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Featured researches published by Gloria Alencáster.


Geobios | 1998

Two new Lower Cretaceous rudists (Bivalvia-Hippuritacea) from the Huetamo Region; Southwestern Mexico

Gloria Alencáster; Jerjes Pantoja-Alor

Abstract The rudists Huetamia buitronae nov. gen., nov. sp. and Douvillelia skeltoni nov. gen., nov. sp. are described and proposed as new taxa. They are components of a rudist assemblage of Early Aptian age from the Huetamo region in Southwestern Mexico. The stratigraphic unit is the Comburindio Formation, consisting of a thick sequence of volcaniclastic and siliciclastic rocks interlayered with fossiliferous rich carbonate biostromes. The new genus Huetamia is a coalcomanid caprinid somewhat similar to Planocaprina in the simplicity of the pallial canals. Douvillelia is a caprotinid nearly related to Horiopleura. The other members of the rudist assemblage are Amphitriscoelus waringi Harris & Hodson , also known from the Lower Aptian of Trinidad, Venezuela, Cuba and Texas, and the recently described taxa Amphitriscoelus pluriloculata Alencaster & Pantoja-Alor , Pantojaloria sphaerica Alencaster and Caprina massei Alencaster .


Journal of Paleontology | 1996

The rudist Amphitriscoelus (Bivalvia-Hippuritacea) in the Lower Cretaceous of southwestern Mexico

Gloria Alencáster; Jerjes Pantoja-Alor

The emended descriptions of the genus Amphitriscoelus and the species A. waringi Harris and Hodson are given, and a new species is proposed ( A. pluriloculata ). These rudist bivalves are derived from a thick Lower Cretaceous sequence of carbonate sediments interlayered with siliciclastic, volcaniclastic, and volcanic rocks in southwestern Mexico, near Huetamo, in the State of Michoacan. The species belong to a recently discovered rich fauna containing other rudists, nerineid gastropods, orbitolinid foraminifers, and calcareous algae. The fauna shows a close affinity with the Amphitriscoelus fauna of northern South America. Similar assemblages are also present in Texas, Cuba and other Mexican localities. The wide distribution of the fauna allows interpretation of paleogeographic relations among all the regions as well as interpretation of paleoecological similarities. The existence of an homogeneous large faunistic province during the Early Cretaceous is suggested.


Journal of Paleontology | 2010

A New Early Campanian Rudist Fauna from San Luis Potosi in Mexico and its Taxonomic and Stratigraphic Significance

Jose Maria Pons; Enric Vicens; Yolanda Pichardo; Javier Aguilar; AngéLica Oviedo; Gloria Alencáster; Pedro García-Barrera

Abstract A rudist fauna composed of the radiolitids Potosites tristantorresi new genus, new species and Radiolites acutocostata (Adkins), the hippuritids Barrettia cf. ruseae Chubb, Torreites sanchezi (Douvillé), and Vaccinites vermunti Mac Gillavry, plagioptychids, and antillocaprinids is described from a rudist limestone succession in the central Mexican State of San Luis Potosí. The previously known species, one radiolitid from Texas and three hippuritids from the Caribbean Biogeographic Province, indicate the early Campanian. The new genus is a large radiolitid with a coiled and canaliculated left valve. New observations on R. acutocostata and V. vermunti shell morphology and variability are provided. Observations made on well preserved specimens of the latter species clarify the outer shell layer structure of the hippuritids right valve and has taxonomic implications. This is the first report of genus Torreites in Mexico and one of the northernmost records of genus Barrettia, already reported in southern Mexico from Chiapas State. This rudist limestone succession (informally ‘Temazcal limestones’ herein) is an easy-to-recognize cartographical unit; up to now it and Santonian and Turonian units have been mapped as the El Abra Formation in most available geological maps. Recognition of the successive carbonate platform intervals, between El Abra and Cardenas formations, improves the geological mapping and the understanding of the Mexican Gulf western margin evolution during the Late Cretaceous.


