental events during the Paleocene. The first case study was performed in a newly descripted sedimentary outcrop in central Turkey, of middle Eocene age, representative of a period of rapid warming (Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum, MECO). The second case study was done using material from a marine sediment core collected in the Ross Sea (Antarctica) that covers from the late Eocene to the Middle Miocene, a period that saw the onset of the modern, permanent ice sheet cover in the Antarctic continent. / A historia climática da Terra é caracterizada por variações climáticas de curto e longo prazo, com variações de condições, as vezes extremas. Dados de isótopos de oxigênio mostram claramente que durante o Cenozoico (desde 65 Ma até o presente) o nosso planeta passou de uma fase quente caracterizada por marcado efeito estufa (durante o Paleoceno) para um período progressivamente mais frio em direção ao presente. Ambos esses estados são caracterizados pela alternância de eventos transientes quentes e frios de relativa curta duração, sendo que destes a maioria ainda não é plenamente compreendida. Um dos principais problemas das reconstruções paleoceangráficas é que quanto mais antigo o evento mais difícil encontrar sequências sedimentares cujo registro de proxies paleoambientais seja preservado e confiável. Este trabalho visa explicitar a possibilidade de desenvolver um novo indicador paleoambiental, baseado em propriedades magnéticas de cristais de magnetita biosintetizados por bactérias magnetotáticas. Tais cristais biogênicos são notavelmente sensíveis a pequenas variações de oxigênio dissolvido na coluna de água e na agua intersticial entre os poros dos sedimentos marinhos, e essa sensibilidade pode ser explorada para reconstruir variações climáticas no registro sedimentar do passado. Informações qualitativas estão disponíveis na literatura cientifica mas, até agora, não existem estudos que quantifiquem essa relação. Esta primeira tentativa de quantificar a preservação de magnetita biogênica em função do estado de oxigenação de águas se baseia em testemunhos coletados na costa do estado do Rio de Janeiro (Saco do Mamanguá, Paraty), onde foi possível coletar dados magnéticos relativos aos cristais de magnetita biogênica concomitantemente a medidas diretas de química da água intersticial. Os resultados desse primeiro estudo foram aplicados para reconstruções de variações climáticas e oceanográficas em duas seções que registram importantes mudanças climáticas durante o Paleogeno. No primeiro caso, um afloramento localizado na Turquia central de idade Eocenica e representativo de um período de rápido aquecimento (Ótimo Climático do Eoceno Médio, Middle Eocene climatic Optimum, MECO). No segundo caso, um testemunho coletado no Mar de Ross (Antártica) que abrange o período entre o Eoceno superior e o Mioceno médio, durante o qual houve a formação da primeira cobertura de gelo permanente no continente antártico.
57

Revisão sistemática do gênero Mourasuchus (Alligatoroidea, Caimaninae), com comentários sobre filogenia, biogeografia e paleoecologia de Caimaninae / Systematic revision of the Mourasuchus genus (Alligatoroidea, Caimaninae), with comments on the phylogeny, biogeography and paleoecology of Caimaninae

Cidade, Giovanne Mendes 09 June 2015 (has links)
Mourasuchus (Alligatoroidea, Caimaninae) é um táxon extinto de crocodilianos restrito ao Cenozoico da América do Sul. Representa um dos grupos de crocodilianos mais peculiares de todos os tempos, devido ao formato longo, largo e achatado de seu rostro (lembrando o bico de um pato) entre outras características. Apesar dessas peculiaridades, relativamente poucos trabalhos foram feitos sobre esse grupo. A maioria das descrições morfológicas dos fósseis do gênero são sucintas e breves, incluindo as dos holótipos de duas das quatro espécies a ele assinaladas: M. amazonensis e M. arendsi. Do mesmo modo, as diagnoses das quatro espécies também se mostram sucintas. Poucas também são as análises filogenéticas realizadas com Mourasuchus a maioria das quais, porém, recupera Orthogenysuchus olseni, do Eoceno dos Estados Unidos, como táxon-irmão de Mourasuchus, gerando um impasse biogeográfico. Além disso, a maneira exata pela qual Mourasuchus se alimentava, fazendo uso de seu peculiar rostro bico de pato, bem como seus