SDSNH locality 3775 Oceanside, lower lacustrine unit (Pleistocene of the United States)

Where: San Diego County, California (33.2° N, 117.3° W: paleocoordinates 33.2° N, 117.3° W)

• coordinate based on nearby landmark

When: Late/Upper Pleistocene (0.1 - 0.0 Ma)

• Rancholabrean

Environment/lithology: fluvial-lacustrine; mudstone and massive sandstone

• The sedimentology and stratigraphy (Fig. 4) of the Town Center North Pleistocene sequence suggests deposition in a freshwater pond or ox-bow lake on the southern margin of the ancestral San Luis Rey River Valley. The older lacustrine sequence preserving the capybara skull, although only exposed in a small area, appears to have been deposited on a relatively high relief unconformity eroded into older Eocene strata. This erosion surface likely formed as the ancestral San Luis Rey River was beginning to aggrade and deposit fine-grained sedi-ments on its floodplain during a eustatic rise in sea level (i.e., an interglacial). The interbedded sequence of mud-stones, laminated carbonaceous siltstones, and medium- to coarse-grained graded sandstones likely represent seasonal changes in sediment input to this fluvial-lacustrine setting.The erosion surface that cuts the older Pleistocene lacus-trine sequence is here interpreted to have formed as the riv-er meandered back to the south during a later time of the same interglacial period. The basal cross-bedded sandstone resting on this unconformity likely represents a coarse-grained “beach” facies that was deposited as the floodplain was aggrading and another ox-bow lake was forming. The mixture of terrestrial and aquatic taxa in this basal trans-gressive unit and the occurrence of isolated and non-articu-lated skeletal elements suggests a possible scenario whereby bloated, floating mammalian carcasses were successively being “beached,” shedding bones, and refloated. The gradational contact between the sandstone “beach” facies and the laminated mudstone-siltstone “lake” facies suggests continuous interglacial floodplain aggradation.

Size class: macrofossils

Primary reference: R. White, J. Mead, G. Morgan and T. A. Deméré. 2022. New Record of Capybara (Rodentia: Caviidae: Hydrochoerinae) from the Pleistocene of San Diego County, California with Remarks on Their Biogeography and Dispersal in the Pleistocene of Western North America. Vertebrate Anatomy Morphology Palaeontology 9(1):131-155more details

Purpose of describing collection: taxonomic analysis

PaleoDB collection 236635: authorized by Val Syverson, entered by Val Syverson on 17.10.2024

Creative Commons license: CC BY (attribution)

Taxonomic list

Mammalia
 Artiodactyla - Antilocapridae
cf. Stockoceros sp. Skinner 1942 pronghorn
 Rodentia - Caviidae
Hydrochoerus hesperotiganites White et al. 2022 capybara