38 research outputs found

    A Late Cretaceous mammal from Brazil and the first radioisotopic age for the Bauru Group

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    In the last three decades, records of tribosphenidan mammals from India, continental Africa, Madagascar and South America have challenged the notion of a strictly Laurasian distribution of the group during the Cretaceous. Here, we describe a lower premolar from the Late Cretaceous Adamantina Formation, São Paulo State, Brazil. It differs from all known fossil mammals, except for a putative eutherian from the same geologic unity and Deccanolestes hislopi, from the Maastrichtian of India. The incompleteness of the material precludes narrowing down its taxonomic attribution further than Tribosphenida, but it is larger than most coeval mammals and shows a thin layer of parallel crystallite enamel. The new taxon helps filling two major gaps in the fossil record: the paucity of Mesozoic mammals in more northern parts of South America and of tribosphenidans in the Cretaceous of that continent. In addition, high-precision U-Pb geochronology provided a post-Turonian maximal age (≤87.8 Ma) for the type stratum, which is overlain by the dinosaur-bearing Marília Formation, constraining the age of the Adamantina Formation at the site to late Coniacian–late Maastrichtian. This represents the first radioisotopic age for the Bauru Group, a key stratigraphic unit for the study of Cretaceous tetrapods in Gondwana.Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Muse

    A Bacia Bauru no Estado de São Paulo e seus tetrápodes

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    The Bauru Basin bears one of the best sampled tetrapod paleofaunas of Brazil, with about 70% of this diversity collected from its deposits in São Paulo. Its fossils are known since the beginning of the 20th century, coming from all stratigraphic units of the Basin cropping-out in the state, i.e., Santo Anastácio, Araçatuba, Adamantina (alternatively divided into Vale do Rio do Peixe, Presidente Prudente, and São José do Rio Preto formations), and Marília formations. Identified taxa include rare anurans, mammals, and squamates, an important set of testudines, theropods (including birds), and sauropods, in addition to one of the most diverse crocodyliform faunas known worldwide. This congregates more than fifty unique taxonomic entities, including 42 formally described species. Based on biostratigraphic correlations (including tetrapods), on few absolute ages, and other sources of evidence, the Bauru Basin deposits in São Paulo seem to be chronologically restricted to the Late Cretaceous, but further investigation is much needed. Finally, the history of research with such fossils highlights the importance of public funding for research and decentralization of university education for the advancement of science.A Bacia Bauru congrega um dos mais ricos conjuntos de somatofósseis de tetrápodes do território brasileiro, sendo cerca de 70% dessa paleodiversidade procedente de seus depósitos em São Paulo. Com registros conhecidos desde o início do século XX, tais fósseis foram coletados em todas as unidades estratigráficas da Bacia que afloram no estado, i.e., formações Santo Anastácio, Araçatuba, Adamantina (alternativamente dividida em formações Vale do Rio do Peixe, Presidente Prudente e São José do Rio Preto) e Marília. Os grupos registrados incluem raros anuros, mamíferos e escamados, um importante conjunto de testudinos, dinossauros terópodes (incluindo aves) e saurópodes, além de uma das mais diversas faunas de crocodiliformes conhecidas para o registro fóssil global. Tal conjunto congrega mais de cinquenta entidades taxonômicas distintas, incluindo 42 espécies formalmente descritas. A partir de dados de cunho bioestratigráfico, incluindo correlação com base em tetrápodes, e em poucas datações absolutas, a totalidade dos depósitos da Bacia Bauru em São Paulo parece estar cronologicamente restrita ao Neocretáceo, mas um maior detalhamento de tais inferências se faz extremamente necessário. Por fim, o histórico das pesquisas com tais fósseis de tetrápodes evidencia a importância da interiorização do ensino universitário e do financiamento público à pesquisa para o desenvolvimento das ciências

