Friasian
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Friasian
The Friasian age is a period of geologic time (16.3–15.5 Ma) within the Early Miocene epoch of the Neogene, used more specifically within the SALMA classification of South America. It follows the Santacrucian and precedes the Colloncuran age. Etymology The age is named after the Río Frías Formation in the Aysén Basin, Patagonia, Chile Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a country in western South America. It is the southernmost country in the world and the closest to Antarctica, stretching along a narrow strip of land between the Andes, Andes Mountains and the Paci .... Formations Fossils References Bibliography ;Río Frías Formation * * * * * ;Castilletes Formation * * * * * * * * ;Cerdas Beds * ;Chilcatay Formation * * * * ;Cura-Mallín Group * * * ;Gran Bajo del Gualicho Formation * ;Parángula Formation * ;Pebas Formation * * ;Río Foyel Formation * * ;Río Yuca Formation * {{SALMA Miocene S ...
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Río Frías Formation
Río Frías Formation () is a Miocene, Middle Miocene geologic formation made up sedimentary rock located in Aysén Region, western Patagonia. The formation crops out along the upper course of Cisnes River ().Marshall & Salinas, 1990 Marsupial fossils have been found in the formation.Marshall, 1990 The Friasian period in the South American Land Mammal Ages is named after the formation. Description Río Frías Formation was discovered by Santiago Roth in the summer of 1897–98. Roth was a Swiss immigrant who had been sent to survey the area by Francisco Moreno. Moreno was director of La Plata Museum and was involved in the Cordillera of the Andes Boundary Case 1902 (Argentina, Chile), Cordillera of the Andes Boundary Case between Chile and Argentina, thus there was both a political and scientific motivation behind the exploration of Patagonia. Santiago Roth called the upper course of Río Cisnes for Río Frías being unaware that it was the same river. Further he thought this une ...
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South American Land Mammal Age
The South American land mammal ages (SALMA) establish a geologic timescale for prehistoric South American fauna beginning 64.5 Ma during the Paleocene and continuing through to the Late Pleistocene (0.011 Ma). These periods are referred to as ages, stages, or intervals and were established using geographic place names where fossil materials where obtained.Flynn & Swisher, 1995 The basic unit of measurement is the first/last boundary statement. This shows that the first appearance event of one taxon is known to predate the last appearance event of another. If two taxa are found in the same fossil quarry or at the same stratigraphic horizon, then their age-range zones overlap. Background South America was an island continent for much of the Cenozoic, or the "Age of Mammals". As a result, its mammals evolved in their own unique directions, as Australia and Madagascar still have today. Paleogeographic timeline A simplified paleogeographic timeline of South America: * 66 Ma – ...
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Magallanes Basin
The Magallanes Basin or Austral Basin is a major sedimentary basin in southern Patagonia. The basin covers a surface of about and has a NNW-SSE oriented shape. The basin is bounded to the west by the Andes mountains and is separated from the Malvinas Basin to the east by the Río Chico-Dungeness High. The basin evolved from being an extensional back-arc basin in the Mesozoic to being a compressional foreland basin in the Cenozoic. Rocks within the basin are Jurassic in age and include the Cerro Toro Formation. Three ages of the SALMA classification are defined in the basin; the Early Miocene Santacrucian from the Santa Cruz Formation and Friasian from the Río Frías Formation and the Pleistocene Ensenadan from the La Ensenada Formation. The Magallanes Basin contains most of Chile's coal reserves dwarfing those found in the Arauco Basin or around Valdivia (e.g. Catamutún, Mulpún). Its coals are lignitic to sub-bituminous. Stratigraphy Aysén Basin The northwest ...
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Castilletes Formation
The Castilletes Formation (, N1c) is a fossiliferous geological formation of the Cocinetas Basin in the northernmost department of La Guajira, Colombia. The formation consists of fossiliferous mudstones, siltstones and medium-grained to conglomeratic fossiliferous lithic to quartzitic sandstones. The Castilletes Formation dates to the Neogene period; Burdigalian to Langhian stages, Colloncuran and Friasian in the SALMA classification, and has a maximum thickness of . Etymology The formation was defined by Rollins in 1965 and named after the village of Castilletes.Moreno et al., 2015, p.27 Description Lithologies The Castilletes Formation consists of fossiliferous mudstones, siltstones and medium-grained to conglomeratic fossiliferous lithic to quartzitic sandstones.Moreno et al., 2015, pp.27-32 Stratigraphy and depositional environment The Castilletes Formation overlies the Jimol Formation and is overlain by the Ware Formation. The age has been estimated to be Middl ...
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Borhyaena
''Borhyaena'' is an extinct genus of South American metatherian, living between 17.5 and 15.5 million years ago in Patagonia, Argentina ( Santa Cruz and Sarmiento Formations) and Chile ( Río Frias Formation).''Borhyaena''
at .org


Description

''Borhyaena'' was a predator and had a large head and a long, powerful neck similar to living . Its legs were , albeit less specialized than those of

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Astrapotherium
''Astrapotherium'' ("lightning beast") is an extinct genus of large Astrapotheria, astrapotherian ungulate native to South America during the early-middle Miocene. It is the best known member of the group. The type species. ''A. magnus'' have been found in the Santa Cruz Formation in Argentina. Other fossils have been found in the Deseado Formation, Deseado, Sarmiento Formation, Sarmiento, and Aisol Formations of Argentina and Chile (Cura-Mallín Group).''Astrapotherium''
at Fossilworks.org


