Reference
Martin, James E. and Crame, J. AlistairPaleobiological significance of high-latitude Late Cretaceous vertebrate fossils from the James Ross Basin, Antarctica; Geological Society, London, Special Publications 2006, 258, pp.109-124
Paleobiological significance of high-latitude Late Cretaceous vertebrate fossils from the James Ross Basin, Antarctica
Principal Author
James E. Martin
Other Authors
J. Alistair Crame
Header
Academic paper
Journal
Geological Society, London, Special Publications 2006
Volume
258
Pages
109-124
Abstract
A diverse marine assemblage of vertebrate fossils has been collected in recent years under the auspices of the BritishAntarctic Survey from Seymour,James Ross andVega islands east of the Antarctic Peninsula. The specimens were derived from the Late Campanian Santa Marta Formation, Early Maastrichtian Snow Hill Island Formation and the Early-Late Maastrichtian L6pez de Bertodano Formation. Sharks, teleosts, plesiosaurs and mosasaurs are represented, but birds and sea turtles are absent from the BAS collections; neornithine birds have been previously reported from the Late Cretaceous deposits of Antarctica. Shark teeth are relatively abundant, but teleosts are seemingly under-represented. Plesiosaurs (Elasmosauridae) are more abundant and complete than mosasaurs, and juveniles of both marine reptile groups are relatively common. The marine lizards, mosasaurs, are taxonomically diverse as elsewhere in the world, but with relatively few individuals compared to the plesiosaurs, which are taxonomically limited. A converse relationship normally occurs at other lower latitude Late Cretaceous localities. Some of these abundances and appearances may be due to collection bias, particularly due to difficult collecting conditions and weathering, but certain distributions may be the result of high latitudes.
Language
English