Search results for "Mosasaur"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Turonian marine amniotes from the Opole area in southwest Poland

2018

A few isolated plesiosaurian and mosasauroid squamate teeth were collected from the Opole area in southwest Poland during the late nineteenth century. Calcareous nannofossil analysis of their associated rock matrix indicates an early Turonian age (nannofossil zone UC7; Mytiloides ex gr. labiatus and Inoceramus apicalis inoceramid zones), which is significant because this constitutes a globally enigmatic interval of marine amniote evolution. The Opole plesiosaurian teeth are attributable to polycotylids, but an indeterminate mesopodial was also recovered. They are similar to specimens from the Cenomanian-Turonian in the Saxonian Cretaceous Basin of Germany and the Chalk succession of England…

010506 paleontologybiologyplesiosauriaCentral EuropePaleontologycomparisonsLate Mesozoic010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesCretaceousMosasauroideaPlesiosauriaPaleontologyGeographyComparisonsTaxonomy (biology)CalcareousPlesiosauriaMosasauroideaTaxonomy0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCretaceous Research
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Geological Setting and Paleoecology of the Upper Cretaceous Bench 19 Marine Vertebrate Bonebed at Bentiaba, Angola

2014

AbstractThe Bench 19 Bonebed at Bentiaba, Angola, is a unique concentration of marine vertebrates preserving six species of mosasaurs in sediments best correlated by magnetostratigraphy to chron C32n.1n between 71.4 and 71.64 Ma. The bonebed formed at a paleolatitude near 24°S, with an Atlantic width at that latitude approximating 2700 km, roughly half that of the current width. The locality lies on an uncharacteristically narrow continental shelf near transform faults that controlled the coastal outline of Africa in the formation of the South Atlantic Ocean. Biostratigraphic change through the Bentiaba section indicates that the accumulation occurred in an ecological time dimension within …

010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyContinental shelfFaunaGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classificationMosasaur01 natural sciencesCretaceous/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterPaleontologyMarine vertebratePrognathodonPaleoecology14. Life underwaterSDG 14 - Life Below WaterGeologyMagnetostratigraphy0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNetherlands Journal of Geosciences = Geologie en Mijnbouw
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Carbon isotope stratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, and 40Ar/39Ar age of the Cretaceous South Atlantic coast, Namibe Basin, Angola

2014

This publication results from Projecto PaleoAngola, an international cooperative research effort among the contributing authors and their institutions, funded by the National Geographic Society, the Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society, Sonangol E.P., Esso Angola, Fundacao Vida of Angola, LS Films, Maersk, Damco, Safmarine, ISEM at SMU, The Royal Dutch Embassy in Luanda, TAP Airlines, Royal Dutch Airlines, The Saurus Institute, and the Perot Museum of Nature and Science. JS was additionally funded by Yale University and the Alfred Kordelin Foundation. We dedicate this contribution to the late Kalunga Lima, our friend and colleague in Projecto PaleoAngola. We thank Margar…

1171 Geosciences010506 paleontologyPaleomagnetismeducationBiostratigraphy010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesWESTERNCretaceous/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterPaleontologyStable carbon isotopesOCEANChemostratigraphySDG 14 - Life Below WaterChemostratigraphyMagnetostratigraphy0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesBasaltCURVEBIOSTRATIGRAPHYMagnetic polarity stratigraphyGEOCHRONOLOGYMOSASAURSGeologyCretaceousBOUNDARY13. Climate actionASTRONOMICAL CALIBRATIONBURIALGeochronologyAfricaAtlanticCenomanianGeologyJournal of African Earth Sciences
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Arctic mosasaurs (Squamata, Mosasauridae) from the Upper Cretaceous of Russia

2020

Abstract From the northern part of Chukotka Region (Russian Far East) and Nether-Polar Urals, one of the oldest and one of the most northerly occurrences of mosasaur remains in the world are recorded. The appearance of mosasaurs at high latitudes could be explained by the expansion of their habitat and an unusual balance of insolation. Polar day conditions could have been useful for marine predators such as mosasaurs because they could have hunted for prey at any time. During the Cretaceous, almost two months of complete darkness can be reconstructed for the territory of present-day Chukotka, and more than one month of twilight. It is highly unlikely that these large-sized animals with a hi…

PaleontologyTwilightGeographySquamataHabitatbiologyArcticPaleontologyFar EastMosasaurbiology.organism_classificationCretaceousPredationCretaceous Research
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