Jump to content

Urbión Group

Coordinates: 42°06′N 2°18′W / 42.1°N 2.3°W / 42.1; -2.3
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GreenC bot (talk | contribs) at 00:00, 18 December 2021 (Move 2 urls. Wayback Medic 2.5). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Urbión Group
Stratigraphic range: Late Hauterivian-late Barremian
~130–121 Ma
Lake Urbíon near the summit of Pico del Urbión
TypeGeological formation
Sub-unitsPinilla de los Moros, Castrillo de la Reina, Larriba & Piedrahita de Muñó Formations
UnderliesEnciso Group
OverliesOncala Group
Lithology
PrimaryLimestone, sandstone
OtherClaystone, conglomerate
Location
Coordinates42°06′N 2°18′W / 42.1°N 2.3°W / 42.1; -2.3
Approximate paleocoordinates32°24′N 9°00′E / 32.4°N 9.0°E / 32.4; 9.0
RegionBurgos & Soria provinces, Castille and León
La Rioja
Country Spain
ExtentCameros Basin, Sierra de la Demanda
Type section
Named forPicos de Urbión
Urbión Group is located in Spain
Urbión Group
Urbión Group
Urbión Group
Urbión Group (Spain)

The Urbión Group is a geological group in Castile and León and La Rioja, Spain whose strata date back to the Early Cretaceous (late Hauterivian to late Barremian.[1] The formations of the group comprise a sequence of brown limestones in a matrix of black silt, sandstones, claystones and conglomerates deposited under terrestrial conditions, in alluvial fan and fluvial environments.

Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation.[2]

Description

The Urbión Group, named after the Picos de Urbión, comprises a sequence of brown limestones in a matrix of black silt, sandstones, claystones and conglomerates deposited under terrestrial conditions, in alluvial fan and fluvial environments.

The contact with the overlying Enciso Group is exposed at the Presa Enciso tracksite.[1][3]

Fossil content

Demandasaurus darwini

The fossil bones of Demandasaurus were recovered in the "Tenadas de los Vallejos II" quarry, located 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) southwest of the town of Salas de los Infantes (Province of Burgos, northern Spain). In geological terms, this area lies within the western Cameros Basin, which is located in the north−westernmost part of the Iberian Range, outcropping in the provinces of Burgos, Soria and La Rioja. This basin is one of the most subsident basins formed during the rift interval at the end of the Jurassic and the Early Cretaceous, which affected this part of the Iberian Peninsula.

The sediments of the Tenadas de los Vallejos II quarry belong to the Castrillo de la Reina Formation and comprise red clay beds intercalated with sheet−like sandstone channel fills that are interpreted as floodplain and fluvial channel deposits respectively. The fluvial system of the Castrillo de la Reina Formation shows a braided channel pattern with well developed and drained floodplains. This lithostratigraphic unit belongs to the fifth depositional sequence of the six ones that divide the basin. The age of the fifth depositional sequence is Late Barremian to Early Aptian as is suggested by charophyte and ostracod biostratigraphy.

The Tenadas de los Vallejos II site was discovered in 1999 during prospection work carried out by the Archaeological−Palaeontological Group of Salas de los Infantes (Colectivo Arqueológico−Paleontológico de Salas de los Infantes, CAS).

Ten caudal vertebrae, a haemal arch, two ischia and a femur, as well as bone fragments were collected in the site. Excavations were carried out during the years 2002–2004, covering a surface area of some 240 square metres (2,600 sq ft). Approximately 810 skeletal elements and bone fragments were recovered, and most of them belong to a single specimen of rebbachisaurid sauropod. The remains were found disarticulated in the same bed and in close proximity to each other. The neural arches of the vertebrae are firmly co−ossified to the centra. There are no anatomically repeated elements, and the bones correspond presumably to a single individual. The relative size of the bones suggests a medium−sized individual whose total length was approximately 10 to 12 metres (33 to 39 ft). In addition, several vertebral centra and femur fragments from a small ornithopod, two spinosaurid theropod vertebrae and a crocodile tooth were recovered from the site.[4]

Other fossils

Among others, the following fossils have been reported from the Urbión Group:[5]

