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[dinosaur] Late Cretaceous dinosaur track record of Bolivia




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:

Ch. A. Meyer, D. Marty, B. ThÃring, S. ThÃring & M. Belvedere (2020)
The Late Cretaceous dinosaur track record of Bolivia â Review and perspective.
Journal of South American Earth Sciences 102992 (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2020.102992
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0895981120305356

Highlights

New dinosaur tracksites are described from the Departamiento Chuquisaca and Potosi.
A complete map of the largest dinosaur tracksite (Cal Orck'o, Sucre) is given.
Peru, Bolivia and Argentina form a megatracksite in the Late Maastrichtian.
The Toro Toro site yields a continous record until the K/Pg boundary.

Abstract

We present an update and a review of the Late Cretaceous dinosaur tracksites of Bolivia. The Puca Group (Coniacian -- Late Maastrichtian) records the tracks and trackways of two different titanosaurid sauropods, ankylosaurs, hadrosaurs and different theropod groups from the Central Andean lacustrine back arc basin. We review the sites from the Maragua syncline (Chuquisaca) and present new data on the famous Toro Toro site (Potosi).

Furthermore, the first complete map of the world's largest dinosaur tracksite, Cal Orck'o (El Molino Formation, Sucre) gives an insight into behavior and movement patterns. Parallel trackways of subadult ankylosaurs provide the first unequivocal evidence of social behavior amongst these dinosaurs worldwide. The El Molino Formation and the coeval deposits of Southern Peru and Northern Argentina form a megatracksite with a size of around 100,000âkm2. The paleogeographic position of the main sites within the basin suggests that they are part of a seasonal migration route along the shoreline and deltas of an ancient lake system.


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