Artigo Revisado por pares

Carnivore Trackways from the Miocene Site of Salinas de Añana (Alava, Spain)

2004; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 11; Issue: 3-4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/10420940490444951

ISSN

1563-5236

Autores

Mauricio Antón, Gregorio López, Robert Santamaría,

Tópico(s)

Amphibian and Reptile Biology

Resumo

A fossil tracksite of Lower Miocene age discovered near Salinas de Añana, Alava (Spain), has rendered an exceptionally well-preserved assemblage of vertebrate ichnites. The site shows a high proportion of carnivore tracks (3 out of 5 mammal ichnospecies) and a high number of individual trackways (15), some including over 50 consecutive footprints. The carnivore ichnites are classified as Felipeda lynxi Panin & Avram, 1962 Panin, M. and Avram, B. 1962. Noi urme de vertebrate in Miocenul Subcarpatilor Rominesti. Studii Cercet Geologia, 13: 521–525. [Google Scholar], Felipeda parvula ichnosp. nov. and Canipeda longigriffa Panin & Avram, 1962 Panin, M. and Avram, B. 1962. Noi urme de vertebrate in Miocenul Subcarpatilor Rominesti. Studii Cercet Geologia, 13: 521–525. [Google Scholar], and they are attributed to a felid, an undetermined small aeluroid, and a herpestid, respectively. The long trackways allow determination of gaits, which include lateral sequence walks and diagonal sequence trots, and of speed, which ranges from 0.4 to 1.4 m/s. Froude numbers range between 0.1 and 0.8, agreeing with gait interpretations and speed calculations. The felid trackways provide the first known evidence of group traveling in fossil cats. The herpestid footprints show modern-grade adaptations for terrestrial locomotion and digging.

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