Constraining the Permian/Triassic boundary in continental environments: stratigraphic and paleontological record from the Southern-Eastern Pyrenees (NE Iberian Peninsula).
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
The continental Permian–Triassic transition in southern Europe presents little paleontological evidence of the
Permian mass extinction and the subsequent faunal recovery during the early stages of the Triassic. New stratigraphic,
sedimentological and paleontological analyses from Middle–Upper Permian to Lower–Middle Triassic
deposits of the Catalan Pyrenees (NE Iberian Peninsula) allowto better constrain the Permian–Triassic succession
in theWestern Tethys basins, and provide new (bio-) chronologic data. For the first time, a large vertebra attributed
to a caseid synapsid fromthe ?Middle Permian is reported fromthe Iberian Peninsula—one of the fewreported
from western Europe. Osteological and ichnological records from the Triassic Buntsandstein facies reveal a
great tetrapod ichnodiversity, dominated by small to medium archosauromorphs and lepidosauromorphs
(Rhynchosauroides cf. schochardti, R. isp. 1 and 2, Prorotodactylus–Rotodactylus), an undetermined Morphotype
A and to a lesser degree large archosaurians (chirotheriids), overall suggesting a late Early Triassic–early Middle
Triassic age. This is in agreement with recent palynological analyses in the Buntsandstein basal beds that identify
different lycopod spores and other bisaccate and taeniate pollen types of late Olenekian age (Early Triassic). The
Permian caseid vertebra was found in a playa-lake setting with a low influence of fluvial water channels and related
to the distal parts of alluvial fans. In contrast, the Triassic Buntsandstein facies correspond to complex alluvial
fan systems, dominated by high-energy channels and crevasse splay deposits, hence a faunal and environmental
turnover is observed. The Pyrenean biostratigraphical data showsimilaritieswith those of the nearbyWestern Tethys
basins, and can be tentatively correlatedwith North African and European basins. The Triassic Pyrenean fossil
remains might rank among the oldest continental records of the Western Tethys, providing newkeys to decipher
the Triassic faunal biogeography and recovery.
Permian mass extinction and the subsequent faunal recovery during the early stages of the Triassic. New stratigraphic,
sedimentological and paleontological analyses from Middle–Upper Permian to Lower–Middle Triassic
deposits of the Catalan Pyrenees (NE Iberian Peninsula) allowto better constrain the Permian–Triassic succession
in theWestern Tethys basins, and provide new (bio-) chronologic data. For the first time, a large vertebra attributed
to a caseid synapsid fromthe ?Middle Permian is reported fromthe Iberian Peninsula—one of the fewreported
from western Europe. Osteological and ichnological records from the Triassic Buntsandstein facies reveal a
great tetrapod ichnodiversity, dominated by small to medium archosauromorphs and lepidosauromorphs
(Rhynchosauroides cf. schochardti, R. isp. 1 and 2, Prorotodactylus–Rotodactylus), an undetermined Morphotype
A and to a lesser degree large archosaurians (chirotheriids), overall suggesting a late Early Triassic–early Middle
Triassic age. This is in agreement with recent palynological analyses in the Buntsandstein basal beds that identify
different lycopod spores and other bisaccate and taeniate pollen types of late Olenekian age (Early Triassic). The
Permian caseid vertebra was found in a playa-lake setting with a low influence of fluvial water channels and related
to the distal parts of alluvial fans. In contrast, the Triassic Buntsandstein facies correspond to complex alluvial
fan systems, dominated by high-energy channels and crevasse splay deposits, hence a faunal and environmental
turnover is observed. The Pyrenean biostratigraphical data showsimilaritieswith those of the nearbyWestern Tethys
basins, and can be tentatively correlatedwith North African and European basins. The Triassic Pyrenean fossil
remains might rank among the oldest continental records of the Western Tethys, providing newkeys to decipher
the Triassic faunal biogeography and recovery.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Permian
Triassic
Vertebrates
Palynology
Western Tethys
Pyrenees
Elenco autori:
Mujal, E.; Gretter, Nicola; Ronchi, LUIGI AUSONIO; López Gómez, J.; Falconnet, J.; Diez, J. B.; De la Horra, R.; Bolet, A.; Oms, O.; Arche, A.; Barrenechea, J. F.; Steyer, J. S.; Fortuny, J.
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