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1 May 2013 Fossil Fish Fauna from the Uppermost Graneros Shale (Upper Cretaceous: Middle Cenomanian) in Southeastern Nebraska
Kevin R. Jansen, Kenshu Shimada, James I. Kirkland
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Abstract

The Graneros Shale was deposited in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of North America during the mid-Cenomanian (ca. 95 Ma). Vertebrate fossils are known to occur in the rock formation, but there is no detailed report collectively documenting the composition of the vertebrate fauna. In this study, we collected many remains of fossil fishes from the uppermost portion of the Graneros Shale in southeastern Nebraska. The fish fauna consists of at least 14 chondrichthyan and 10 osteichthyan taxa. The locality is characterized by the abundance of benthic taxa, indicative of a well-oxygenated, shallow marine environment. This paleoenvironmental inference based on fossil fish evidence is consistent with that made previously for the Graneros Shale based on lithological and invertebrate evidence.

Kevin R. Jansen, Kenshu Shimada, and James I. Kirkland "Fossil Fish Fauna from the Uppermost Graneros Shale (Upper Cretaceous: Middle Cenomanian) in Southeastern Nebraska," Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 115(3&4), 145-152, (1 May 2013). https://doi.org/10.1660/062.115.0308
Published: 1 May 2013
KEYWORDS
Cenomanian
fossil fishes
Paleoecology
vertebrate
Western Interior Seaway
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