Reinterpretation of a Middle Eocene record of Tardigrada (Pilosa, Xenarthra, Mammalia) from La Meseta Formation, Seymour Island, West Antarctica
Reinterpretation of La Meseta tardigradan
MacPhee, R. D. E.
creator
Reguero, Marcelo.
contributor
text
book
New York, NY
American Museum of Natural History
c2010
2010
ENG
Caption title.
"June 25, 2010."
An isolated and incomplete tooth, discovered in sediments of Middle Eocene La Meseta Fm on Seymour Island (northern Weddell Sea, West Antarctica), has previously been interpreted to be that of a sloth. The specimen as preserved is composed of dentine, as in sloths and tooth-bearing xenarthrans generally. However, characters associated with the dentinal histology of definite sloths are either not represented on the Seymour tooth, or depart considerably from tardigradan and even general xenarthran models according to new observations presented here. On the basis of histological criteria, the La Meseta tooth cannot be shown positively to be tardigradan; it may not even be xenarthran. Further progress with establishing its relationships will depend on the recovery of more (and better) specimens. For the moment, it is best attributed to Mammalia, incertae sedis.
Antarctica
Eocene
La Meseta Formation
La Meseta Formation (Antarctica)
Mammals, Fossil
Paleontology
Seymour Island
Teeth, Fossil
QL1 .A436 no.3689 2010
American Museum novitates, no. 3689
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/38931
0003-0082
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/168492
645118214
YAM