Kakanaut
Description
Source: Wikipédia
The Kakanaut Formation is a geological formation in Siberia, whose strata date back to the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian). Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation. The flora of the formation is relictual, containing some of the youngest remains of the extinct plant orders Bennettitales and Czekanowskiales.
Découvertes
Source: The Paleobiology Database
Site(s) correspondant(s) à cette formation: 2Kakanaut, Lake Pekulnei : Chukot - Anadyrsky 12945 16510 23626 54137 68933 86461
left bank of river, basin of Pekulnei Lake (= Lake Pekulneyskoje), SE part of Koryak upland, Chukot Autonomous AreaKakanaut River : Chukot - Anadyrsky 29157 71292 84527 86461
along banks of Kakanaut River, in SE part of Koryak Upland
Publication(s)
La base comprend 9 publication(s).
Source: The Paleobiology Database
- ↑1 2 L. A. Nessov. 1995. Dinozavri severnoi Yevrazii: Novye dannye o sostave kompleksov, ekologii i paleobiogeografii [Dinosaurs of northern Eurasia: new data about assemblages, ecology, and paleobiogeography]. Institute for Scientific Research on the Earth's Crust, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg
- ↑1 T. H. Rich. 1996. Significance of polar dinosaurs in Gondwana. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 39(3):711-717
- ↑1 A. O. Averianov and H.-D. Sues. 2007. A new troodontid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Cenomanian of Uzbekistan, with a review of troodontid records from the territories of the former Soviet Union. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27(1):87-98 (https://doi.org/10.1671/0272-4634(2007)27[87:antdtf]2.0.co;2)
- ↑1 T. H. Rich, R. A. Gangloff, and W. R. Hammer. 1997. Polar dinosaurs. Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs
- ↑1 R. A. Gangloff. 2012. Dinosaurs Under the Aurora (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tibs.2011.11.003)
- ↑1 2 A. O. Averianov and A. V. Lopatin. 2023. Dinosaurs of Russia: a review of the localities. Herald of the Russian Academy of Sciences 93(4) (https://doi.org/10.1134/S1019331623020090)
- ↑1 2 P. Godefroit, L. Golovneva, and S. Shchepetov, G. Garcia, P. Alekseev. 2009. The last polar dinosaurs: high diversity of latest Cretaceous arctic dinosaurs in Russia. Naturwissenschaften 96(4):495-501 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-008-0499-0)
- ↑1 A. O. Averianov, P. P. Skutschas, and R. Schellhorn, A. V. Lopatin, P. N. Kolosov, V. V. Kolchanov, D. D. Vitenko, D. V. Grigoriev, T. Martin. 2019. The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere. Lethaia 53:362-368 (https://doi.org/10.1111/let.12362)
- ↑1 R. Amiot, L. B. Golovneva, and P. Godefroit, J. Goedert, G. Garcia, C. Lécuyer, F. Fourel, A. B. Herman, R. A. Spicer. 2023. High-latitude dinosaur nesting strategies during the latest Cretaceous in north-eastern Russia. Diversity 15(4):565:1-13 (https://doi.org/10.3390/d15040565)
Galerie d'image
Pas d'image.
