The Chinchilla Local Fauna: an exceptionally rich and well-preserved Pliocene vertebrate assemblage from fluviatile deposits of south-eastern Queensland, Australia
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Louys, Julien
Price, Gilbert
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Polska Akademia Nauk (Polish Academy of Sciences)
Abstract
The Chinchilla Sand is a formally defined stratigraphic sequence of Pliocene fluviatile deposits that
comprise interbedded clays, sands, and conglomerates located in the western Darling Downs, south-east
Queensland, Australia. Vertebrate fossils from the deposits are referred to as the Chinchilla Local Fauna.
Despite over a century and a half of collection and study, uncertainties concerning the taxa in the Chinchilla
Local Fauna continue, largely from the absence of stratigraphically controlled excavations, lost or destroyed
specimens, and poorly documented provenance data. Here we present a detailed and updated study of the
vertebrate fauna from this site. The Pliocene vertebrate assemblage is represented by at least 63 taxa in 31
families. The Chinchilla Local Fauna is Australia’s largest, richest and best preserved Pliocene vertebrate
locality, and is eminently suited for palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental investigations of the late
Pliocene.
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Acta Palaeontologica Polonica
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