New Late Cretaceous microvertebrate assemblage from the Campanian-Maastrichtian Williams Fork Formation, northwestern Colorado, USA, and its paleoenvironmental implications

被引:6
作者
Brand, Nickolas A. [1 ,2 ]
Heckert, Andrew B. [2 ]
Sanchez, Israel [2 ]
Foster, John R. [3 ]
Hunt-Foster, Rebecca K. [4 ]
Eberle, Jaelyn J. [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] George Mason Univ, Dept Environm Sci & Policy, 4400 Univ Dr, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA
[2] Appalachian State Univ, Dept Geol & Environm Sci, ASU Box 32067, Boone, NC 28608 USA
[3] Nat Hist State Pk Museum, Utah Field House, 496 East Main St, Vernal, UT 84078 USA
[4] Dinosaur Natl Monument, POB 128, Jensen, UT 84035 USA
[5] Univ Colorado, Museum Natutul Hist, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[6] Univ Colorado, Dept Geol Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
关键词
Chondrichthyes; Osteichthyes; Dinosauria; Lepidosauria; Mammalia; Euselachii; paleoenvironment; microvertebrate; fluvial; Judithian; Lancian; North America; AGUJA FORMATION; GENUS; SQUAMATA; LIZARDS; FAUNA;
D O I
10.4202/app.00934.2021
中图分类号
Q91 [古生物学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 070903 ;
摘要
We describe a microvertebrate assemblage from the J&M site, of the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) Williams Fork Formation. Breakdown of fossil bearing matrix was achieved with the use of heated dimethyl sulfoxide. Nine of the recovered taxa arc new to both the J&M site and the Williams Fork Formation. The sharks Lonchidion griffisi, Chiloscvllium sp., and Cantioscyllium markaguntensis are the first non-batoid elasmobranchs reported from the Williams Fork Formation and arc all represented by teeth. The rays Cristomylus and Psuedomyledaphus arc also newly reported from teeth. The most common identifiable fossils were teeth of indeterminate amiids, most likely belonging to Melvius. Osteichthyan fossils new to the Williams Fork Formation include teeth of Paralbula, an indeterminate pycnodontid tooth plate fragment, and an indeterminate lungfish tooth fragment. A tooth of the teiid Peneteius is also the first reported from within the Williams Fork Formation. Alligatoroid teeth are relatively common and are extremely similar to those of the contemporaneous durophage Brachychampsa but are generically indeterminate. Terrestrial taxa were recovered in much smaller numbers. Theropod dinosaur fossils included isolated tooth fragments belonging to an indeterminate dromaeosaurid and, possibly, to Richanloestesia. We recovered both multituberculate and metatherian fossils in the form of isolated teeth. Some of these taxa are known from marine and estuarine deposits and, given that so many of these marine associated taxa have been recovered together, it seems likely that the J&M site is recording marine or estuarine influence within at least part of its depositional history. The mammalian taxa suggest a Judithian-Lancian age for the site, while records of the squamate Peneteius and the ray Myledaphus, suggest that the J&M site may be temporally transitional between other late Campanian and late Maastrichtian-aged localities.
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页码:579 / 600
页数:22
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