Gian Luigi Pillola
University of Cagliari
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gian Luigi Pillola.
Ichnos-an International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces | 2018
Lorenzo Marchetti; Fabio Massimo Petti; Daniel Zoboli; Gian Luigi Pillola
ABSTRACT A new study of the ichnotaxonomy and palaeoecology of the Late Pennsylvanian San Giorgio Basins trace fossils was carried out. The tetrapod tracks were attributed to Batrachichnus salamandroides and to indet. tracks with a possible small temnospondyl and/or lepospondyl affinity. The invertebrate trace fossils include locomotion traces (Diplichnites isp.), grazing traces (Cochlichnus anguineus), and feeding structures (Treptichnus bifurcus, Treptichnus isp.). The trace fossils were evaluated by means of ichnofacies, highlighting a transitional Scoyenia-Mermia ichnofacies, typical of Carboniferous freshwater settings. The trace fossil co-occurrence and taphonomy was utilized to give a new interpretation of the fossil-bearing lithofacies, which are dolomitic mudstones-fine sandstones expression of marginal lacustrine environments repeatedly subject to flooding (three different ichnoassociations highlight different bathymetry/emersion). This is the oldest continental ichnoassociation of Italy, and its moderately high diversity and complexity suggest further study of this important Carboniferous trace fossil locality.
Gff | 2010
María Eugenia Dies Álvarez; A. W. A. Rushton; Rodolfo Gozalo; Gian Luigi Pillola; Eladio Liñán; Per Ahlberg
A revision of paradoxidid trilobites reveals that previous identifications of specimens from Sardinia and Spain as the Nordic trilobite species Paradoxides brachyrhachis Linnarsson, 1883, are mistaken. The southern species, occurring also in France, is here referred to Eccaparadoxides mediterraneus (Pompeckj, 1901). Main differences are seen in the preocular field, pleural furrow and pygidium. The species P. brachyrhachis is referred with question to the genus Mawddachites Fletcher 2007.
Journal of Systematic Palaeontology | 2018
Bastien Mennecart; Daniel Zoboli; Loïc Costeur; Gian Luigi Pillola
Sardomeryx oschiriensis is the oldest insular ruminant known (Burdigalian of Oschiri, Sardinia, Italy). Only two isolated upper dentitions compose the type material. The first phylogenetic hypothesis proposed Sardomeryx to be closely related to the Giraffoidea and especially the Late Miocene Sardinian derived giraffid Umbrotherium. Description of new specimens from Laerru (Burdigalian, Sardinia, Italy), including lower teeth and decidual premolars, leads to a reinterpretation of the phylogenetic position of Sardomeryx and of the early evolutionary history of the Giraffomorpha. Based on our phylogenetic hypothesis, Sardomeryx is nested within the Giraffomorpha as a basal Palaeomerycoidea. Sardomeryx may have originated from south-western Europe before the separation of the Corsica-Sardinia Block during the earliest Miocene. The enigmatic latest Oligocene Bedenomeryx from the south-west France is also considered as a basal (and the most ancient) member of the Palaeomerycoidea. Including Bedenomeryx in the Palaeomerycoidea lineage would place the origin of the Giraffoidea, the sister family of Palaeomerycoidea, within the Oligocene. Bedenomeryx is characteristic of arid south-western France, directly echoing the advanced condition observed in the Sardomeryx dentition (e.g. high crowned teeth, absence of the external postprotocristid on lower molar, reduction in length of the premolar row) typical for insular ruminants in arid environments.
Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research In Paleontology and Stratigraphy) | 2017
Daniel Zoboli; Gian Luigi Pillola
A mammal assemblage discovered in a fissure filling located in a quarry near the village of Samatzai (Campidano, southern Sardinia, Italy) is described herein. The following taxa are reported: Microtus ( Tyrrhenicola ) henseli , Rhagamys orthodon , Prolagus sardus , Asoriculus sp., Cynotherium sardous and Praemegaceros ( Nesoleipoceros ) cazioti . The assemblage (“ Microtus ( Tyrrhenicola )” Faunal Complex, Dragonara Faunal Subcomplex) infers a Late Pleistocene age and represents the richest deposit of Quaternary mammals reported in the central Campidano area.
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2006
Arnaud Botquelen; Rémy Gourvennec; Alfredo Loi; Gian Luigi Pillola; F Leone
Archive | 1995
Gian Luigi Pillola; F Leone; Alfredo Loi
Revue de Micropaléontologie | 2008
Gian Luigi Pillola; Sergio Piras; Enrico Serpagli
Quaternary International | 2012
M.R. Palombo; Marco Ferretti; Gian Luigi Pillola; L. Chiappini
Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences. Série 2. Sciences de la terre et des planètes | 1996
Alfredo Loi; Gian Luigi Pillola; F Leone
Archive | 1998
Gian Luigi Pillola; F Leone; Alfredo Loi