info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Evidence of Late-Pleistocene monte formation in central west Argentina
Fecha
2009-10Registro en:
Martinez Carretero, Eduardo Enrique; García, Eduardo Alejandro; Dacar, María Ana; Evidence of Late-Pleistocene monte formation in central west Argentina; Center for the Study of the First Americans; Current Research in the Pleistocene; 26; 10-2009; 139-141
8755-898X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Martinez Carretero, Eduardo Enrique
García, Eduardo Alejandro
Dacar, María Ana
Resumen
The present knowledge on late-Quaternary environmental change in subtropical central-western Argentina is fragmentary, particularly because dates and organic records are scarce (Martínez Carretero et al. 2004), pollen analyses are mostly restricted to the Holocene, and a general model of Pleistocene glacial advances is not yet available. Within this context, a paleoecological record obtained from recent stratigraphic excavations at the Gruta del Indio site (34° 45′ S, 68° 22′ W, 660 m a.s.l.) provides important evidence of paleoenvironments of the area, particularly for the late Pleistocene (García 2003; García and Lagiglia 1999). This record, unique for this part of South America, is composed of coprolites from small rodents (medium-sized Lagidium viscacia) and large mammals (Hippidion sp.) (García et al. 2006, 2008). Two xeric phytogeographical regions are currently present in the area: the Monte, on flatlands and foothills, dominated by shrubs and scarce trees, and the Cardonal, on sunny slopes, dominated by cactaceae and small shrubs.