User:Abyssal/Prehistory of South America

The Prehistory of South America Portal

Introduction

The Prehistory of South America portal collects and presents articles, images and categories on the prehistorical period in time (before 10,000 years ago) of the continent South America. South America has a rather unique prehistory, both regarding the human settlement prehistory and early history and the flora and fauna prehistory of the continent. For approximately 115 million years, since the Aptian, the continent was no longer connected to Africa and the other landmasses of Eurasia and North America and during the early Cenozoic, the continent became unconnected to Australia. The only connection to another continent was with Antarctica, that drifted away in the late Eocene, approximately 35 million years ago.

The next 30 million years, until the late Miocene to early Pliocene (6-4 million years ago), South America was completely isolated from the other landmasses, separated by the Atlantic, Pacific, Antarctic and paleo-Caribbean oceans. This caused the evolution of a unique prehistoric fauna and flora in South America. Due to plate tectonic movements in the Neogene, the isthmus of Panama was formed, leading to the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI), drastically reshaping the faunal assemblages of both Americas, but South America in particular, with many more migration from north to south than vice versa.

The history of human settlement was equally recent, with the oldest evidences dating to approximately 18,500 years ago (Monte Verde, Chile). Human migration resembled the migration of prehistoric animals; via the Isthmus of Panama, arriving first in what is now Colombia. The indigenous people spread out across the continent with hunter-gatherer lifestyles. The human prehistory is followed by a period of sedentary settlement and the development of agriculture into various civilizations.

Selected article on prehistoric South America

Ferugliotheriidae is one of two known families in the order Gondwanatheria, an enigmatic group of extinct mammals. Gondwanatheres have been classified as a group of uncertain affinities or as members of Multituberculata, a major extinct mammalian order. The best-known representative of Ferugliotheriidae is the genus Ferugliotherium from the Late Cretaceous epoch in Argentina. A second genus, Trapalcotherium, is known from a single tooth, a first lower molariform (molar-like tooth), from a different Late Cretaceous Argentinean locality. Another genus known from a single tooth (in this case, a fourth lower premolar), Argentodites, was first described as an unrelated multituberculate, but later identified as possibly related to Ferugliotherium. Finally, a single tooth from the Paleogene of Peru, LACM 149371, perhaps a last upper molariform, may represent a related animal. Ferugliotheriids are known from isolated, low-crowned (brachydont) teeth and possibly a fragment of a lower jaw. Ferugliotherium is estimated to have weighed 70 g (2.5 oz).

Most ferugliotheriids come from the Late Cretaceous epoch (CampanianMaastrichtian ages, 84–66 million years ago, or mya) of Argentina, where they may have lived in a marshy or seashore environment. They coexisted with mammals such as dryolestoids and a variety of other animals, including dinosaurs. Ferugliotheriids may have been herbivores or omnivores. (see more...)

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Selected image

An ant preserved in Colombian amber

An ant preserved in a small, roughly 1.5 cm by 2 cm piece of Colombian amber.
Photo credit: Brocken Inaglory

Did you know?

  • ... that modern humans have been found to inhabit various countries for periods ranging from almost 200,000 years to less than 800 years?
  • ... that a fossil of Concavodonta described in 1843 has been lost?
  • ... that fossils of the extinct bivalve family Praenuculidae have been found on every continent except Antarctica?


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