Skip navigation
Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://rid.unrn.edu.ar/handle/20.500.12049/11679

Título: A Neuquensaurus australis dominated bone-bed from Cinco Saltos (Río Negro, Argentina): first report on fossil biostratinomy
Autor(es): Citton, Paolo
Caratelli, Martina
Zurriaguz, Virginia Laura
Cerda, Ignacio Alejandro
Martinelli, Agustín
Kaluza, Jonatan
Aravena, José
Guzmán, Federico
Lagos, Walter I.
Schenardi, Martín
Fecha de publicación: nov-2023
Revista: RCAPA 2023, General Roca, Argentina
Resumen: Neuquensaurus australis is a small-bodied, saltasaurine titanosaur sauropod reported from different sites within the Anacleto Formation (Campanian, Upper Cretaceous) of Cinco Saltos area (Río Negro province, Argentina). One of these sites includes a multitaxic monodominant bone-bed that yielded dozens of skeletal elements including cranial, axial, and appendicular bones. The assemblage is presently dominated by Neuquensaurus australis, which is represented at least by three individuals (a juvenile and two sub-adults), plus another titanosaur taxon and other, currently undetermined, vertebrate remains. Here we discuss some biostratinomic aspects of the assemblage, based on preliminary analyses of part of the material, and a first possible interpretation about the type of accumulation. Skeletal remains were collected few metres below the unconformable contact between the Anacleto and Allen formations, from a fine- to medium-grained, 60 cm thick massive sandstone layer barren of microfossils. The bonebearing deposit lays on an erosional surface developed on medium-grained, cross-bedded, yellowish sands, also barren of microfossils. These deposits are included in a succession of mainly dark-red and green mudstones with carbonate nodules and reddish laminated siltstones, intercalated with light-yellow to light-grey, tabular and through cross-stratified sandstones, and subordinate conglomerates. Accumulation of fossil bones likely occurred close to a channelized area within a wide floodplain furrowed by low to medium-energy flowing streams. In general, fossil bones referred to Neuquensaurus australis, excluding few exceptions currently under consideration, are complete, including fragile anatomica l parts like neural spines of cervical vertebrae. Material so far analysed shows slight weathering on those bone surfaces that were directly in contact with the palaeosurface. Longitudinal cracking and subordinate mosaic cracking affect long bones diaphyses and flat surfaces of bones (e.g. vertebrae). Occasionally, cortical tissue on edges appears imploded by the collapse of underlying pneumatised tissue. Preliminary data suggest that skeletal remains suffered an overall short exposure time. A short ablation time can also be inferred, considering that Voorhies’s categories of different susceptibility to transport are identified in the same place. Material not referable to Neuquensaurus australis, considered until now as isolated findings, is instead affected by different weathering stages, among which flaking, suggesting a longer time of subaerial exposure. Observed uniformity in biostratinomic features of Neuquensaurus australis, coupled with the occurrence of isolated elements of other taxa with higher weathering, would characterize the bone-bed as a mixed fossil accumulation that may have been resulted from the cooccurrence of attritional and not attritional mode of accumulations.
URI: http://rid.unrn.edu.ar/handle/20.500.12049/11679
Aparece en las colecciones: Objetos de conferencia

Archivos en este ítem:
Archivo Descripción Tamaño Formato  
Citton et al., 2023.pdf563,99 kBAdobe PDFVisualizar/Abrir

Este documento es resultado del financiamiento otorgado por el Estado Nacional, por lo tanto queda sujeto al cumplimiento de la Ley N° 26.899


Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons Creative Commons