New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina

Autores
Vento, Bárbara; Toro, B. A.; Maletz, J.
Año de publicación
2010
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
documento de conferencia
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
Trichograptus dilaceratus (Herrmann), Acrograptus gracilis (Törnquist), Expansograptus urbanus (Monsen) and Corymbograptus v-fractus tullbergi (Monsen) are recognized and described in Argentina for the first time, reinforcing the graptolite faunal affinities with Baltoscandia. The studied specimens come from the Quinilican and Agua Chica sections, located at the northern extreme of the Aguilar Range in the Cordillera Oriental (Jujuy Province). The graptolites are preserved in fine to medium grained sandstones interbedded within a fine-grained succession of approximately 200m thickness, corresponding to the lower part of the Acoite Formation. The presence of Baltograptus vacillans (Tullberg), Acrograptus filiformis (Tullberg) and Expansograptus cf. holmi (Törnquist) allow to assign the studied levels to the Tetragraptus akzarensis biozone, which corresponds to the lower Floian. These levels are closely correlated with the lower part of the Lumara section located to the northeast of the studied area. The recognized species have been considered together with all the species previously documented in equivalent stratigraphic levels from the Argentine Cordillera Oriental and those recently reviewed in Baltoscandia, Great Britain and North America. A multivariate analysis (mvsp) was used and the determination of faunistic similarities was made with the classic Jaccards' index. The resulting affinity dendrogram shows stronger relationships between early Floian graptolite faunas from Northwestern Argentina and those coming from Baltoscandia. Great Britain is located in an intermediate position in the similarity dendrogram, and shows less affinity with northwestern Argentina. In addition, weak affinities with North American faunas are observed. The statistical analysis confirms the paleobiogeographic relationships previously established in other areas of the Cordillera Oriental, and supports the hypothesis that during the Early Ordovician, northwestern Argentina was located in middle to high latitudes, corresponding to the Atlantic Faunal Realm of cold water graptolite biofacies.
Simposio I: 2º Simposio de bioestratigrafía y eventos del Paleozoico inferior
Trabajo subsidiado por ANPCyT-PICT 1272 y CONICET-PIP 112-200801-01994.
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
Materia
Ciencias Naturales
Paleontología
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Repositorio
SEDICI (UNLP)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de La Plata
OAI Identificador
oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/16796

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spelling New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern ArgentinaVento, BárbaraToro, B. A.Maletz, J.Ciencias NaturalesPaleontologíaTrichograptus dilaceratus (Herrmann), Acrograptus gracilis (Törnquist), Expansograptus urbanus (Monsen) and Corymbograptus v-fractus tullbergi (Monsen) are recognized and described in Argentina for the first time, reinforcing the graptolite faunal affinities with Baltoscandia. The studied specimens come from the Quinilican and Agua Chica sections, located at the northern extreme of the Aguilar Range in the Cordillera Oriental (Jujuy Province). The graptolites are preserved in fine to medium grained sandstones interbedded within a fine-grained succession of approximately 200m thickness, corresponding to the lower part of the Acoite Formation. The presence of Baltograptus vacillans (Tullberg), Acrograptus filiformis (Tullberg) and Expansograptus cf. holmi (Törnquist) allow to assign the studied levels to the Tetragraptus akzarensis biozone, which corresponds to the lower Floian. These levels are closely correlated with the lower part of the Lumara section located to the northeast of the studied area. The recognized species have been considered together with all the species previously documented in equivalent stratigraphic levels from the Argentine Cordillera Oriental and those recently reviewed in Baltoscandia, Great Britain and North America. A multivariate analysis (mvsp) was used and the determination of faunistic similarities was made with the classic Jaccards' index. The resulting affinity dendrogram shows stronger relationships between early Floian graptolite faunas from Northwestern Argentina and those coming from Baltoscandia. Great Britain is located in an intermediate position in the similarity dendrogram, and shows less affinity with northwestern Argentina. In addition, weak affinities with North American faunas are observed. The statistical analysis confirms the paleobiogeographic relationships previously established in other areas of the Cordillera Oriental, and supports the hypothesis that during the Early Ordovician, northwestern Argentina was located in middle to high latitudes, corresponding to the Atlantic Faunal Realm of cold water graptolite biofacies.Simposio I: 2º Simposio de bioestratigrafía y eventos del Paleozoico inferiorTrabajo subsidiado por ANPCyT-PICT 1272 y CONICET-PIP 112-200801-01994.Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo2010info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionResumenhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794info:ar-repo/semantics/documentoDeConferenciaapplication/pdfhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/16796enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-987-95849-7-2info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/hdl/10915/25738info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)reponame:SEDICI (UNLP)instname:Universidad Nacional de La Platainstacron:UNLP2025-11-05T12:32:56Zoai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/16796Institucionalhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/oai/snrdalira@sedici.unlp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:13292025-11-05 12:32:56.402SEDICI (UNLP) - Universidad Nacional de La Platafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
title New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
spellingShingle New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
Vento, Bárbara
Ciencias Naturales
Paleontología
title_short New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
title_full New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
title_fullStr New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
title_full_unstemmed New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
title_sort New insights for the paleobiogeographic analysis of the Early Ordovician graptolite fauna of northwestern Argentina
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Vento, Bárbara
Toro, B. A.