    The Bauru Basin in São Paulo and its tetrapods

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    Funding Information: The authors thank the editors of Derbyana, especially its Editor-in-Chief Silvio T. Hiruma, for the invitation to participate in this volume dedicated to “Advances in Paleontology”. This contribution results from FAPESP grant 2020/07997-4, to which most of the authors are affiliated. We also thank the Derbyana ad-hoc reviewers, Drs. Agustin Martinelli and Fabiano Iori, for their helpful comments to the manuscript. FIGURE 6 – Cumulative chronological distribution of the tetrapod fossil record in the Bauru Basin of São Paulo (1913-2022) compared to science and technology funding metrics and events: A – For all tetrapods; grey bars indicate total records of tables 1-5; green line indicates taxonomic richness (grey lines in Tables 1-5); pink line indicates FAPESP budget in billions of reais between 1976 and 2021 (FAPESP 2022); blue line indicates CNPq, CAPES, and FINEP budget in millions of reais between 1996 and 2018 (ESCOBAR 2019). Events indicated by arrows correspond, in chronological sequence, to the foundations of USP, “Instituto Geográfico e Geológico”, FAPESP, Unicamp, UNESP, “Instituto Geológico”, and Monte Alto Museum of Paleontology, the implementations of the Qualis list, the Lattes curriculum, the CAPES Portal de Periódicos, and the CNPq “grant”, the foundation of the Marília Museum of Paleontology, the release of the first MCT/CNPq public call for “Strengthening National Paleontology”, and the foundation of “Pedro Candolo” Museum of Paleontology. B – Separately for each recorded tetrapod group, coloured lines indicate total of records in tables 1-5 of Anura = light blue, Crocodyliformes = red, Mammalia = purple, Sauropoda = green, Squamata = yellow, Testudines = orange, and Theropoda = dark blue. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers.The Bauru Basin bears one of the best sampled tetrapod paleofaunas of Brazil, with about 70% of this diversity collected from its deposits in São Paulo. Its fossils are known since the beginning of the 20th century, coming from all stratigraphic units of the Basin cropping-out in the state, i.e., Santo Anastácio, Araçatuba, Adamantina (alternatively divided into Vale do Rio do Peixe, Presidente Prudente, and São José do Rio Preto formations), and Marília formations. Identified taxa include rare anurans, mammals, and squamates, an important set of testudines, theropods (including birds), and sauropods, in addition to one of the most diverse crocodyliform faunas known worldwide. This congregates more than fifty unique taxonomic entities, including 42 formally described species. Based on biostratigraphic correlations (including tetrapods), on few absolute ages, and other sources of evidence, the Bauru Basin deposits in São Paulo seem to be chronologically restricted to the Late Cretaceous, but further investigation is much needed. Finally, the history of research with such fossils highlights the importance of public funding for research and decentralization of university education for the advancement of science.publishersversionpublishe

    Análise de metais pesados no Sistema Aquífero Bauru em Mato Grosso do Sul

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    RESUMO Os metais pesados são contaminantes de grande preocupação ao atingirem os aquíferos, devido à sua toxicidade em determinadas concentrações e a sua difícil remediação. Este estudo visou analisar as concentrações de cobre (Cu), cromo (Cr), ferro (Fe), manganês (Mn) e zinco (Zn) presentes no Sistema Aquífero Bauru (SAB), no Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul, no período de 2009 a 2013. Os teores de Cu, Cr e Zn mantiveram-se dentro dos limites de potabilidade estabelecidos na legislação brasileira, ao contrário do Mn e do Fe. Há, na área de afloramento do Aquífero. Atividades econômicas podem influenciar na qualidade das águas subterrâneas, como, por exemplo, o uso da vinhaça na fertirrigação na cultura de cana-de-açúcar e o curtimento mineral do couro. Este estudo teve o objetivo de reforçar a importância da consolidação de uma rede de monitoramento da qualidade das águas subterrâneas, a fim de estabelecer um zoneamento de vulnerabilidade à poluição por meio de medidas de controle, prevenção e remediação

    The last dinosaurs of Brazil: The Bauru Group and its implications for the end-Cretaceous mass extinction

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    ABSTRACT The non-avian dinosaurs died out at the end of the Cretaceous, ~66 million years ago, after an asteroid impact. The prevailing hypothesis is that the effects of the impact suddenly killed the dinosaurs, but the poor fossil record of latest Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) dinosaurs from outside Laurasia (and even more particularly, North America) makes it difficult to test specific extinction scenarios. Over the past few decades, a wealth of new discoveries from the Bauru Group of Brazil has revealed a unique window into the evolution of terminal Cretaceous dinosaurs from the southern continents. We review this record and demonstrate that there was a diversity of dinosaurs, of varying body sizes, diets, and ecological roles, that survived to the very end of the Cretaceous (Maastrichtian: 72-66 million years ago) in Brazil, including a core fauna of titanosaurian sauropods and abelisaurid and carcharodontosaurid theropods, along with a variety of small-to-mid-sized theropods. We argue that this pattern best fits the hypothesis that southern dinosaurs, like their northern counterparts, were still diversifying and occupying prominent roles in their ecosystems before the asteroid suddenly caused their extinction. However, this hypothesis remains to be tested with more refined paleontological and geochronological data, and we give suggestions for future work

    Evolução dos tratos de sistemas continentais neocretáceos da porção sudeste da plataforma sul-americana

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