Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/2621
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Collareta, Alberto
Tejada Medina, Luz Marina
Chacaltana Budiel, César Augusto
Landini, Walter
Altamirano Sierra, Ali J.
Urbina Schmitt, Mario
Bianucci, Giovanni
Perú
Eoceno medio
2020-05-29T20:32:55Z
2020-05-29T20:32:55Z
2020-03
Collareta, A., Tejada, L., Chacaltana, C., Landini, W., Altamirano, A., Urbina, M. & Bianucci, G. (2020). A rhinopristiform sawfish (genus Pristis) from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of southern Peru and its regional implications. Carnets de Geologie, 20(5): 91-105. https://doi.org/10.4267/2042/70759
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12544/2621
Modern sawfishes (Rhinopristiformes: Pristidae) are circumglobally distributed in warm waters and are common in proximal marine and even freshwater habitats. The fossil record of modern pristid genera (i.e., Pristis and Anoxypristis) dates back to the early Eocene and is mostly represented by isolated rostral spines and oral teeth, with phosphatised rostra representing exceptional occurrences. Here, we report on a partial pristid rostrum, exhibiting several articulated rostral spines, from middle Eocene strata of the Paracas Formation (Yumaque Member) exposed in the southern Peruvian East Pisco Basin. This finely preserved specimen shows anatomical structures that are unlikely to leave a fossil record, e.g., the paracentral grooves that extend along the ventral surface of the rostrum. Based on the morphology of the rostral spines, this fossil sawfish is here identified as belonging to Pristis. To our knowledge, this discovery represents the geologically oldest known occurrence of Pristidae from the Pacific Coast of South America. Although the fossil record of pristids from the East Pisco Basin spans from the middle Eocene to the late Miocene, sawfishes are no longer present in the modern cool, upwelling-influenced coastal waters of southern Peru. Given the ecological preferences of the extant members of Pristis, the occurrence of this genus in the Paracas deposits suggests that middle Eocene nearshore waters in southern Peru were warmer than today. The eventual disappearance of pristids from the coastal waters off southern Peru might be interpreted as reflecting the late Cenozoic trend of strengthening of the Humboldt Current.
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eng
Carnets de Geologie
urn:issn:1634-0744
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.en
Instituto Geológico, Minero y Metalúrgico – INGEMMET
Repositorio Institucional INGEMMET
East Pisco Basin
Elasmobranchii
Exceptional preservation
Humboldt Current System
Palaeobiogeography
Palaeoclimatology
Palaeoenvironments
Paracas Formation
A rhinopristiform sawfish (Genus pristis) from the middle eocene (lutetian) of southern Peru and its regional implications
Un poisson-scie rhinopristiforme (genre Pristis) de l'Éocène moyen (Lutétien) du Pérou méridional et ses implications régionales
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Paleontología
FR
https://doi.org/10.4267/2042/70759
Carnets de Geologie
Peer reviewed
Carnets de Geologie, volumen 20, número 5, marzo 2020, páginas 91-105

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