Dinosaurs of Alaska: Implications for the Cretaceous origin of Beringia

被引:40
作者
Fiorillo, Anthony R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Museum of Nature and Science, P.O. Box 151469, Dallas, TX 75315, United States
来源
Special Paper of the Geological Society of America | 2008年 / 442卷
关键词
Animals - Sea level;
D O I
10.1130/2008.442(15)
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fossils within accreted terranes are typically used to describe the age or origin of the exotic geologic blocks. However, accretion may also provide new pathways for faunal exchange between previously disconnected landmasses. One such landmass, the result of accretion, is Beringia, that entity encompassing northeastern Asia and northwestern North America and the surmised land connection between the two regions. The present concept of Beringia as a Quaternary subcontinent includes a climatic component in the form of glacial advances and retreats driving changes in sea level. These changes may have facilitated exchanges of marine biota between the Pacific Ocean and Arctic Basin, or exchanges of terrestrial faunas and floras between Asia and North America. The Beringian ecosystem includes specializations of the flora and fauna, especially in the vertebrate fauna. A review of tectonic reconstructions and the striking taxon-free parallel patterns in data on the Cretaceous and Quaternary fauna and flora suggest that a generalized concept of Beringia should be formally extended back in time to the Cretaceous. A significant shift in emphasis of defining variables occurs with this extension. Climate, in the form of meteorological phenomena, and geologic history are important variables in the previously recognized definition of Beringia. The extension of Beringia into the Cretaceous implies that Beringia is rooted in its accretionary rather than its climatic history; in other words, the geographic pattern as the result of tectonics is the defining parameter for Beringia. © 2008 The Geological Society of America.
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页码:313 / 326
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