itens alimentares, ainda não foram plenamente esclarecidos, ainda que algumas teorias tenham sido propostas na literatura. Assim, este trabalho se propôs a: oferecer uma re-descrição dos holótipos de M. amazonensis e M. arendsi; revisar as diagnoses das espécies e do próprio gênero; realizar uma análise filogenética investigando as relações das espécies entre si e do gênero, como um todo, em Caimaninae; investigar a relação de Orthogenysuchus olseni como táxon-irmão de Mourasuchus; elucidar o modo de forrageio e os itens alimentares consumidos pelo grupo. As re-análises das diagnoses das espécies revelaram que duas delas constituem, na verdade, espécies não-válidas, enquanto a análise de um novo material craniano descrito neste trabalho (MCNC-PAL-110-72V) revelou a existência de uma nova espécie de Mourasuchus, fazendo com que este trabalho reconheça três espécies válidas para o gênero. A análise filogenética revelou M. atopus como o táxon mais basal, enquanto M. amazonensis e a nova espécie proposta formam um clado mais derivado. Orthogenysuchus olseni não foi recuperado como táxon-irmão de Mourasuchus em nenhuma das análises, mas seu posicionamento ainda dentro de Caimaninae faz com que impasses biogeográficos permaneçam. Este trabalho defende que Mourasuchus coletava presas em grande quantidade usando a musculatura da parte de baixo de seu rostro uma alimentação coletora enquanto ainda não há evidências de que esses animais fariam uma filtração da massa alimentar coletada. É possível, também, que tal hábito tenha evoluído a partir do hábito alimentar durófago exibido por Caimaninae basais, especialmente o gênero Gnatosuchus. / Mourasuchus (Alligatoroidea, Caimaninae) is an extinct crocodilian taxon restricted to the Cenozoic of South America. It represents one of the most peculiar crocodilian groups of all time, due to the long, wide, flattened shape of its rostrum (resembling the beak of a duck), among other features. Regardless these peculiarities, relatively few works have been done about this group. Most of morphological descriptions of the fossils belonging to this genus are shot and brief, including those of two from the four species assigned to it: M. amazonensis and M. arendsi. Similarly, the diagnoses of all the four species are also very brief. The phylogenetic analyses involving Mourasuchus are also very few most of them, however, recover Orthogenysuchus olseni, from the Eocene of the United States, as Mourasuchus sister-taxon, creating a biogeographically problematic scenario. Furthermore, the exact way by which Mourasuchus feed itself, using its peculiar beak of duck rostrum, as well as its prey items, are yet to be determined, even though some proposals have already been made in the literature. As such, this work had the following objectives: offer a redescription of the holotypes of M. amazonensis and M. arendsi; re-evaluate the diagnoses of Mourasuchus species and the genus itself; perform a phylogenetic analysis to evaluate the relationships between Mourasuchus species and of this group, as a whole, within Caimaninae; evaluate the position of Orthogenysuchus olseni as a sister-taxon of Mourasuchus; elucidate the foraging tactics and the prey items consumed by this group. The re-evaluation of the diagnoses of the species revealed that two are in reality non-valid species, while the analysis of a new cranial material described in this work (MCNC-PAL-110-72V) revealed the existence of a new species of Mourasuchus, taking this work to recognize the existence of three valid species for the genus. The phylogenetic analysis recovered M. atopus as the basalmost taxon, while M. amazonensis and the new species proposed in this work form a more derived clade. Orthogenysuchus olseni was not recovered as a Mourasuchus sister-taxon in any of the analyses made, but its position still within Caimaninae maintains biogeographically problematic scenarios in this clade. This work defends that Mourasuchus collected a high number of prey items using the musculature between the lower jaws a collecting foraging tactic while there is still no evidence that these animals could perform a straining of the entire concentration of food it collected. It is possible, as well, that such habit may have evolved from the durophagous feeding habit of some basal Caimaninae, especially Gnatosuchus.
