Mammalian fossils from Gruta do Ioio cave and past of the Chapada Diamantina, northeastern Brazil, using taphonomy, radiocarbon dating and paleoecology

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Data

2020-03-01

Autores

Eltink, Estevan
Castro, Mariela
Montefeltro, Felipe Chinaglia [UNESP]
Trindade Dantas, Mario Andre
Scherer, Carolina Saldanha
Oliveira, Paulo Victor de
Langer, Max Cardoso

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Editor

Elsevier B.V.

Resumo

Gruta do Ioio is a cave part of Iraquara carstic system (Salitre Formation, Una Group). Located in the region of the Chapada Diamantina, northeastern Brazil, this partially submerged cave has yielded abundant fossil remains that until now included Siluriformes, an alligatorid crocodilian and a set of mammals, such as representatives of Mustelidae, Rodentia and Chiroptera. Besides the record of Palaeolama major (Camelidae), Pecari tajacu (Tayassuidae), both yielded from subaquatic site, Puma concolor, Leopardus pardalis (Felidae), Chrysocyon brachyurus (Canidae), and a Didelphidae indet. were yielded from newly described subaerial site. Taphonomic features, such as weathering, transport, breakage, bones and taxonomic representation, demonstrate that bioestrationomic and fossildiagenetic conditions varies between fossiliferous accumulations in the cave, and differences are still observed in the same fossil-bearing site (subaerial). The radiocarbon ages indicate the occurrence of Leopardus pardalis at 30,351-30,862 yr cal BP, Palaeolama major at 24,854-25,379 yr cal BP and Pecari tajacu at 8170-8336 yr cal BP. It extends the time range of Gruta do 1oi6 fossils from the Late Pleistocene to the Early-Middle Holocene, encompassing the Last Glacial Maximum. Paleoecological inferences provided by stable isotopes (delta C-13) suggest great proportion of diets based on C-3 plants along the trophic levels, suggesting a denser forest environment and more humid conditions in the region of Gruta do Ioio cave during the Quaternary. The record of taxa, such as Myocastor coypus (a semiaquatic rodent currently distributed in subtropical and temperate South America) and Chrysocyon brachyurus (a typical dweller of open grasslands) shows that past landscape, composed by forests and/or savannic vegetations, contrasts with xeric arboreal scrubland that currently covers the area.

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Palavras-chave

Fossils, Limestone Cave, Stable Isotopes, Radiocarbon Dating, Taphonomy, Chapada Diamantina, Quaternary

Como citar

Journal Of South American Earth Sciences. Oxford: Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, v. 98, 16 p., 2020.