Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Large euenantiornithine birds from the Cretaceous of southern France, North America and Argentina

2007; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 144; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0016756807003871

ISSN

1469-5081

Autores

C. A. Walker, Éric Buffetaut, Gareth J. Dyke,

Tópico(s)

Ichthyology and Marine Biology

Resumo

Abstract We review historical approaches to the systematics of Enantiornithes, the dominant birds of the second half of the Mesozoic, and describe the forelimb remains of a new Cretaceous euenantiornithine. This taxon is known on the basis of fossil specimens collected from southern France, Argentina and the United States; such a wide geographical distribution is uncharacteristic for Enantiornithes as most taxa are known from single localities. Fossils from the Massecaps locality close to the village of Cruzy (Hérault, southern France), in combination with elements from New Mexico (USA) and from the Argentine locality of El Brete (Salta Province) testify to the global distribution of large flighted euenantiornithine birds in the Late Cretaceous. We discuss the systematics and taxonomy of additional isolated bones of Enantiornithes that were collected from the Argentine El Brete locality in the 1970s; the presence of these flying birds in Cretaceous rocks on both sides of the equator, in both northern and southern hemispheres, further demonstrates the ubiquity of this avian lineage by the latter stages of the Mesozoic.

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