58

Lagartos e serpentes (Lepidosauria, Squamata) do mioceno médio-superior da Região Norte da América do Sul

Hsiou, Annie Schmaltz January 2010 (has links)
Lagartos e serpentes fósseis da América do Sul são registrados desde o Cretáceo inferior até o Pleistoceno superior-Holoceno para a Argentina, Bolívia, Brasil, Colômbia, Equador, Peru, Uruguai e Venezuela. Para o Cretáceo, os restos de lagartos e serpentes são principalmente do Brasil e da Argentina. Lagartos filogeneticamente relacionados com a ancestralidade dos Squamata ocorrem em sedimentos do Cretáceo inferior e superior das regiões nordeste e sudeste do Brasil. As serpentes estão representadas pelos Anilioidea para o sudeste do país, e pelos Madtsoiidae para o Cretáceo médio do Estado do Maranhão. Para a Argentina, um provável Iguanidae foi descrito, além de fósseis de lagartos ainda indeterminados. As serpentes estão representadas no Cretáceo superior da Argentina pelos Dinilysiidae, Madtsoiidae, Anilioidea, e uma das serpentes mais primitivas conhecidas Najash rionegrina e provavelmente Boidae. Além da Argentina e Brasil, os Madtsoiidae também foram referidos para o Cretáceo superior da Bolívia. Para o Paleógeno, os lagartos são representados pelos Iguanidae, Gekkonidae, Teiidae, ?Scincidade e Anguimorpha. As serpentes são conhecidas quase que exclusivamente por fragmentos de vértebras das famílias Madtsoiidae, Palaeopheidae, Aniliidae, Boidae e Tropidophiidae. Para o Neógeno o material é ainda mais numeroso, onde a grande maioria dos gêneros e espécies fósseis de lagartos e serpentes ainda ocorre na herpetofauna sul-americana. Embora tenha ocorrido notável incremento no conhecimento do registro fóssil de lagartos e serpentes na América do Sul, até agora alguns problemas ainda persistiam, como a ausência de informação destes grupos no início do Néogeno do Brasil, e a ausência de trabalhos de integração dos dados para o Cenozóico sul-americano, o que tem limitado as interpretações sobre a evolução dos escamados, principalmente para à região norte da América do Sul. Neste trabalho foram descritos fósseis atribuídos aos Teiidae (cf. Paradracaena sp), Boidae (Eunectes sp e cf. Eunectes) e aos Anilioidea (Colombophis portai e C. spinosus sp. nov.) para a Formação Solimões, Mioceno superior do sudoeste da Amazônia brasileira. A associação de lagartos e serpentes encontrada na Formação Solimões indica uma similaridade ecológica entre as faunas miocênicas do norte da América do Sul, tais como La Venta (Colômbia) e região de Urumaco (Venezuela). Esta fauna de escamados descrita neste trabalho representa o primeiro registro do grupo para o Neógeno do sudoeste da Amazônia brasileira, e talvez contribua para um melhor entendimento anatômico de certos grupos, bem como para a distribuição dos mesmos na região norte da América do Sul. / South American fossil lizards and snakes are known from Early Cretaceous to Late Pleistocene-Holocene of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. For the Cretaceous, lizard and snake remains are mainly from Brazil and Argentina. The most ancient lizards (related to the ancestry of Squamata) are from the Early and Late Cretaceous sediments of the northeastern and southeastern regions of Brazil. Snakes are represented by Anilioidea in the southeastern region. In addition, Madtsoiidae were reported for the Middle Cretaceous of Maranhão State. For Argentina, an Iguanidae lizard was described, as well as additional undetermined remains of lizards. The snakes are represented in the Late Cretaceous of Argentina by Dinilysiidae, Madtsoiidae, Anilioidea, and one of the most primitive snake known, Najash rionegrina, and probably Boidae. Besides the records of Argentina and Brazil, Madtsoiidae were also referred to the Late Cretaceous of Bolivia. For the Paleogene, the lizards are represented by Iguanidae, Gekkonidae, Teiidae, ?Scincidade, and Anguimorpha. Snakes are almost known exclusively by fragments of vertebrae of the families Madtsoiidae, Palaeopheidae, Aniliidae, Boidae and Tropidophiidae. In the Neogene the material is even more