Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/1787
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Type: Journal article
Title: Mid-Tertiary elapid snakes (Squamata, Colubroidea) from Riversleigh, northern Australia: early steps in a continent-wide adaptive radiation
Author: Scanlon, J.
Lee, M.
Archer, M.
Citation: Geobios, 2003; 36(5):573-601
Publisher: Editions Scientifiques Medicales Elsevier
Issue Date: 2003
ISSN: 0016-6995
1777-5728
Statement of
Responsibility: 
John D. Scanlon, Michael S. Y. Lee and Michael Archer
Abstract: Vertebral and cranial remains of elapid snakes have been collected from fossil assemblages at Riversleigh, north-west Queensland, Australia; most are Miocene but one may be late Oligocene and another as young as Pliocene. The oldest specimen (probably the oldest elapid yet known anywhere) is a vertebra that can be referred provisionally to the extant taxon Laticauda (Hydrophiinae, sensu Slowinski and Keogh, 2000), implying that the basal divergences among Australasian hydrophiine lineages had occurred by the early Miocene, in contrast to most previous estimates for the age of this geographically isolated adaptive radiation. Associated vertebrae and jaw elements from a Late Miocene deposit are described as Incongruelaps iteratus nov. gen. et sp., which has a unique combination of unusual derived characters otherwise found separately in several extant hydrophiine taxa that are only distantly related. Associated vertebrae from other sites, and two parietals from a possibly Pliocene deposit, suggest the presence of several other taxa distinct from extant forms, but the amount of material (and knowledge of variation in extant taxa) is currently insufficient to diagnose these forms. The Tertiary elapids of Riversleigh thus appear to be relatively diverse taxonomically, but low in abundance and, with one exception, not referable to extant taxa below the level of Hydrophiinae. This implies that the present diversity of hydrophiine elapids (31 recognized terrestrial genera, and approximately 16 marine) represents the result of substantial extinction as well as the "cone of increasing diversity" that could be inferred from phylogenetic studies on extant forms. © 2003 Éditions scientifiques et médicales Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.
Description: Abstract published in English and French French title: Serpents élapidés (Squamata, Colubroidea) du Tertiaire moyen de Riversleigh, Nord de l’Australie : étapes précoces d’une radiation adaptive répandue sur un continent entier
DOI: 10.1016/S0016-6995(03)00056-1
Description (link): http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/622310/description#description
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0016-6995(03)00056-1
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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