Cenozoic ectothermic continental tetrapods (amphibians and reptiles) have not been documented previously from Antarctica, in contrast to all other continents. Here we report a fossil ilium and an ornamented skull bone that can be attributed to the Recent, South American, anuran family Calyptocephalellidae or helmeted frogs, representing the first modern amphibian found in Antarctica. The two bone fragments were recovered in Eocene, approximately 40 million years old, sediments on Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. The record of hyperossified calyptocephalellid frogs outside South America supports Gondwanan cosmopolitanism of the anuran clade Australobatrachia. Our results demonstrate that Eocene freshwater ecosystems in Antarctica provide...
The fossil record of anurans in South America is scarse, especially for Mesozoic-aged beds. The aim ...
Cockburn Island is one of the most historically significant places on the Antarctic continent. The i...
As Earth warms, temperate and subpolar marine species will increasingly shift their geographic range...
Cenozoic ectothermic continental tetrapods (amphibians and reptiles) have not been documented previo...
Mörs, Thomas, Reguero, Marcelo, Vasilyan, Davit (2020): First fossil frog from Antarctica: implicati...
Figure 6. Reconstruction of an Eocene pond in the Nothofagus forest of the Antarctic Peninsula with ...
Eocene caldera-lake deposits from Rio Pichileufu have yielded anuran remains in association with a t...
Figure 2. Ilium (NRM-PZ B282) of Calyptocephalella sp. from Seymour Island, Antarctica. Ilium in lat...
Summary The earliest known tetrapods in Antarctica occur in fluvial deposits just above the Permian-...
New fossil mammals found at the base of Acantilados II Allomember of the La Meseta Formation, from t...
Frogs (Anura) are nowadays common and abundant constituents of terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems...
Abstract: The fossil record of continental vertebrates from Antarctica is practically nonexistent, h...
The fossil record of terrestrial mammals in Antarctica is temporally and geographically constrained ...
The Eocene-Oligocene Southern Ocean is thought to have played a major role in cetacean evolution. Ye...
Abstract: Gondwanatherians are an enigmatic group of extinct non-therian mammals apparently restrict...
The fossil record of anurans in South America is scarse, especially for Mesozoic-aged beds. The aim ...
Cockburn Island is one of the most historically significant places on the Antarctic continent. The i...
As Earth warms, temperate and subpolar marine species will increasingly shift their geographic range...
Cenozoic ectothermic continental tetrapods (amphibians and reptiles) have not been documented previo...
Mörs, Thomas, Reguero, Marcelo, Vasilyan, Davit (2020): First fossil frog from Antarctica: implicati...
Figure 6. Reconstruction of an Eocene pond in the Nothofagus forest of the Antarctic Peninsula with ...
Eocene caldera-lake deposits from Rio Pichileufu have yielded anuran remains in association with a t...
Figure 2. Ilium (NRM-PZ B282) of Calyptocephalella sp. from Seymour Island, Antarctica. Ilium in lat...
Summary The earliest known tetrapods in Antarctica occur in fluvial deposits just above the Permian-...
New fossil mammals found at the base of Acantilados II Allomember of the La Meseta Formation, from t...
Frogs (Anura) are nowadays common and abundant constituents of terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems...
Abstract: The fossil record of continental vertebrates from Antarctica is practically nonexistent, h...
The fossil record of terrestrial mammals in Antarctica is temporally and geographically constrained ...
The Eocene-Oligocene Southern Ocean is thought to have played a major role in cetacean evolution. Ye...
Abstract: Gondwanatherians are an enigmatic group of extinct non-therian mammals apparently restrict...
The fossil record of anurans in South America is scarse, especially for Mesozoic-aged beds. The aim ...
Cockburn Island is one of the most historically significant places on the Antarctic continent. The i...
As Earth warms, temperate and subpolar marine species will increasingly shift their geographic range...