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Science 18 September 1970:
Vol. 169. no. 3951, pp. 1197 - 1201
DOI: 10.1126/science.169.3951.1197

Articles

Triassic Tetrapods from Antarctica: Evidence for Continental Drift

David H. Elliot 1, Edwin H. Colbert 2, William J. Breed 2, James A. Jensen 3, and Jon S. Powell 4

1 Institute of Polar Studies and Department of Geology, Ohio State University, Columbus
2 Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff
3 Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
4 University of Arizona, Tucson

During the austral summer of 1969-1970 bones of Lower Triassic vertebrates were excavated from coarse quartzose sandstones forming stream channel deposits of the Fremouw Formation at Coalsack Bluff, in the Transantarctic Mountains of Antarctica. This is the first assemblage of fossil tetrapods of significant geologic age to be found on the Antarctic Continent. The fossils include labyrinthodont amphibians, presumed thecodont reptiles, and therapsid reptiles, including the definitive genus, Lystrosaurus. This genus is typical of the Lower Triassic of southern Africa, and is also found in India and China. Lystrosaurus and associated vertebrates found in Antarctica were land-living animals: therefore their presence on the South Polar Continent would seem to indicate the contiguity of Antarctica, Africa, and India in Early Triassic times.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
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Lystrosaurus Zone (Triassic) Fauna from Antarctica.
J. W. Kitching, J. W. Kitching, J. W. Collinson, D. H. Elliot, and E. H. Colbert (1972)
Science 175, 524-527
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