The tapir Tapirus (Mammalia: Perissodactyla) from the late Pliocene (early Blancan) Tonuco Mountain Local Fauna, Camp Rice Formation, Do�a Ana County, southern New Mexico

Q4 Earth and Planetary Sciences
G. Morgan, R. Hulbert, E. S. Gottlieb, J. Amato, G. Mack, T. Jonell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

A mandible of a tapir (Tapirus sp.) from the late Pliocene (early Blancan North American land mammal age-NALMA), Tonuco Mountain Local Fauna (LF), Dona Ana County, southern New Mexico, is a significant addition to the small sample of fossil tapirs known from the late Cenozoic of New Mexico. The Tonuco Mountain tapir mandible is not identified to the species level because the diagnostic characters in the genus Tapirus are primarily found in the skull. It is most similar in size and morphological features to the mandible of the late Blancan species Tapirus lundeliusi from Florida. The Tonuco Mountain LF consists of 17 species of vertebrates, including a mud turtle, two tortoises, a duck, and 13 species of mammals. Among mammals in this fauna, the camel Camelops, the peccary Platygonus, and the horse Equus scotti first appeared in North American early Blancan faunas at about 3.6 Ma, whereas the horses Nannippus peninsulatus and Equus simplicidens became extinct in New Mexico in the late Blancan at about 2.6 Ma. The association of these mammals, together with the absence of mammals of South American origin that first appeared in the American Southwest at about 2.7 Ma, restricts the age of the Tonuco Mountain LF to the late early Blancan, between 2.7 and 3.6 Ma. The fossils from the Tonuco Mountain LF are derived from sediments of the axial-fluvial lithofacies of the ancestral Rio Grande, referred to the Camp Rice Formation. The sediments in the lower 30 m of the Camp Rice Formation section containing the Tonuco Mountain LF, including the Tapirus mandible, are normally magnetized and correspond to the lowermost portion of the Gauss Chron (C2An.3n), above the Gilbert/Gauss boundary (younger than 3.58 Ma) and below the base of the Mammoth Subchron (C2An.2r; older than 3.33 Ma). The mammalian biochronology and magnetostratigraphy restrict the age of the Tonuco Mountain LF to between 3.3 and 3.6 Ma (early late Pliocene, late early Blancan). The tapir mandible from the Tonuco Mountain LF is the first record of Tapirus from the early Blancan (2.7-4.9 Ma) of North America. Tapirus had a restricted geographic distribution in the late Pliocene and earliest Pleistocene (late early and late Blancan; ~1.6-3.6 Ma) of temperate North America, occurring primarily in the southern United States from Florida to California, including New Mexico.
新墨西哥州南部Do - Ana县Camp Rice组,上新世晚期(Blancan早期)Tonuco山当地动物群中的貘(哺乳目:长趾目)
新墨西哥州南部多纳阿纳县托努科山地方动物群(LF)上新世晚期(北美陆生哺乳动物时代NALMA早期)的一只貘(Tapirus sp.)的下颚,是对新墨西哥州新生代晚期已知的小样本貘化石的重要补充。由于Tapirus属的诊断特征主要在头骨中发现,因此没有从物种层面上确定Tonuco山貘的下颌骨。它在大小和形态特征上与来自佛罗里达州的晚布兰坎物种Tapirus lundeliusi的下颌骨最为相似。托努科山LF由17种脊椎动物组成,包括一只泥龟、两只陆龟、一只鸭子和13种哺乳动物。在该动物群中的哺乳动物中,骆驼、山核桃和马首次出现在北美早期布兰坎动物群中是在3.6 Ma左右,而南尼普斯半岛马和马在布兰坎晚期约2.6 Ma在新墨西哥州灭绝,加上约2.7Ma首次出现在美国西南部的南美洲哺乳动物的缺失,将托努科山LF的年龄限制在早布兰坎晚期,介于2.7~3.6Ma之间。托努科山LF的化石来源于祖先格兰德河的轴向河流岩相沉积物,即Camp Rice组。包含托努科山LF的Camp Rice组下部30m的沉积物,包括Tapirus下颌骨,通常被磁化,对应于高斯Chron的最下部(C2An.3n),吉尔伯特/高斯边界上方(小于3.58 Ma)和猛犸亚时底部下方(C2An.2r;大于3.33 Ma)。哺乳动物生物岩石学和磁地层学将托努科山LF的年龄限制在3.3至3.6 Ma之间(上新世晚期早期,布兰坎早期晚期)。托努科山LF的tapir下颌骨是北美洲早期布兰坎(2.7-4.9 Ma)Tapirus的第一个记录。Tapirus在北美洲温带上新世晚期和更新世早期(布兰坎早期和晚期晚期;约1.6-3.6 Ma)的地理分布受到限制,主要分布在美国南部,从佛罗里达州到加利福尼亚州,包括新墨西哥州。
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来源期刊
New Mexico Geology
New Mexico Geology Earth and Planetary Sciences-Geology
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: New Mexico Geology is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal available by subscription. Articles of original research are generally less than 10,000 words in length and pertain to the geology of New Mexico and neighboring states, primarily for an audience of professional geologists or those with an interest in the geologic story behind the landscape. The journal also publishes abstracts from regional meetings, theses, and dissertations (NM schools), descriptions of new publications, book reviews, and upcoming meetings. Research papers, short articles, and abstracts from selected back issues of New Mexico Geology are now available as free downloads in PDF format. Back issues are also available in hard copy for a nominal fee.
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