“…Finally, the current record of fossil woods, added to the previously mentioned findings that include fossil remains and traces of vertebrates and invertebrates, together with fossil plants and palynomorphs, support the existence of humid and certainly stable marginal environments similar to an oasis that would allow maintaining this important biota in the Botucatú Desert (Almeida, 1950;Suguio & Coimbra, 1972;Mussa, 1974;Herbst & Ferrando, 1985;Martínez & Figueiras, 1991;Martínez et al, 1993;Würdig & Pinto, 2001;Shen et al, 2004;Leonardi et al, 2007;Perea et al, 2009;Pires et al 2011;Mesa, 2012;De Valais et al, 2012;Buck et al, 2017, Santa Cruz et al, 2019Peixoto et al, 2020). These records added to the role of these wetlands/paleoerg as biogeographical bridges/barriers (Gallego & Rinaldi, 2004) that facilitated the colonization and dispersion of this flora and fauna, open an interesting future panorama to continue analyzing different aspects of these important geological sections of the Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous from South America.…”