Paralouatta marianae (Pitheciidae)



Paralouatta marianae ist eine Primatenart innerhalb der Familie Pitheciidae, die ab dem Neogen (Miozän) im Aquitanium lebte, das vor rund 23 Millionen Jahren begann und bis vor 20,4 Millionen Jahren andauerte.

Fundorte

Systematik

Daten zu den einzelnen Funden von Paralouatta marianae
Sammlung Kommentar zum Fundort Epoche, Alter Geologie, Formation Kommentar zur Sammlung
Domo de Zaza coordinate based on Presa Zaza, which is immediately north of Domo de Zaza Burdigalian
zwischen 15.97 und 23.03 Millionen Jahren
Lagunitas Zaza Dome; Canal de Zaza
Kommentar z. Stratigraphie Lithographie Kommentar z. Taxonomie
most in situ fossils are from the lower half of the section "poorly sorted, angular to subangular gravel, moderately cemented by carbonates and low in clay content... Grey to yellowish-green interbedded sands and gravels"; "light green clays, with brown and red spotting and minor amounts of sand... soil development... Bioturbation... root casts" bony fishes and invertebrates are excluded, with some treated separately (see other Domo de Zaza lists)

Literatur

R. D. E. MacPhee, M. A. Iturralde-Vinent, E. S. Gaffney 2003, Domo de Zaza, an Early Miocene vertebrate locality in south-central Cuba, with notes on the tectonic evolution of Puerto Rico and the Mona Passage. American Museum Novitates. 3394, p. 1 - 42