Santa Rosa local fauna

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9°29′39″S 72°45′48″W / 9.49417°S 72.76333°W / -9.49417; -72.76333 The Santa Rosa local fauna consists of the animals found in the Paleogene fossil site of Santa Rosa in eastern Peru. The age of the Santa Rosa fauna is difficult to determine, but may be Eocene (Mustersan) or Oligocene (Deseadan).

Few fossils have been found in the vast rainforests of the Amazon Basin, and Santa Rosa was the first Paleogene fauna to be discovered in the region.[1] The Santa Rosa local fauna was discovered in July 1995, and the discovery was briefly reported in 1996. In 1998, further fossil samples were taken at the site. Though not all of the material had been sorted, a report on the fauna was published in 2004 in a volume edited by Kenneth Campbell of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.[2] The publication was reviewed favorably by Bruce MacFadden in the Journal of Mammalian Evolution.[3]

Location and geology

The Santa Rosa fossil site is located in eastern Peru's Atalaya Province. It is about 7.0 kilometres (4.3 miles) north of the town of Breu, 7.5 kilometres (4.7 miles) south of the Brazilian border, and 2.0 kilometres (1.2 miles) north of a small village named Santa Rosa. It is on the left (west) bank of the Río Yurúa at an altitude of 215 metres (705 feet).[4] The fossils were found in coarse fluvial deposits that form thin lenses along the bank of the river.[5]

There is a number of similar rock units—so-called "red beds"—in the Tertiary deposits of western Amazonia, including eastern Peru, and it is difficult to assign the isolated Santa Rosa outcrop to any of them.[6] However, Campbell and colleagues suggested on the basis of the stage of evolution of the rodents and marsupials found that Santa Rosa dates to the Mustersan South American Land Mammal Age, which is part of the Eocene. This would make it likely that it is part of the Yahuarango Formation, which may be Cretaceous to Eocene in age. On the other hand, they suggested that Santa Rosa could be younger, perhaps Oligocene, and could fall either into a continuation of the Yahuarango Formation or into the younger Chambira Formation.[7] Indeed, María Vucetich noted in 2010 that some of the Santa Rosa rodents are similar to Deseadan (Oligocene) forms, and the notoungulates also suggest a younger age.[8]

Fauna

Faunal list

References

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