numerous, the majority of fossil lizards and snakes (genera and species) are still living in South American herpetofauna. Although there was considerable increase in knowledge of the fossil record of lizards and snakes in South America, yet there were still some problems such as lack of information for these groups from the beginning of the Neogene of Brazil and the lack of works data integration for the South American Cenozoic, what has limited interpretations concerning the evolution of the squamates, mainly to northern South America. In this study were described fossils attributed to the Teiidae (cf. Paradracaena sp), Boidae (Eunectes sp. and cf. Eunectes sp.), and Anilioidea (Colombophis portai and C. spinosus sp. nov.) for the Solimões Formation, Late Miocene of the southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. The association of lizards and snakes found in the Solimões Formation indicates an ecological similarity between the faunas of the northern Miocene South America, such as La Venta (Colombia) and the region of Urumaco (Venezuela). The squamate fauna described here, represents the first record of the group for the Neogene of southwestern Brazilian Amazonia and perhaps a contribution for a better understanding of the anatomy of certain groups, as well as their distribution in the northern South America.
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Caracterização e idade das intrusivas do sistema pórfiro yarumalito, magmatismo Combia, Colombia

Henrichs, Isadora Alberti January 2013 (has links)
O sistema pórfiro Yarumalito, caracterizado por concentrar minério em veios controlados por estruturas e stockworks encontra-se localizado no distrito mineiro de Marmato, que é considerado um dos mais antigos distritos de ouro da Colômbia, com atividades de extração que remontam da época dos Incas. O sistema ígneo da região é relacionado ao magmatismo Miocênico da Formação Combia. Neste trabalho foram descritas as rochas subvulcânicas diretamente relacionadas às zonas mineralizadas do sistema pórfiro Yarumalito com o objetivo de, após caracterizar as intrusões, realizar datação através do método U-Pb em zircão. Amostras selecionadas de duas intrusões férteis, uma andesítica mais abundante na área e outra diorítica com características intrusivas na primeira e de ocorrência mais restrita, foram criteriosamente descritas e tiveram zircões separados e posteriormente analisados por SHRIMP na Universidade de São Paulo. Os resultados apontaram para um intervalo bastante restrito para as idades, com médias ponderadas das idades 206Pb/238U variando de 7 ± 0.15 Ma para o andesito pórfiro a 6.95 ± 0.16 Ma para o diorito pórfiro. Estes resultados sugerem um período restrito no tempo para a cristalização das intrusivas portadoras de mineralizações na área do projeto e posicionam o sistema Yarumalito para o final do magmatismo Combia. / The Yarumalito porphyry system, characterized to concentrate ore in structure related veins and stockworks is located in the mining district of Marmato, that is considered one of the oldest gold mining districts of Colombia, with exploration activities since the Inca Empire. The igneous system of the region is related to the miocenic magmatism of the Combia formation. In this paper, the subvolcanic rocks directly related with the mineralized zones of the Yarumalito porphyry were described in order to, after characterization, obtain UPb ages in zircon to the intrusions. Selected samples of the two fertile intrusions, one andesitic more abundant in the area and one dioritic more restricted, were carefully described and had their zircon grains separated and analyzed by SHRIMP in the University of São Paulo. The results points to a very restricted interval for the ages, with weighted average 206Pb/238U varying from 7 ± 0.15 Ma for the andesitic porphyry and 6.95 ± 0.16 Ma for the dioritic porphyry. These results suggest a brief period for the crystallization of the mineralized subvolcanic rocks in the area and constrain the Yarumalito system to the final stages of the Combia magmatism.
