Literature DB >> 10769157

Stratigraphic Analysis of Upper Cretaceous Rocks in the Mahajanga Basin, Northwestern Madagascar: Implications for Ancient and Modern Faunas.

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Abstract

Upper Cretaceous strata of the Mahajanga Basin, northwestern Madagascar, yield some of the most significant and exquisitely preserved vertebrate fossils known from Gondwana. The sedimentology of these strata and their stratigraphic relations have been the focus of renewed geological investigations during the course of five expeditions since 1993. We here designate stratotypes and formalize the terrestrial Maevarano Formation, with three new members (Masorobe, Anembalemba, Miadana), and the overlying marine Berivotra Formation. The Maevarano Formation accumulated on a broad, semiarid alluvial plain bounded to the southeast by crystalline highlands and to the northwest by the Mozambique Channel. The Berivotra Formation was deposited in an open marine setting that evolved from a clastic- to a carbonate-dominated shelf, resulting in deposition of the overlying Betsiboka limestone of Danian age. New stratigraphic data clearly indicate that the Maevarano Formation correlates, at least in part, with the Maastrichtian Berivotra Formation, and this in turn indicates that the most fossiliferous portions of the Maevarano Formation are Maastrichtian in age, rather than Campanian as previously reported. This revised age for the Maevarano vertebrate assemblage indicates that it is approximately contemporaneous with the vertebrate fauna recovered from the Deccan basalt volcano-sedimentary sequence of India. The comparable age of these two faunas is significant because the faunas appear to be more similar to one another than either is to those from any other major Gondwanan landmass. The revised age of the Maevarano Formation, when considered in the light of our recent fossil discoveries, further indicates that the ancestral stocks of Madagascar's overwhelmingly endemic modern vertebrate fauna arrived on the island in post-Mesozoic times. The basal stocks of the modern vertebrate fauna are conspicuously absent in the Maevarano Formation. Finally, the revised age of the Maevarano Formation serves to expand our global perspective on the K/T event by clarifying the age of a diverse, and arguably the best preserved, sample of Gondwanan vertebrates from the terminal Cretaceous.

Entities:  

Year:  2000        PMID: 10769157     DOI: 10.1086/314403

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Geol        ISSN: 0022-1376            Impact factor:   2.701


  6 in total

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Authors:  Mary Higby Schweitzer; Jennifer L Wittmeyer; John R Horner
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Review 2.  Avian evolution, Gondwana biogeography and the Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction event.

Authors:  J Cracraft
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4.  Late Cretaceous bird from Madagascar reveals unique development of beaks.

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-11-25       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  New material of Beelzebufo, a hyperossified frog (Amphibia: Anura) from the late cretaceous of Madagascar.

Authors:  Susan E Evans; Joseph R Groenke; Marc E H Jones; Alan H Turner; David W Krause
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  A new pelomedusoid turtle, Sahonachelys mailakavava, from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar provides evidence for convergent evolution of specialized suction feeding among pleurodires.

Authors:  Walter G Joyce; Yann Rollot; Serjoscha W Evers; Tyler R Lyson; Lydia J Rahantarisoa; David W Krause
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2021-05-05       Impact factor: 2.963

  6 in total

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