Taphonomy and abundance of birds from the Lower Eocene Fur Formation of Denmark
Taphonomy and abundance of birds from the Lower Eocene Fur Formation of Denmark
The pattern, pace and extent of the evolutionary radiation of modern birds (Neornithes) by the end-Cretaceous (65?Ma) has long been debated. Well-dated, taphonomically understood and phylogenetically constrained fossil birds from both sides of the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary are required to quantify the shape of this radiation, but have largely been lacking. Here we report on a large collection of fossil birds from the Lower Eocene of Denmark (ca. 54?Ma) that includes three-dimensionally preserved, articulated specimens from carbonate concretions as well as skeletal imprints and feathers. These birds are from a marine diatomite sequence (the Fur Formation), a low-energy deep-water preservational environment unique to the Cretaceous and Paleogene avian fossil record. We present taphonomic and palaeoecological information gleaned from these birds that in combination with phylogenetic data have implications for unravelling avian survivorship across the K–Pg boundary as well as for the pattern of the neornithine evolutionary radiation.
Aves, taphonomy, survival, evolution
365-373
Dyke, Gareth J.
600ca61e-b40b-4c86-b8ae-13be4e331e94
Lindow, Bent
f8884ab5-c823-433b-92eb-2027fd6f427b
May 2009
Dyke, Gareth J.
600ca61e-b40b-4c86-b8ae-13be4e331e94
Lindow, Bent
f8884ab5-c823-433b-92eb-2027fd6f427b
Dyke, Gareth J. and Lindow, Bent
(2009)
Taphonomy and abundance of birds from the Lower Eocene Fur Formation of Denmark.
Geological Journal, 44 (3), .
(doi:10.1002/gj.1150).
Abstract
The pattern, pace and extent of the evolutionary radiation of modern birds (Neornithes) by the end-Cretaceous (65?Ma) has long been debated. Well-dated, taphonomically understood and phylogenetically constrained fossil birds from both sides of the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary are required to quantify the shape of this radiation, but have largely been lacking. Here we report on a large collection of fossil birds from the Lower Eocene of Denmark (ca. 54?Ma) that includes three-dimensionally preserved, articulated specimens from carbonate concretions as well as skeletal imprints and feathers. These birds are from a marine diatomite sequence (the Fur Formation), a low-energy deep-water preservational environment unique to the Cretaceous and Paleogene avian fossil record. We present taphonomic and palaeoecological information gleaned from these birds that in combination with phylogenetic data have implications for unravelling avian survivorship across the K–Pg boundary as well as for the pattern of the neornithine evolutionary radiation.
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Published date: May 2009
Keywords:
Aves, taphonomy, survival, evolution
Organisations:
Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 205173
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/205173
ISSN: 0072-1050
PURE UUID: a429a184-3a15-44e7-b458-d94392dc7333
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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2011 10:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 04:33
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Author:
Gareth J. Dyke
Author:
Bent Lindow
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