info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Microbivalves from the Monte Leon Formation (Early Miocene), Patagonia, Argentina
Fecha
2012-04Registro en:
Griffin, Miguel; Pastorino, Roberto Santiago Guido; Microbivalves from the Monte Leon Formation (Early Miocene), Patagonia, Argentina; Museum Histoire Naturelle; Revue de Paléobiologie; 11; 4-2012; 447-455
0253-6730
1661-5468
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Griffin, Miguel
Pastorino, Roberto Santiago Guido
Resumen
Three new species (Mysella donaciformis n. sp., Cosa helianthea n. sp., and Lissarca saraballentae n. sp.) of small bivalves are described from early Miocene rocks in southern Patagonia. The outcrops lie along the coast of the province of Santa Cruz, within the boundaries of the Monte León National Park. The fossil-rich rocks exposed there at the base of the coastal cliff are included in the Punta Entrada Member of the Monte León Formation. This stratigraphic unit has been dated as early Miocene. It was probably deposited in a tidally-influenced near-shore and fully marine environment. The affinities of these small mollusks lie with taxa known to occur in other areas of the Southern Ocean, such as Antarctica, Australia, and New Zealand. The dispersal of these mollusks across vast expanses of water by means of rafting on drifting kelp is discussed.