Description

''Astrapotherium'' had an elongated body, with a total length around , a weigh ...
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Santacrucian
The Santacrucian age is a period of geologic time (17.5 – 16.3 Mya (unit), Ma) within the Early Miocene epoch of the Neogene, used more specifically with South American land mammal age, SALMA classification in South America. It follows the Colhuehuapian and precedes the Friasian age. Etymology The age is named after the Santa Cruz Formation in the Magallanes Basin, Austral/Magallanes Basin of southern Patagonia, Argentina and Chile. Formations Fossils References Bibliography

;Santa Cruz Formation * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ;Aisol Formation * * ;Cantaure Formation * ;Castillo Formation * * * * * ;Cerro Boleadores Formation * ;Chaguaramas Formation * ;Chilcatay Formation * * * * ;Cura-Mallín Group * * * ;Gran Bajo del Gualicho Formation * ;Jimol Formation * * * * * * * * ;Mariño Formation * * * * * ;Pinturas Formation * * ;Río Yuca Formation * {{SALMA Santacrucian, Miocene South America ...
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Colloncuran
The Colloncuran () age is a period of geologic time (15.5–13.8 Ma) within the Middle Miocene epoch of the Neogene, used more specifically within the SALMA classification in South America. It follows the Friasian and precedes the Laventan age. Etymology The age is named after the Collón Curá Formation in the Cañadón Asfalto and Neuquén Basins of northern Patagonia, Argentina Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic, is a country in the southern half of South America. It covers an area of , making it the List of South American countries by area, second-largest country in South America after Brazil, the fourt .... Formations Fossils References Bibliography ;Collón Curá Formation * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ;Castilletes Formation * * * * * * * * ;Cura-Mallín Group * * * ;Gran Bajo del Gualicho Formation * ;Nazareno Formation * * * * ;Pebas Formation * * ;Pisco Form ...
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Cura-Mallín Group
Cura-Mallín Group () is a heterogeneous group of volcano-sedimentary formations of Oligocene-Miocene age, Colhuehuapian to Laventan in the SALMA classification, in south-central Chile and nearby parts of Argentina.Pedroza et al., 2017 The sediments belonging to the group were deposited in a lacustrine environment and alongside rivers in an intra-arc basin.Suárez & Emparan, 1995 Southeast of Laguna del Laja Cura-Mallín Group has a thickness of more than . The sediments making up the group deposited in an interval between 22 and 8 million years ago. The outcrops of Cura-Mallín Group are found along a north–south elongate area. The group is considered an equivalent of Abanico Formation, either as a southern extension or as a lateral equivalent of that formation.Flynn et al., 2008 Stratigraphy and members Various subdivision schemes have been proposed for the Cura-Mallín unit since the 1980s. In 1983, Niemeyer and Muñoz identified two members; the Río Queuco Member, ov ...
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Colorado Basin, Argentina
The Colorado Basin () is a sedimentary basin located in northeastern Patagonia. The basin stretches across an area of approximately , of which onshore in the southern Buenos Aires Province and the easternmost Río Negro Province extending offshore in the South Atlantic Ocean. The basin comprises a sedimentary succession dating from the Permian (pre-rift stage) and Early Cretaceous (rift stage) to the Quaternary, representing the passive margin tectonic phase of the basin history. The Mesozoic rifting in the basin resulted from the break-up of Pangea and the formation of the South Atlantic. Long hiatuses exist in the succession. The basin is of paleontological significance for hosting fossiliferous stratigraphic units dating to the Late Miocene. The Arroyo Chasicó Formation defines the Chasicoan South American land mammal age and contains a rich mammal and other vertebrate fauna. The contemporaneous Cerro Azul Formation has provided fossil rodents, armadillos and opossums. The ...
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Cocinetas Basin
The Cocinetas Basin () is a small sedimentary basin of approximately in northeasternmost Colombia. The wikt:onshore, onshore pull-apart basin is located in the departments of Colombia, department of La Guajira Department, La Guajira at the border with Zulia, Venezuela. The basin is bound by three sets of hills; the Serranía de Jarara, Serranía Macuira and Serranía Cocinas, with the eastern boundary formed by the Gulf of Venezuela, part of the Caribbean Sea. The basin was formed during the Paleogene as a result of the eastward movement of the Caribbean Plate along the northern edge of the South American Plate, leading to the deposition of a Eocene, Middle Eocene to Pleistocene, Middle Pleistocene sedimentary sequence of conglomerate (geology), conglomerates, sandstones, siltstones, limestones and mudstones. In the Cocinetas Basin, several list of fossiliferous stratigraphic units of Colombia, fossiliferous stratigraphic units have been registered, providing an abundance of mari ...
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Pebas Formation
The Pebas Formation is a stratigraphic unit#Lithostratigraphic units, lithostratigraphic unit of Miocene age, found in western Amazon rainforest, Amazonia. The geological formation, formation extends over , including parts of Brazil, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia.Wesselingh et al., 2006 It is interpreted as representing the deposits of a lake ("Lake Pebas") or series of lakes, formed within the Andean foreland basins, foreland basin of the Andes mountain belt. It is known for its abundant fossil ostracods and molluscs and an unusually diverse group of crocodylians.Sala Gismondi et al., 2006 Fossil content Fish Insects Mammals Reptiles Correlations Laventan Huayquerian References Bibliography * * * Further reading

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