December 30 , 2016:
Highlights
Turtles and crocodyliforms in Morrison Formation more abundant in east and north areas
Distribution coincides with absence of Salt Wash and Brushy Basin Members
Distribution coincides with relatively greater abundance of limestone and drab mudstone.
Suggests wetter conditions east and north and relative highland to southwest
Abstract
Nearly 150 occurrences of turtles and neosuchian crocodyliforms in the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation indicate that, by number of localities and number of specimens, both are preferentially preserved off the Colorado Plateau in deposits in the eastern and northern parts of the Morrison basin, suggesting that these latter areas contained wetter paleoenvironments and either were more populated with these semi-aquatic taxa or more frequently preserved their remains, compared with areas to the south and west. Cursorial crocodylomorphs occur at more sites and in greater numbers on the Colorado Plateau than to the east and north, but this pattern is only significant by number of specimens. Previous suggestions of wetter paleoenvironmental conditions on floodplains distal to the southwestern source areas on the Colorado Plateau, or western source areas for northern outcrops, based on geological and microvertebrate data, seem to be borne out by these data from semi-aquatic mesovertebrates.
==
John R. Foster and Sharon K. McMullen (2016)
Paleobiogeographic distribution of Testudinata and neosuchian Crocodyliformes in the Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic) of North America: Evidence of habitat zonation?
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (advance online publication)
AbstractResearch highlights Purchase PDF - $37.95
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2016.12.013
|