Telm 5, Seymour Island: Bartonian - Priabonian, Antarctica
collected by Gazdzicki

List of taxa
Where & when
Geology
Taphonomy & methods
Metadata & references
Taxonomic list
Cephalopoda - Nautilida - Nautilidae
Euciphoceras argentinae (Del Valle and Fourcade 1976)
Mammalia - Astrapotheria - Trigonostylopidae
Trigonostylops sp. Ameghino 1897
Case 2006
Mammalia - Panameriungulata - Macraucheniidae
Victorlemoinea sp. (Ameghino 1901)
Case 2006
Mammalia - Polydolopidae
Polydolops dailyi
Case 2006
Polydolops seymouriensis
Case 2006
Mammalia - Prepidolopidae
Perrodelphys coquinense Goin et al. 1999
Case 2006
Mammalia
Marambiotherium glacialis Goin et al. 1999
Case 2006
Mammalia - Derorhynchidae
Pauladelphys juanjoi Goin et al. 1999
Case 2006
Derorhynchus minutus Goin et al. 1999
Case 2006
Xenostylus peninsularis Goin et al. 1999
Case 2006
see common names

Geography
Country:Antarctica
Coordinates: 64.2° South, 56.7° West (view map)
Paleocoordinates:64.2° South, 59.1° West
Basis of coordinate:estimated from map
Time
Period: Paleogene Epoch: Eocene
Stage: Bartonian - Priabonian 10 m.y. bin: Cenozoic 3
Key time interval: Bartonian - Priabonian
Age range of interval: 41.2 - 33.9 m.y. ago
Stratigraphy
Formation:La Meseta Member:Telm 5
Stratigraphic resolution:group of beds
Stratigraphy comments: The age model for the La Meseta Formation (and recently-defined Submeseta Formation) is controversial. Strontium isotopes (Ivany et al., 2008) suggest earlier ages, with the La Meseta (Telm1-Telm5) almost entirely Ypresian and the Submeseta (Telm6-Telm7) Middle-Late Eocene. Montes et al. (2013) also created an age model incorporating magnetostratigraphy to support the largely-Ypresian age for the La Meseta and Middle-Late Eocene for the Submeseta. Some mammals are similar to the radiometrically-constrained late early Eocene Paso del Sapo assemblage of Patagonia (Gelfo et al., 2009, Tejedor et al., 2009), but the mammals are not exactly similar (Bond et al., 2011). However, Douglas et al. (2014) re-evaluated the strontium data and used dinoflagellate biostratigraphy to argue for a Lutetian (Telm2-4) and younger (Bartonian to mid-Priabonian for Telm5-6) age range. AmenĂ¡bar et al. (2019) also found younger ages from dinoflagellates: Lutetian (Telm1-mid Telm 3), Bartonian (mid Telm 3-mid Telm 5), and Priabonian (upper Telm 5), SPDZ10-SPDZ13. This age range is more consistent with the presence of basilosaurid whales in Telm4 and Telm7, as basilosaurids are globally-distributed first in the middle Eocene (Buono et al., 2016). Although the ages are still debated, the dinoflagellate age model of AmenĂ¡bar et al. (2019) is used here.
Lithology and environment
Primary lithology: unlithified sandstone
Environment:paralic indet.
Geology comments: The environment of deposition of this complex unit has been subject to different interpretations, all agreeing in general that Telm5 represents a shallow-marine setting. A study by Wiedman and Feldmann (1988) on the ichnofossil fauna and depositional environment of the La Meseta Formation concluded that the Telm5 setting was a littoral to very shallow sublittoral clastic marine terrain, definitely above storm base and most probably above normal wave base. They agreed with Elliot and Trautrnan (1982) that Units II and III probably represent a tidally dominated environment, but evidence from sedimentary structures is also consistent with a barrier bar model and does not represent a shallowing upward sequence. Elliot and Trautman (1982) favored a deltaic model. The analysis of trace fossils and body fossils (including vertebrate remains and large, abundant wood fragments) indicates variable nearshore, shallow-marine environments. A scenario for the depositional environment could include a combination ebb-tidal (or possibly flood-tidal) delta-barrier island complex (Stilwell & Zinsmeister, 1992).
Taphonomy
Modes of preservation:body
Size of fossils:macrofossils
Collection methods and comments
Collection methods:field collection
Reason for describing collection:taxonomic analysis
Collectors:Gazdzicki
Collection method comments: Repository: Institute of Paleobiology of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Metadata
Database number:173115
Authorizer:M. Clapham, M. Uhen Enterer:K. Okamoto, F. Villegas-Garin
Modifier:M. Clapham Research group:marine invertebrate
Created:2015-09-09 19:55:45 Last modified:2019-08-18 00:10:39
Access level:the public Released:2015-09-09 19:55:45
Creative Commons license:CC BY
Reference information

Primary reference:

56258. J. Dzik and A. Gazdzicki. 2001. The Eocene expansion of nautilids to high latitudes. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 172:297-312 [M. Clapham/K. Okamoto/M. Clapham]

Secondary references:

60527 J. A. Case. 2006. The late middle Eocene terrestrial vertebrate fauna from Seymour Island; the tails of the Eocene Patagonian size distribution. Geological Society Special Publications 258:177-186 [M. Uhen/F. Villegas-Garin]