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Paleobiologia de foraminíferos e microfósseis associados dos depósitos eocênicos, miocênicos e plio-pleistocênicos da Ilha Seymour, Antártica Ocidental / not available

Badaro, Victor Cezar Soficier 15 December 2017 (has links)
Os depósitos cenozoicos da Antártica Ocidental, especialmente aqueles da transição Eoceno-Oligoceno, fornecem importantes dados geológicos sobre as mudanças climáticas ocorridas ao longo da Era Cenozoica e de seu impacto na biosfera austral. Assembleias fósseis, incluindo de foraminíferos, foram relatadas para unidades de todas as épocas cenozoicas, em afloramentos dos arquipélagos James Ross e Shetlands do Sul. Todavia, os diamictitos das Formações Hobbs Glacier (Mioceno) e Weddell Sea (Plio-Pleistoceno), que afloram nas ilhas James Ross e Seymour, ainda não haviam sido alvo de análises micropaleontólogicas visando a obtenção de microfósseis com paredes inorgânicas. Foram analisadas amostras de 12 seções estratigráficas da Ilha Seymour, incluindo estratos do topo da Formação La Meseta (Eoceno) e de diversos níveis das formações Hobbs Glacier e Weddell Sea. Pela primeira vez foram encontradas assembleias de microfósseis com paredes inorgânicas, constituídas principalmente por foraminíferos, na porção superior da Formação La Meseta e em estratos das formações Hobbs Glacier e Weddell Sea. Na Formação La Meseta foram encontrados restos autóctones ou parautóctones de foraminíferos Textularia sp., primeira ocorrência do gênero para a unidade. Na Formação Hobbs Glacier, a assembleia autóctone ou parautóctone melhor preservada é composta pelo foraminífero lagenído Oolina stellula e pelo radiolário Larcopyle polyacantha. O foraminífero rotaliído Bolivina sp. é raro e representa um resto alóctone na unidade. Para a Formação Weddell Sea, a assembleia autóctone ou parautóctone melhor preservada é constituída pelo foraminífero lagenído Favulina hexagona e pelo planctônico Globigerinita uvula, além do rotaliído Globocassidulina subglobosa e do radiolário L. polyacantha nos mesmos e em outros níveis. Nos depósitos miocênicos e plio-pleistocênicos ocorrem também foraminíferos aglutinados grandes de táxons típicos de mar profundo, cujas feições tafonômicas indicam sua reelaboração a partir de depósitos mais antigos, possivelmente do Paleoceno, tendo em vista sua associação tafonômica e estratigráfica com o foraminífero Reticulophragmium garcilassoi, um fóssil-índice dessa época. Além de R. garcilassoi, ocorrem outros táxons típicos de assembleias de mar profundo na Formação Hobbs Glacier, como Alveolophragmium orbiculatum, Ammodiscus sp. nov., Ammodiscus pennyi, Ammomarginulina cf. aubertae, Bathysiphon sp. 1, Bathysiphon sp. 2, Cyclammina placenta e Nothia robusta. Na Formação Weddell Sea, as grandes formas aglutinadas são representadas por Ammodiscus sp. nov., Bathysiphon sp. 1, Budashevaella cf. laevigata, Cyclammina cancellata, Glomospira charoides, Saccammina grzybowski, Sculptobaculites barri e Verneulinoides cf. neocomiensis. Alguns táxons da Ilha Seymour podem ser associados àqueles dos depósitos paleocênicos da Nova Zelândia e Nova Guiné, sugerindo alguma correlação cronológica. Embora o registro fossilífero das formações La Meseta, Hobbs Glacier e Weddell Sea seja rarefeito, foi possível identificar restos autóctones ou parautóctones que indicaram a composição parcial das comunidades infaunais e planctônicas que habitavam a região durante a deposição das unidades. Os poucos fósseis-índice encontrados corroboram as idades já propostas paras as formações. Para a Formação Weddell Sea, as assembleias autóctones ou