Taphonomy of a Mysticeti whale in the Lower Pliocene Huelva Sands Formation (Southern Spain)
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Abstract
This paper reports the occurrence of an incomplete fossil baleen whale skeleton in the Lower Pliocene Huelva
Sands Formation (Guadalquivir basin) near the town of Bonares, southwestern Spain. The skeleton was found in
the highly bioturbated glauconitic sandstone unit in association with Neopycnodonte cochlear shells. Several
morphological features of the mandibles, scapula and vertebrae suggest that the specimen belongs in the suborder
Mysticeti, family Balaenopteridae. Most bones show abrasion due to a long exposure on the seafloor, and
some bones show shark tooth marks and both micro- and macro-bioerosion by scavengers. The position of the
bones suggests that the carcass landed on the seafloor on its left side and then turned right side up. Sedimentological
and paleontological features indicate that the whale was buried in shallow platform waters under low
sedimentation rates.
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Bibliographic citation
R. Esperante, Fernando Muñiz Guinea, K.E. Nick. Taphonomy of a Mysticeti whale in the Lower Pliocene Huelva Sands Formation (Southern Spain). Geologica acta: an international earth science journal, ISSN 1695-6133, Vol. 7, Nº. 4, 2009, págs. 489-504. DOI: 10.1344/105.000001451







