Wisconsinan Pre-Pleniglacial Biotic Change in Southeastern New Mexico
- 1 July 1993
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 40 (1), 127-133
- https://doi.org/10.1006/qres.1993.1063
Abstract
Interpretation of a 1.5-m mid- to late- Wisconsinan stratigraphic sequence containing fossil vertebrates from the Animal Fair Site in Dry Cave, Eddy County, New Mexico, suggests a progression of habitats, all cooler and moister than today. Mid-Wisconsinan semiarid, moderately warm grasslands or grassy woodlands initially were replaced by cooler, more mesic, grassy woodlands; these were followed by cool, relatively dense sagebrush-grassland-woodland with elements from mixed-coniferous forest. A minor reversal of trend toward earlier, warmer conditions appears at the top of the section. Species collected from each level were basically harmonious until climatic deterioration, documented by invasion of new biotic elements at the end of the mid-Wisconsinan, permitted incursion of taxa associated with more boreal areas; these replaced most of the local fauna but failed to dislodge several taxa with southern affinities.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fossil Evidence Bearing on Southwestern Mammalian BiogeographyJournal of Mammalogy, 1990
- Two Parapatric Species of Pocket GophersEvolution, 1967
- TWO PARAPATRIC SPECIES OF POCKET GOPHERSEvolution, 1967