Journal of Paleontology | 2006

MAASTRICHTIAN INOCERAMID BIVALVES FROM CENTRAL CHIAPAS, SOUTHEASTERN MÉXICO

Gloria Alencáster; Lourdes Omaña

Abstract In central Chiapas (southeastern México) the last occurrence of inoceramid bivalves was recorded in strata of the predominantly terrigenous Ocozocoautla Formation. The inoceramids are associated with foraminifers of the Gansserina gansseri Zone (Late Campanian to Early Maastrichtian). The described species are: Cataceramus? cf. barabini (Morton, 1834), Cataceramus? cf. subcircularis (Meek, 1876), Trochoceramus aff. costaecus (Khalafova, 1966), Trochoceramus nahorianensis (Kociubynskij, 1968), and Trochoceramus tricostatus n. sp. Based on the inoceramid and foraminifer species present, the assemblage is assigned to the Early Maastrichtian. This age is important because at this level most of the typical inoceramids globally disappeared. This is the first report of the genus Trochoceramus in México, which is a good index fossil for the Early Maastrichtian and has a cosmopolitan distribution.


Journal of Paleontology | 2013

The Rudist Fauna of the Cárdenas Formation, Maastrichtian, San Luis Potosí State, Mexico

Jose Maria Pons; Enric Vicens; Angélica Oviedo; Javier Aguilar; Pedro García-Barrera; Gloria Alencáster

Abstract A Maastrichtian rudist fauna composed of the radiolitids Biradiolites aguilerae Böse, B. Cárdenasensis Böse, Huasteca ojanchalensis (Myers), Tampsia floriformis Myers, and Trechmannites rudissimus (Trechmann), the hippuritids Caribbea muellerriedi (Vermunt) and Praebarrettia sparcilirata (Whitfield) sensu lato, and the plagioptychids Coralliochama gbohemi Böse and Mitrocaprina tschoppi (Palmer) is described from the Cárdenas Formation in San Luis Potosí State, Mexico. Abundant fossil material and excellent preservation of a number of specimens allowed observation of both the internal and external shell characters and their ontogenetic and eco-phenotypic variability. The description of some hitherto insufficiently known species has been enhanced and/or completed, making easier their subsequent identification and allowing their unequivocal generic assignation. Two new genera, Huasteca and Trechmannites, are proposed for two already known species of radiolitids. The Cárdenas Formation exhibits a continuously exposed sequence in the vicinity of Cárdenas. Thus, precise stratigraphic location of all fossil localities and their rudist associations, ranging from the early to the early late Maastrichtian, has been possible.


Revista española de paleontología | 1994

Fossil assemblages, mainly foraminifers and rudists, from the Early Aptian of Southwestern México. Palaeobiogeographical consequences for the Caribbean Region

Alor Jerjes Pantoja; R. Schroeder; Antonietta Cherchi; Gloria Alencáster; Jose Maria Pons


Revista Mexicana De Ciencias Geologicas | 1998

New caprinid rudist genera Guzzella and Muellerriedia (Bivalvia-Hippuritacea) from the Albian (Cretaceous) of central Mexico

Gloria Alencáster


Archive | 2013

Biostratigraphy and paleoenvironment of the Cenomanian/Turonian boundary interval based on foraminifera from W Valles-San Luis Potosí Platform, Mexico

Lourdes Omaña; Rubén López Doncel; José Ramón Torres; Gloria Alencáster


Geobios | 2008

Albian Radiolitid rudists (Mollusca Bivalvia) from East-Central Mexico ☆

Gloria Alencáster; Pedro García-Barrera


Revista Mexicana De Ciencias Geologicas | 2009

Lower Aptian shallow-water benthic foraminiferal assemblage from the Chilacachapa range in the Guerrero-Morelos Platform, south Mexico

Lourdes Omaña; Gloria Alencáster

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Lourdes Omaña

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Pedro García-Barrera

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Rubén López Doncel

Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí

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Jose Maria Pons

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Blanca Estela Buitrón

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Celestina González-Arreola

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Delfino Hernández-Láscares

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

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Jerjes Pantoja-Alor

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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José Ramón Torres Hernández

Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí

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José Ramón Torres

Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí

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