A series of Cretaceous mammal faunas, beginning with standard late Cretaceous faunas and continuing with three of Paleocene aspect, are summarized. Four families (Eucosmodontidae, Taeniolabididae, Leptictidae, Arctocyonidae) and one order (Condylarthra) of Tertiary mammals are extended into the Cretaceous. New genera Cimexomys, Stygimys, Procerberus, and Protungulatum are described, as is a small species of Catopsalis. The skeleton of a multituberculate is restored and multituberculate classification is revised.
Dinosaur extinction in Montana, Alberta, and Wyoming was a gradual process that began 7 million years before the end of the Cretaceous and accelerated rapidly in the final 0.3 million years of the Cretaceous, during the interval of apparent competition from rapidly evolving immigrating ungulates. This interval involves rapid reduction in both diversity and population density of dinosaurs. The last dinosaurs known are from a channel that contains teeth of Mantuan mammals, seven species of dinosaurs, and Paleocene pollen. The top of this channel is 1.3 meters above the likely position of the iridium anomaly, the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary.
North American Paleocene land mammal ages are the Mantuan, Puercan, Torrejonian, Tiffanian, and Clarkforkian. These ages (and associate stages) are subdivided into 16 zones or subzones, varying in duration from 0.1 to 2.9 m.y., defined by widespread species. Although gross evolutionary changes during the first four of these ages are about equal, their durations are very unequal. As defined by magnetostratigraphy and fossil occurrence, the Mantuan is about 0.2 m.y., the Puercan about 1.1 m.y., the Torrejonian about 3.1 m.y., the Tiffanian about 6.1 m.y., and the Paleocene part of the Clarkforkian about 1.3 m.y. in duration. Puercan encompasses normal magnetozone 29, Torrejonian zones 28 and 27, and the Tiffanian-Clarkforkian boundary falls in zone 25. The type Rio Chico Formation of Patagonia is of mid-Tiffanian to Clarkforkian age.Problems in the identification of magnetozones in the San Juan Basin have arisen because an unconformity is present between the Kirtland Shale and the Ojo Alamo Sandstone, and for some years an extra normal chron was falsely identified. When this hiatus is taken into account, marine and terrestrial fossil correlations agree with magnetozone correlations throughout Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene rocks.The Danian stage in marine rocks in North Dakota is equivalent to Mantuan through early Tiffanian; the Thanetian is exactly equivalent to mid-Tiffanian to early Clarkforkian. The rate of Paleocene sedimentation in the major basins of North America does not depart from linearity much more than the contemporary rate of seafloor spreading. Terrestrial rates of sedimentation vary from a peak of 568 bubnoffs (b) (meters per million years) for the Hoback Formation at the Rocky Mountain front to 99 b in the San Juan Basin and 15 b in the Black Peaks Formation in Texas, compared to 2.7 b at Gubbio, Italy. Sedimentation rates along a transect through the Bighorn, Powder River, and Williston basins follow the equation Y = 200X -0 -25 , where Y is the sedimentation rate in bubnoffs and X is the radial distance in kilometers from the Absaroka thrust.Absolute taxonomic and morphologic rates of evolution of the most rapidly evolving mammals during the Bugcreekian-Mantuan interval across the Cretaceous-Paleocene boundary peak at 5 genera per m.y. and 3.85 darwins (a rate of measurement defined in the text), the fastest rates known in the fossil record, and decline exponentially to more normal rates of 1 species per m.y. and 0.5 darwins by the Tiffanian. Range charts of 299 species of ungulates, primates, and multituberculates permit ready identification of zones. Seven new species of multituberculates are described, and shape and metrical properties of latest Cretaceous-Paleocene neoplagiaulacid multituberculates are summarized for ease in identification. 165 on May 25, 2015 specialpapers.gsapubs.org Downloaded from on May 25, 2015 specialpapers.gsapubs.org Downloaded from on May 25, 2015 specialpapers.gsapubs.org Downloaded from on May 25, 2015 specialpapers.gsapubs.org Downloaded from on May 25, 2015 sp...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.