Abstract The Miocene aquatic and terrestrial fossil record from western Amazonia constitute a clear evidence of the palaeoenvironmental diversity that prevailed in the area, prior to the establishment of the Amazon River drainage. During the Miocene, the region was characterized by a freshwater megawetland basin, influenced by episodic shallow-marine incursions. A fossil vertebrate collection from the middle Miocene strata of the Pebas Formation is here studied and described. This historical collection was recovered in 1912 along the banks of the Itaya River (Iquitos, Peru), during a scientific expedition led by two scientists of the University of Zurich, Hans Bluntschli and Bernhard Peyer. Our findings include a total of 34 taxa, including...
Between c. 23 and 8 Ma, western Amazonia was occupied by the vast Pebas long-lived lake/wetland syst...
A small assemblage of 22 otoliths was identified from the historical collection of Bluntschli and Pe...
The Miocene Pebas system was a huge (> 1 million km2) system of long-lived lakes and wetlands that o...
The Miocene aquatic and terrestrial fossil record from western Amazonia constitute a clear evidence ...
New evidence indicates marine influences during the Miocene in the northwestern Amazonia basin. This...
The middle Miocene rocks of the Honda Group (La Victoria and Villavieja formations) in the Tatacoa D...
This PhD study aims to exploit the rich archive provided by the Miocene mollusc fauna of the Pebas F...
A wide variety of aquatic vertebrates from fluvio-lacustrine facies of northern South America (Colom...
In the Miocene (23–5 Ma), a large wetland known as the Pebas System characterized western Amazonia. ...
Among the ichthyofaunal remains collected in the Tertiary deposits of Peruvian Amazonia, elasmobranc...
In northern South America the Cenozoic was a period of intense tectonic and climatic interaction tha...
International audienceThe Middle Miocene has been identified as a time of great diversification in m...
The Middle Miocene has been identified as a time of great diversification in modern lineages now dis...
Between c. 23 and 8 Ma, western Amazonia was occupied by the vast Pebas long-lived lake/wetland syst...
A small assemblage of 22 otoliths was identified from the historical collection of Bluntschli and Pe...
The Miocene Pebas system was a huge (> 1 million km2) system of long-lived lakes and wetlands that o...
The Miocene aquatic and terrestrial fossil record from western Amazonia constitute a clear evidence ...
New evidence indicates marine influences during the Miocene in the northwestern Amazonia basin. This...
The middle Miocene rocks of the Honda Group (La Victoria and Villavieja formations) in the Tatacoa D...
This PhD study aims to exploit the rich archive provided by the Miocene mollusc fauna of the Pebas F...
A wide variety of aquatic vertebrates from fluvio-lacustrine facies of northern South America (Colom...
In the Miocene (23–5 Ma), a large wetland known as the Pebas System characterized western Amazonia. ...
Among the ichthyofaunal remains collected in the Tertiary deposits of Peruvian Amazonia, elasmobranc...
In northern South America the Cenozoic was a period of intense tectonic and climatic interaction tha...
International audienceThe Middle Miocene has been identified as a time of great diversification in m...
The Middle Miocene has been identified as a time of great diversification in modern lineages now dis...
Between c. 23 and 8 Ma, western Amazonia was occupied by the vast Pebas long-lived lake/wetland syst...
A small assemblage of 22 otoliths was identified from the historical collection of Bluntschli and Pe...
The Miocene Pebas system was a huge (> 1 million km2) system of long-lived lakes and wetlands that o...