Building better biochronology: New fossils and <sup>40</sup> Ar/ <sup>39</sup> Ar radioisotopic dates from Central Anatolia — Andrew Tholt (2025) | RDL Network
Building better biochronology: New fossils and <sup>40</sup> Ar/ <sup>39</sup> Ar radioisotopic dates from Central Anatolia
Article 2025 en
Authors
AT
Andrew Tholt
OB
Okşan Başoğlu
YB
Yener Bektaş
Abstract
1 min read
Türkiye’s geographic position between Europe, Asia, and Africa gives it pivotal importance for understanding the local, interregional, and intercontinental dynamics of Neogene vertebrate evolution. Although rich in vertebrate fossil deposits spanning the Middle and Late Miocene, associated geochronology has been limited by the lack of available volcanic materials that allow radioisotopic dating and geochemical correlation. As a result, calibrating mammalian evolution has been largely restricted to the semicircular application of paleomagnetic inferences combined with temporally ill-constrained and geographically remote biochronological deductions. For example, fossils from three Greek localities and one Anatolian locality assigned to the primate genus Ouranopithecus lack datable samples, leaving its ages poorly constrained. Chronological calibration based on the 40 Ar/ 39 Ar results reported here demonstrates how a fauna-focused, precision geochronology can enhance a better understanding of evolving species lineages and the ecosystems they comprise.
Daniel Rutte, Paul Randall Renne, Jonathan Morrell, Liqiang Qi, Mauricio Ayllon Unzueta, K. van Bibber, J. N. Wilson, Tim A. Becker, J. C. Batchelder, L. A. Bernstein, M. Lebois, Jay Z. James, Su-Ann Chong, Will L. Heriot, M. Wallace, Angel Marcial, Charles Johnson, Graham Woolley, Parker A. Adams
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.