Maletz, J.
author Vento, Bárbara
author_facet Vento, Bárbara
Toro, B. A.
Maletz, J.
author_role author
author2 Toro, B. A.
Maletz, J.
author2_role author
author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Ciencias Naturales
Paleontología
topic Ciencias Naturales
Paleontología
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv Trichograptus dilaceratus (Herrmann), Acrograptus gracilis (Törnquist), Expansograptus urbanus (Monsen) and Corymbograptus v-fractus tullbergi (Monsen) are recognized and described in Argentina for the first time, reinforcing the graptolite faunal affinities with Baltoscandia. The studied specimens come from the Quinilican and Agua Chica sections, located at the northern extreme of the Aguilar Range in the Cordillera Oriental (Jujuy Province). The graptolites are preserved in fine to medium grained sandstones interbedded within a fine-grained succession of approximately 200m thickness, corresponding to the lower part of the Acoite Formation. The presence of Baltograptus vacillans (Tullberg), Acrograptus filiformis (Tullberg) and Expansograptus cf. holmi (Törnquist) allow to assign the studied levels to the Tetragraptus akzarensis biozone, which corresponds to the lower Floian. These levels are closely correlated with the lower part of the Lumara section located to the northeast of the studied area. The recognized species have been considered together with all the species previously documented in equivalent stratigraphic levels from the Argentine Cordillera Oriental and those recently reviewed in Baltoscandia, Great Britain and North America. A multivariate analysis (mvsp) was used and the determination of faunistic similarities was made with the classic Jaccards' index. The resulting affinity dendrogram shows stronger relationships between early Floian graptolite faunas from Northwestern Argentina and those coming from Baltoscandia. Great Britain is located in an intermediate position in the similarity dendrogram, and shows less affinity with northwestern Argentina. In addition, weak affinities with North American faunas are observed. The statistical analysis confirms the paleobiogeographic relationships previously established in other areas of the Cordillera Oriental, and supports the hypothesis that during the Early Ordovician, northwestern Argentina was located in middle to high latitudes, corresponding to the Atlantic Faunal Realm of cold water graptolite biofacies.
Simposio I: 2º Simposio de bioestratigrafía y eventos del Paleozoico inferior
Trabajo subsidiado por ANPCyT-PICT 1272 y CONICET-PIP 112-200801-01994.
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
description Trichograptus dilaceratus (Herrmann), Acrograptus gracilis (Törnquist), Expansograptus urbanus (Monsen) and Corymbograptus v-fractus tullbergi (Monsen) are recognized and described in Argentina for the first time, reinforcing the graptolite faunal affinities with Baltoscandia. The studied specimens come from the Quinilican and Agua Chica sections, located at the northern extreme of the Aguilar Range in the Cordillera Oriental (Jujuy Province). The graptolites are preserved in fine to medium grained sandstones interbedded within a fine-grained succession of approximately 200m thickness, corresponding to the lower part of the Acoite Formation. The presence of Baltograptus vacillans (Tullberg), Acrograptus filiformis (Tullberg) and Expansograptus cf. holmi (Törnquist) allow to assign the studied levels to the Tetragraptus akzarensis biozone, which corresponds to the lower Floian. These levels are closely correlated with the lower part of the Lumara section located to the northeast of the studied area. The recognized species have been considered together with all the species previously documented in equivalent stratigraphic levels from the Argentine Cordillera Oriental and those recently reviewed in Baltoscandia, Great Britain and North America. A multivariate analysis (mvsp) was used and the determination of faunistic similarities was made with the classic Jaccards' index. The resulting affinity dendrogram shows stronger relationships between early Floian graptolite faunas from Northwestern Argentina and those coming from Baltoscandia. Great Britain is located in an intermediate position in the similarity dendrogram, and shows less affinity with northwestern Argentina. In addition, weak affinities with North American faunas are observed. The statistical analysis confirms the paleobiogeographic relationships previously established in other areas of the Cordillera Oriental, and supports the hypothesis that during the Early Ordovician, northwestern Argentina was located in middle to high latitudes, corresponding to the Atlantic Faunal Realm of cold water graptolite biofacies.
publishDate 2010
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