Permian–Triassic rocks of the Transantarctic Basin provide an unparalleled record of high latitude paleoenvironments and terrestrial vertebrate faunas. Here we summarize the taxonomic and paleoecological implications of the approximately 1300 vertebrate fossils collected since 1968, as well as report on new geologic field observations made during the 2017–18 austral field season. The Fremouw Formation records a vertebrate assemblage taxonomically most similar to that of the Karoo Basin of South Africa, with 10 genera shared in common. However, temnospondyls form a much greater percentage of tetrapod occurrences in the Fremouw Formation, suggesting favorable conditions for these ectothermic fossil amphibians at high latitudes. Lower Triassic small reptiles (viz. Procolophon, Prolacerta) occur in slightly higher proportions than in the Karoo, but their taxonomic diversity is likely undercounted. Seven stratigraphic columns of the upper Buckley and lower–middle Fremouw formations detail fluvial depositional environments in the central Transantarctic region, recording a shift from wet swamp lands to drier floodplains, most similar to Gondwanan basins in Australia. Fremouw Formation paleosols primarily consist of Protosols, which indicate poor soil forming conditions likely due to low precipitation and high sediment supply from crevasse splays. Mineralogy from X-ray diffraction, review of igneous intrusives, and Buckley Formation coal characterization demonstrate post-pedogenic diagenetic alteration that casts doubt on the results of previous stable isotopic studies of these paleosols. Tetrapod fossils first appear in the Fremouw Formation, which has been taken as evidence for immigration to the Antarctic portion of southern Pangea around the time of the end-Permian mass extinction. However, this may be due to higher soil pH, increased base saturation, lower moisture content, and more rapid burial conditions in the Fremouw than the underlying Buckley Formation that favored bone preservation.
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First record of the amphibamiform Micropholis stowi from the lower Fremouw Formation (Lower Triassic) of Antarctica
The fossil record of temnospondyl amphibians in the immediate wake of the Permo-Triassic mass extinction captures extensive taxic and ecological diversity, with most records known from high paleolatitudinal settings. In southern Pangea, the most substantial records come from South Africa and Australia, with a total of over 20 taxa presently recognized. Temnospondyls have also been known from correlated horizons in the lower Fremouw Formation of Antarctica since the late 1960s, but these records are mostly fragmentary, thereby limiting taxonomic resolution to the family level and subsequent biostratigraphic correlations and comparisons between high-latitude basins. Here we report substantial new material of the amphibamiform Micropholis stowi, a relic dissorophoid previously known only from the Katberg Formation (Lystrosaurus declivis Assemblage Zone) of South Africa, from the lower Fremouw Formation. The exceptional preservation of the recently recovered material permits not only confident taxonomic referral but also tentative association of several individuals to the broad-headed morph of the taxon. The recognition of M. stowi in Antarctica represents only the fourth geographic occurrence of a dissorophoid from southern Pangea and supports the hypothesis that high-latitude environments served as refugia for temnospondyls during the mass extinction. In the case of M. stowi, such refugia permitted the persistence of a predominantly Permo-Carboniferous clade, and the Antarctic records discussed here further hint at a poorly sampled cryptic distribution, both of amphibamiforms in southern Pangea and of small-bodied temnospondyls in early Mesozoic deposits.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1947094
- PAR ID:
- 10504953
- Publisher / Repository:
- Taylor and Francis
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
- Volume:
- 41
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 0272-4634
- Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
- Antarctica Fremouw Formation Temnospondylio
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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