parautóctones e as formas planctônicas permitiram redefinir o contexto deposicional da unidade como glacio-marino, e não plenamente glacial, como anteriormente proposto. / Western Antarctic deposits, especially those from the Eocene-Oligocene transition, provide important geological data on Cenozoic global climate changes and their impact on the southern biota. Fossil assemblages, including foraminifers, are known from geological units from all Cenozoic epochs, in outcrops of the James Ross and South Shetlands archipelagos. However, the diamictites of Hobbs Glacier (Miocene) and Weddell Sea (Plio-Pleistocene) formations, exposed in James Ross and Seymour islands, were never subjects of micropaleontologic analysis targeting inorganic-walled microfossils. Twelve stratigraphic sections on Seymour Island were analyzed, including the top of the La Meseta Formation (Eocene) and several strata of Hobbs Glacier and Weddell Sea formations. Assemblages of inorganic-walled microfossils, composed mainly of foraminifers, were found for the first time in the La Meseta Formation and in strata from the Hobbs Glacier and Weddell Sea formations. Autochthonous or parautochthonous remains of the foraminifer Textularia sp. were found in the La Meseta Formation, being the first occurrence of the genus in this unit. The best preserved autochthonous or parautochthonous assemblage from Hobbs Glacier Formation is composed of the Lagenid foraminifer Oolina stellula and radiolarian Larcopyle polyacantha. The Rotaliid foraminifer Bolivina sp. is rare and represents an allochthonous elements in this formation. In the Weddell Sea Formation, the best preserved autochthonous or parautochthonous assemblage is composed of the Lagenid foraminifer Favulina hexagona and the planktonic Globigerinita uvula, as well as the Rotaliid foraminifer Globocassidulina subglobosa and the radiolarian L. polyacantha in the same and in other strata. In these Miocene and Plio-Pleistocene deposits also occur large agglutinated foraminifers typical of the deep sea, whose taphonomic features indicate their reelaboration from older deposits, possibly from the Paleocene, given their taphonomic and stratigraphic association with the foraminifer Reticulophragmium garcilassoi, a Paleocene index-fossil. Besides R. garcilassoi, other typical deep-sea taxa occur in the Hobbs Glacier Formation, such as Alveolophragmium orbiculatum, Ammodiscus sp. nov., Ammodiscus pennyi, Ammomarginulina cf. aubertae, Bathysiphon sp. 1, Bathysiphon sp. 2, Cyclammina placenta and Nothia robusta. In the Weddell Sea Formation the agglutinated specimens are represented by Ammodiscus sp. nov., Bathysiphon sp. 1, Budashevaella cf. laevigata, Cyclammina cancellata, Glomospira charoides, Saccammina grzybowski, Sculptobaculites barri and Verneulinoides cf. neocomiensis. Some taxa from Seymour Island also occur in the Paleocene deposits of New Zealand and New Guinea, suggesting some chronological correlation. Although the fossil record of the La Meseta, Hobbs Glacier and Weddell Sea formations is sparse, it was possible to identify autochthonous or parautochthonous remains that indicate the partial composition of the infaunal communities and plankton that thrived in the area during the deposition of the units. The few index-fossils found corroborate the ages already indicated for the deposits. For the Weddell Sea Formation, the autochthonous or parautochthonous assemblages and the planktonic specimens allowed the redefinition of its depositional setting as glacial-marine, and not fully glacial, as previously proposed.

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