Bioerosion structures in a Late Cretaceous mosasaur from Antarctica

Bioerosive structures in the cortical region of a vertebra from a mosasaur fall in the López de Bertodano Formation (Upper Maastrichtian) in Seymour Island (Isla Marambio), Antarctica, are reported. The traces studied are similar but not coincident with the described microborings in other fossil bon...

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Veröffentlicht in:Facies 2019, Vol.65 (1), p.1-5, Article 5
Hauptverfasser: Talevi, Marianella, Brezina, Soledad
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description Bioerosive structures in the cortical region of a vertebra from a mosasaur fall in the López de Bertodano Formation (Upper Maastrichtian) in Seymour Island (Isla Marambio), Antarctica, are reported. The traces studied are similar but not coincident with the described microborings in other fossil bone remains. The morphology and extension of these bioerosive structures are considered as the result of the activity of endolithic organisms on the original vascular channels of the bone. They are approximately straight, anastomosed, and commonly filled with an opaque mineral and framboidal pyrite. As most of the bone structure is well preserved, only the small portion of the cortical region was exposed to the microorganisms’ activity. This would mean that the mosasaur individual died well earlier than the burial event. This is their first report of this type of bioerosive structures in a mosasaur fall.
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subjects Bioerosion
Bioerosion: An interdisciplinary approach
Biogeosciences
Bones
Cretaceous
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Ecology
Fossils
Geochemistry
Microorganisms
Morphology
Original Article
Paleontology
Pyrite
Sedimentology
Structures
title Bioerosion structures in a Late Cretaceous mosasaur from Antarctica
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