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Featured researches published by Tristán Simanauskas.


Alcheringa | 2002

Permian brachiopods from the Tupe Formation, San Juan Province, Precordillera, Argentina

Gabriela A. Cisterna; Tristán Simanauskas; Neil W. Archbold

The brachiopod fauna from the Tupe Formation at La Herradura Creek, located on the west flank of Perico Hill, San Juan Province, Argentina, palaeogeographically belongs to the western sector of the Paganzo basin (‘Guandacol embayment’). The stratigraphical section of the Tupe Formation at La Herradura Creek is the stratotype of the Tivertonia jachalensis-Streptorhynchus inaequiornatus biozone, was previously regarded as being of Late Carboniferous age but here is assigned to the earliest Permian (Asselian). We describe and review the biozone assemblage, which consists of Streptorhynchus inaequiornatus, Tivertonia jachalensis, Kochiproductus sp., Costatumulus sp., Coronalosia argentinensis, Tupelosia paganzoensis, Trigonotreta pericoensis, Septosyringothyris sp. aff. Septosyringothyris jaguelensis and Crurithyris? sp. This brachiopod assemblage is related to Indian and Australian Early Permian faunas and its presence in the La Herradura Creek section provides new evidence in support of an Asselian (Early Permian) age for the Tivertonia jachalensis-Streptorhynchus inaequiornatus biozone. This assemblage is also important for intra- and inter-basinal correlation because several of its characteristic species have been identified from other sections of the Paganzo basin and the Río Blanco basin. The proposed age for this biozone is consistent with the age of palynological data from slightly above the marine faunas from the stratotype locality.


Alcheringa | 2000

A palaeo-opportunistic brachiopod from the Early Permian of Argentina

Tristán Simanauskas; Gabriela A. Cisterna

Neochonetes sp. (Brachiopoda, Chonetoidea) is recorded from the middle to upper part of the early Permian Río del Peñón Formation, Río Blanco Basin, La Rioja, Argentina. It can be recognised as an r-strategist based on distribution, facies, morphological and ontogenic data which agree with the criteria proposed by Levinton and Alexander for recognising palaeo-opportunistic brachiopods. The new record of an opportunistic chonetid suggests that the group may have evolved this adaptative strategy during the late Palaeozoic.


Alcheringa | 2006

Palaeobiogeographical affinities of the Argentine Precordilleran Late Palaeozoic brachiopod faunas

Gabriela A. Cisterna; Neil W. Archbold; Tristán Simanauskas

Precordilleran Late Palaeozoic brachiopod genera considered for this palaeobiogeographical analysis belong to four faunal associations: the low diversity Early Carboniferous (Tournaisian) Protocanites scalabrinii-Azurduya chavelensis Zone; the Late Carboniferous (Bashkirian-Moscovian) Levipustula fauna, which appears in sequences associated with glacial intervals; the latest Carboniferous-earliest Permian (Gzhelian-Asselian) Rhipidomella-Micraphelia and Tuberculatella-Aseptella associations, and the Early Permian (mid to late Asselian) Tivertonia jachalensis-Streptorhynchus inaequiornatus Biozone. The brachiopod affinities of the Precordillera are compared with the biogeographical Late Palaeozoic regions previously suggested by other authors using cluster analysis. During the Bashkirian-Moscovian, the Precordilleran faunas show a high affinity with the Austral Realm because of the presence of the Levipustula faunal elements in Eastern Australia. At the same time the affinity with the central and North American Regions is very low. The Early Permian Precordilleran faunas demonstrate highest affinity with the Gondwanan Realm with several genera also linked to the Tethyan and Boreal Realms. After the Late Carboniferous glacial episodes that affected the southwestern Gondwanan margin, the Precordilleran region underwent climatic amelioration. Subsequently, the Early Permian Precordilleran brachiopod assemblages are characterized by typical cool to cold water genera widely developed in the core Gondwanan Realm, with fewer genera (such as Kochiproductus, Rhynchopora and Neochonetes) suggesting a warmer water influence. The Precordilleran faunas demonstrate an increase in brachiopod diversity from the Carboniferous to the Permian, related to water temperature changes and to the palaeogeographical evolution of the southwestern Gondwanan margin and the movement of Gondwana across the South Pole.


Alcheringa | 2002

Early Permian Jakutoproductus (Productida: Brachiopoda) from Patagonia, Argentina

Tristán Simanauskas; Neil W. Archbold

The productid brachiopod genus Jakutoproductus, dominant in the Early Permian marine faunas of northeastern Siberia, is described for the first time from the southern hemisphere. Jakutoproductus australis sp. nov. is described from the Rio Genoa Formation, Chubut Province (Patagonia), Argentina. The age of the Patagonian species is considered to be Sakmarian (Early Permian), possibly Sterlitamakian.


Revista española de paleontología | 2000

Brachiopods from the Río del Peñón Formation, Río Blanco Basin, Upper Palaeozoic of Argentina

Gabriela A. Cisterna; Tristán Simanauskas


Ameghiniana | 1996

Una nueva especies de lanipustula (productoidea, brachiopoda) del paleozoico superior de patagonia, argentina

Tristán Simanauskas


Ameghiniana | 1996

UN SUPUESTO CHONETOIDEA DEL PÉRMICO DE PATAGONIA REASIGNADO A UN GÉNERO DE PRODUCTOIDEA (BRACHIOPODA)

Tristán Simanauskas


Ameghiniana | 1991

Lissochonetes jachalensis amos, 1961. (Brachiopoda, Chonetacea). Redescripción morfológica y ontogenia

Tristán Simanauskas


Ameghiniana | 1996

BRAQUIÓPODOS (PRODUCTO IDEA) DEL PÉRMICO DE LA CUENCA TEPUEL-GENOA, CHUBUT, ARGENTINA

Tristán Simanauskas


Ameghiniana | 2014

BIOESTRATIGRAFÍA DEL PALEOZOICO SUPERIOR MARINO DE LA CUENCA TEPUEL-GENOA, PROVINCIA DEL CHUBUT, ARGENTINA

Tristán Simanauskas; Nora Sabatini

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Gabriela A. Cisterna

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Andrea F. Sterren

National University of Cordoba

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María del Milagro Vergel

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Gabriela A. Cisterna

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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