6533b86dfe1ef96bd12ca9e3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evidence of an Early Triassic age (Olenekian) in Argana Basin (High Atlas, Morocco) based on new chirotherioid traces.

Naima BenaouissJean-sébastien SteyerBernard BattailNour-eddine JalilJean BroutinDamien GermainGeorges GandSylvie BourquinSoumaya SebbanRenaud VacantAbdelilah TouraniFatima Khaldoune

subject

010506 paleontologyPermianPaleozoicChirotheriumEarly TriassicArchosauriformesArgana BasinEarly Triassic010502 geochemistry & geophysics[SDV.BID.SPT]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Systematics Phylogenetics and taxonomy01 natural sciencesPaleontologyIchnotaxonPhanerozoicComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciences[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontologybiology[SDV.BID.EVO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]General Engineeringbiology.organism_classificationMoroccoLepidosauriaLepidosauriaChirotherioid footprintsArchosauriformes[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyOlenekianGeology

description

8 pages; International audience; New chirotherioid traces (Synaptichnium, Chirotherium, Brachychirotherium, Isochirotherium), are described in the Argana Basin (High Atlas of Morocco). Seeing that these ichnotaxa are frequent in the Triassic, their occurrence in outcrops formerly mapped as Permian (T2 Member) has required detailed sedimentological and paleontological studies of the fossiliferous site. These studies clearly show that the ichnite-bearing strata belong actually to the T3 Member of the “regional Triassic”, i.e. lower member of the Timezgadiwine Formation, the age of which was, in fact, unknown up to now. The description of these ichnospecies and their statistical comparison with those of other Early and Middle Triassic areas, suggest an Olenekian age for this footprint site, and consequently for the T3. The trackmakers were Archosauriformes, some of which had autopodia less evolved than those of Anisian age. With Lepidosauria, they lived in a floodplain close to alluvial-fans.

10.1016/j.crpv.2010.05.001https://hal.science/hal-00525076