犹他州非海相白垩纪恐龙生物地层学

J. Kirkland, J. Sertich, A. Titus
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的三十年里,对犹他州陆地中生代地段的勘探使已知的恐龙物种增加了五倍多。这些地层的时间和层序地层框架高度分明,有助于将这些新发现的恐龙组合用于地质、进化、古生态和古地理研究。由于帕拉多克斯盆地北部盐构造造成的局部沉降,犹他州东部的这一地区保存了白垩纪基底的恐龙动物群,这些动物群在北美洲无处可寻,它们记录了横跨原北大西洋与欧洲之间的古生物地理联系。犹他州中部圣拉斐尔漩涡以西的白垩纪中段地层保存了与世隔绝的北美地区独特的恐龙群落。这些地层还记录了亚洲恐龙首次移居北美的情况,以及一些北美特有恐龙种群的最后出现。在整个晚白垩世,犹他州南部的高原上,晚白垩世西部内陆海道西侧的大峡谷海湾内,出露了大量含化石的洪泛平原沉积。通过对微脊椎动物遗址的研究,发现了上白垩世大部分序列中脊椎动物生活的不同记录。特别是,通过对坎帕尼亚期富含恐龙的床层的研究,发现了许多新的恐龙物种,它们与蒙大拿州和阿尔伯塔州的西内海道西海岸的同时期恐龙床层截然不同。这些大量丰富的恐龙组合的进一步发展将为未来的大量研究提供基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dinosaur biostratigraphy of the Nonmarine Cretaceous of Utah
Over the past thirty years, exploration of the terrestrial Mesozoic section in Utah has resulted in a more than fivefold increase in the known species of dinosaurs. A highly resolved temporal and sequence stratigraphic framework for these strata is facilitating the utility of these newly discovered dinosaur assemblages in geologic, evolutionary, paleoecologic, and paleogeographic research. Local subsidence due to salt tectonics in the northern Paradox Basin is responsible for this region of eastern Utah preserving basal Cretaceous dinosaur faunas, known nowhere else in North America, that document paleobiogeographic connections across the proto-North Atlantic with Europe. The more medial Cretaceous strata west of the San Rafael Swell, in central Utah, preserve a unique dinosaur assemblage on an isolated North America. These strata also record the first immigration of Asian dinosaurs into North America and the last occurrences of a number of endemic North American dinosaur lineages. Through the Late Cretaceous, extensive, fossiliferous floodplain deposits are exposed in the high plateaus of southern Utah within the Grand Canyon Bight on the western side of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway. Research on microvertebrate sites has resulted in a diverse record of vertebrate life substage by substage through most of the Upper Cretaceous sequence. Particularly, rich dinosaur-bearing beds through the Campanian have resulted in the discovery of many new dinosaur species distinct from the coeval dinosaur-bearing beds farther north along the western coast of the Western Interior Seaway in Montana and Alberta. The further development of these numerous rich dinosaur assemblages will provide the basis for considerable research in the future.
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