Correlation

Early Cretaceous stratigraphy of Iberia
Ma Age Paleomap \ Basins Cantabrian Olanyà Cameros Maestrazgo Oliete Galve Morella South Iberian Pre-betic Lusitanian
100 Cenomanian
La Cabana Sopeira Utrillas Mosquerela Caranguejeira
Altamira Utrillas
Eguino
125 Albian Ullaga - Balmaseda Lluçà Traiguera
Monte Grande Escucha Escucha Jijona
Itxina - Miono
Aptian Valmaseda - Tellamendi Ol Gp. - Castrillo Benassal Benassal Olhos
Font En Gp. - Leza Morella/Oliete Oliete Villaroya Morella Capas
Rojas
Almargem
Patrocinio - Ernaga Senyús En Gp. - Jubela Forcall Villaroya Upper
Bedoulian
Figueira
Barremian Vega de Pas Cabó Abejar Xert Alacón Xert Huérguina Assises
Prada Artoles Collado Moutonianum Papo Seco
Rúbies Tera Gp. - Golmayo Alacón/Blesa Blesa Camarillas Mirambel
150 Hauterivian Ur Gp. - Pinilla Llacova Castellar Tera Gp. - Pinilla Villares Porto da
Calada
hiatus
Huerva Gaita
Valanginian Villaro Ur Gp. - Larriba Ped Gp. - Hortigüela
Ped Gp. - Hortigüela Ped Gp. - Piedrahita
Peñacoba Galve Miravetes
Berriasian Cab Gp. - Arcera Valdeprado hiatus Alfambra
TdL Gp. - Rupelo Arzobispo hiatus Tollo
On Gp. - Huérteles
Sierra Matute
Tithonian Lastres Tera Gp. - Magaña Higuereles Tera Gp. - Magaña Lourinhã
Arzobispo
Ágreda
Legend Major fossiliferous, oofossiliferous, ichnofossiliferous, coproliferous, minor formation
Sources


See also

References

  1. ^ a b Melero Rubio & Pérez Lorente, 2011, p.31
  2. ^ Weishampel et al., 2004, pp.556-563
  3. ^ Presa de Enciso tracksite (2PRE) at Fossilworks.org
  4. ^ Torcida et al., 2011, p.537
  5. ^ Urbión Group at Fossilworks.org

Bibliography

  • Template:Cite LSA
  • Template:Cite LSA Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  • Template:Cite LSAISBN 0-520-24209-2

Further reading

  • A. Pérez-García and X. Murelaga. 2012. Larachelus morla, gen. et sp. nov., a new member of the little-known European Early Cretaceous record of stem cryptodiran turtles. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32(6):1293-1302
  • P. Ansorena, I. Díaz Martínez, and F. Pérez Lorente. 2008. Mina Victoria (Navajún) y Valdeperillo (Cornago). Nuevos yacimientos de icnitas de dinosaurio en El Grupo de Urbión (Cuenca de Cameros. La Rioja. España) [Mina Victoria (Navajún) and Valdeperillo (Cornago). New dinosaur footprint localities in the Urbión Group (Cameros Basin. La Rioja. Spain)]. Zubía 25–26:75-96
  • F. Torcida Fernández Baldor. 2005. Los dinosaurios de Castilla y León [The dinosaurs of Castilla y León]. Patrimonio Histórico de Castilla y León 6(23):23-34
  • J. I. Ruiz Omeñaca and J. I. Canudo. 2003. Dinosaurios (Saurischia, Ornithischia) en el Barremiense (Cretácico Inferior) de la península Ibérica [Dinosaurs (Saurischia, Ornithischia) in the Barremian (Lower Cretaceous) of the Iberian peninsula]. In F. Pérez Lorente (ed.), Dinosaurios y Otros Reptiles Mesozóicos de España 269-312
  • F. Torcida Fernández, L. A. Izquierdo Montero, P. Huerta Hurtado, D. Montero Huerta, and G. Pérez Martínez. 2003. Dientes de dinosaurios (Theropoda, Sauropoda), en el Cretácico Inferior de Burgos (España) [Teeth of dinosaurs (Theropoda, Sauropoda), in the Lower Cretaceous of Burgos (Spain)]. In F. Pérez Lorente, M. M. Romero Molina & P. Rivas Carrera (eds.), Dinosaurios y Otros Reptiles Mesozoicos en España. Congreso Internacional sobre Dinosaurios y otros Reptiles Mesozoicos en España, Logroño 335-346
  • F. Pérez Lorente. 2002. La distribución de yacimientos y de tipos de huellas de dinosaurios en la Cuenca de Cameroa (La Rioja, Burgos, Soria, España) [The distribution of localities and types of dinosaur footprints in the Cameros Basin (La Rioja, Burgos, Soria, Spain)]. Zubia Monográfico 14:191-210
  • X. Pereda Suberbiola, M. Meijide, F. Torcida, J. Welle, C. Fuentes, L. A. Izquierdo, D. Montero, G. Pérez, and V. Urién. 1999. Espinas dermicas del dinosaurio anquilosaurio Polacanthus en las facies Weald de Salas de los Infantes (Burgos, España) [Dermal spines of the ankylosaurian dinosaur Polacanthus in the Weald facies of Salas de los Infantes (Burgos, Spain)]. Estudios Geológicos 55:267-272
  • F. Ortega, J. J. Moratalla, A.G. Buscalioni, J. S. Sanz, S. Jiménez and J. Valbuena. 1996. Sobre la presencia de un cocodrilo fósil (Crocodylomorpha: Neosuchia: Goniopholis sp.) en la Cuenca de Cameros (Cretácico inferior: Vadillos-San Román de Cameroa, La Rioja). Zubía 14:113-120