New discoveries from a recently described nearshore marine fauna from northwestern Venezuela of presumed early Miocene age are reported. The fossils consist of a cranial portion of a crocodile assigned to the Tbmistominae, confirming the presence of this group in South America, and the scapula of a cetacean with affinities to the Platanistoidea. The stratigraphic section of the fossil locality ‘Cerro La Cruz’ consists of ca. 87 m of clayey marls interbedded with thin hardground units, with the upper strata being gypsiferous. The fossils were found in sandstones stratigraphically above this sequence.Museo de La Plat
The extensive Venezuelan coastline is very important for understanding the evolution of the Caribbea...
The study of trace fossils is of paramount importance to recognize different depositional environmen...
During the last years the knowledge about derived eusuchian crocodiles has been increased. Anatomica...
A diverse near-shore marine fauna existed during the early Miocene in what is today an arid inland r...
A wide variety of aquatic vertebrates from fluvio-lacustrine facies of northern South America (Colom...
There are significant geographic gaps in our knowledge of marine mammal evolution because most fossi...
The richest and more explored regions concerning Miocene crocodylians in South America are the basin...
<p>One-hundred and ninety-two fossil marine vertebrate specimens, preserved as bone elements croppin...
Fossil cetaceans are often found in Miocene marine outcrops across the globe. However, because this ...
The top of the Querales Formation is well exposed at the Quebrada Corralito section, 17 m thick, in ...
The Urumaco stratigraphic sequence, western Venezuela, preserves a variety of paleoenvironments that...
International audienceThe Pliocene-Pleistocene transition in the Neotropics is poorly understood des...
<p>Hundreds of fossil marine vertebrates cropping out at Cerro Colorado (Pisco Basin, Peru) are iden...
The Urumaco stratigraphic sequence, western Venezuela, preserves a variety of paleoenvironments that...
Two new fossil vertebrate localities are described from the Santa Cruz Formation (late early - early...
The extensive Venezuelan coastline is very important for understanding the evolution of the Caribbea...
The study of trace fossils is of paramount importance to recognize different depositional environmen...
During the last years the knowledge about derived eusuchian crocodiles has been increased. Anatomica...
A diverse near-shore marine fauna existed during the early Miocene in what is today an arid inland r...
A wide variety of aquatic vertebrates from fluvio-lacustrine facies of northern South America (Colom...
There are significant geographic gaps in our knowledge of marine mammal evolution because most fossi...
The richest and more explored regions concerning Miocene crocodylians in South America are the basin...
<p>One-hundred and ninety-two fossil marine vertebrate specimens, preserved as bone elements croppin...
Fossil cetaceans are often found in Miocene marine outcrops across the globe. However, because this ...
The top of the Querales Formation is well exposed at the Quebrada Corralito section, 17 m thick, in ...
The Urumaco stratigraphic sequence, western Venezuela, preserves a variety of paleoenvironments that...
International audienceThe Pliocene-Pleistocene transition in the Neotropics is poorly understood des...
<p>Hundreds of fossil marine vertebrates cropping out at Cerro Colorado (Pisco Basin, Peru) are iden...
The Urumaco stratigraphic sequence, western Venezuela, preserves a variety of paleoenvironments that...
Two new fossil vertebrate localities are described from the Santa Cruz Formation (late early - early...
The extensive Venezuelan coastline is very important for understanding the evolution of the Caribbea...
The study of trace fossils is of paramount importance to recognize different depositional environmen...
During the last years the knowledge about derived eusuchian crocodiles has been increased. Anatomica...