The last Cretaceous ammonites in Latin America

W Stinnesbeck, C Ifrlm, C Salazar - Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 2012 - BioOne
W Stinnesbeck, C Ifrlm, C Salazar
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 2012BioOne
Sections yielding late Maastrichtian ammonite assemblages are rare in Latin America and
precise biostratigraphic correlation with European type sections remains difficult. In all, the
extinction pattern of ammonites appears to differ between sites in southern high latitudes
and those in the tropics to subtropics. In austral sections of Chile, and possibly also in
southern Argentina, diverse assemblages range throughout most of the substage and then
show a gradual decline prior to the Cretaceous—Paleogene (K—Pg) boundary. Further …
Sections yielding late Maastrichtian ammonite assemblages are rare in Latin America and precise biostratigraphic correlation with European type sections remains difficult. In all, the extinction pattern of ammonites appears to differ between sites in southern high latitudes and those in the tropics to subtropics. In austral sections of Chile, and possibly also in southern Argentina, diverse assemblages range throughout most of the substage and then show a gradual decline prior to the Cretaceous—Paleogene (K—Pg) boundary. Further north, in northeast Brazil, only two genera (Diplomoceras, Pachydiscus) range into the uppermost Maastrichtian, but disappear within the last 0.3 Ma of the Cretaceous. In tropical sections of Columbia and Mexico, the decline of ammonites started earlier and Sphenodiscus is the last ammonite known to occur in the late Maastrichtian. In all sections revised here the disappearance of ammonites was completed prior to the end of the Maastrichtian and was thus independent of the asteroid impact at, or near, the end of the Cretaceous.
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