Chunga incerta

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Chunga incerta
Temporal range: Late Pliocene
~3 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Cariamiformes
Family: Cariamidae
Genus: Chunga
Species:
C. incerta
Binomial name
Chunga incerta
Tonni, 1974

Chunga incerta is an extinct species of cariamid bird which inhabited the Pliocene of the central-eastern Southern Cone of South America. It belongs to the genus Chunga, today only represented by one species, Chunga burmeisteri.

This species was originally described in 1974 by Argentinian paleontologist Eduardo Pedro Tonni.[1] The holotype is MLP 71-VII-5-1, the distal end of a tibiotarsus. MLP 71-VII-5-2 and MLP 71-VII-5-4 were also collected. These are fragmentary remains of tibiotarsus and tarsometatarsus. All of them were deposited in the collection of the museo de ciencias naturales of La Plata, which belongs to the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Museum of the Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP).[1] The type locality of C. incerta is the Monte Hermoso Formation, in the Partido de Monte Hermoso, Buenos Aires, Argentina.[1] The postulated age for the bearing stratum is Late Pliocene,[2] during the Montehermosan-Chapadmalalan South American land mammal ages, with an approximate age of 3 mya.[3]

Description

Distribution

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