2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2011.01685.x
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Marine vertebrate assemblages in the southwest Atlantic during the Miocene

Abstract: Two biogeographical units are generally recognized in the present shelf area of Argentina: the Magellanian and Argentinian Provinces. The two provinces differ in their fossil record. The evolution of these provinces has been characterized by migrations, extinctions, pseudoextinctions and, perhaps, even speciation events. Marine vertebrate assemblages with some similarities to the Argentinian fauna were already present in the Miocene, whereas no associations similar to those of the Magellanian fauna have been f… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…; Cione et al . ; Compagnucci ), especially Liolaemus (Albino , ). The Pliocene was a warm period characterized by multiple large glaciations (~3.5 Ma; Rabassa et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; Cione et al . ; Compagnucci ), especially Liolaemus (Albino , ). The Pliocene was a warm period characterized by multiple large glaciations (~3.5 Ma; Rabassa et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, use of the early Miocene as a single time 'bin' masks both the general global rarity of Cetacea of Aquitanian age , and problems of dating. Of the two most widely cited early Miocene assemblages, the Patagonian fauna from Argentina is Burdigalian (Cione et al, 2011). The Belluno fauna (Libano Sandstone, Italy) has not been directly dated by pelagic microfossils, but was considered by Bianucci and Landini (2002:22), who noted that it "may be upper Aquitanian or/and lower Burdigalian in age .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The next three papers describe vertebrate palaeontological evidence on fishes and penguins (Cione et al ., 2011), squamatan reptiles (Albino, 2011), and terrestrial birds (Tambussi, 2011). All three papers focus on what the respective fossil assemblages can tell us about palaeoclimate: Cione et al . (2011) analyze three rich marine fossil assemblages that were formed during two marine transgressions that flooded Patagonia in the Early and Middle to Late Miocene (Malumián & Náñez, 2011).…”
Section: Palynology and Palaeontologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2011) analyze three rich marine fossil assemblages that were formed during two marine transgressions that flooded Patagonia in the Early and Middle to Late Miocene (Malumián & Náñez, 2011). Cione et al . (2011) note the absence in the fossil record of a Miocene temperate fossil assemblage similar to that of the extant Magellanic fauna of the south‐west Atlantic Ocean and infer from this absence that the cold temperate fauna of that time likely exhibited a more southern distribution than at present (Cione et al ., 2011).…”
Section: Palynology and Palaeontologymentioning
confidence: 99%