Mammals Biochronology and Paleoecology of the Euro-Mediterranean Quaternary
A special issue of Quaternary (ISSN 2571-550X).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2024) | Viewed by 17199
Special Issue Editors
Interests: paleontology; paleobiology; paleoecology; paleobiogeography; biochronology; ecomorphology; faunal turnover; taxonomy; zoological nomenclature; mammals
Interests: neogene and quaternary vertebrate faunas; taxonomy and evolution; biochronology and biostratigraphy; taphonomy; palaeobiogeography; palaeoecology; proboscidea evolution; megafauna-homo interactions; carnivoran guilds
Interests: mammal palaeontology; artiodactyla; neogene; quaternary; systematics; phylogeny; palaeoecology
2. Department of Geology, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Cerdanyola del Vallès, 08193 Barcelona, Spain
Interests: vertebrate paleontology; neuroanatomy; stable isotopes; paleoecology; mammals; taxonomy; systematics; ecology and evolution; biodiversity; phylogenetic analysis; conservation ecology
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The Quaternary is a time of fundamental climatic shifts and environmental changes that highlight the need for a thorough investigation from different perspectives and at multiple scales to disentangle the factors involved in the response of the biota. In turn, recognizing bioevents (e.g., the dispersal or extinction of species) and relating them to geological time is crucial for correlating changes between distant geographic regions. The mammalian fossil record is widely used for biochronological correlations and palaeoecological reconstructions of the Euro-Mediterranean region and represents an especially important proxy for inferring the timing, pattern, and paleoenvironmental context of the earliest events of hominin dispersal into Europe. Conducting research on the response of mammals to the paleoenvironmental changes of the Euro-Mediterranean Quaternary and developing a consistent and precise pan-European biochronological framework both require the thoughtful integration of data and schemes from different geographic areas. This is especially relevant considering the wealth of new discoveries made in the last few decades and the semantic and conceptual differences in the use of biochronological terms like Mammal Ages (e.g., Villafranchian and Galerian).
This Special Issue will aim to gather contributions derived from the homonymous session organized at the XXI INQUA conference (Rome, July 14th–20th 2023), featuring research on the evolution of mammal communities and ecosystems and the identification and definition of bioevents, including taxonomic studies, and the discussion of their broader biochronological and palaeoecological significance.
Dr. Alessio Iannucci
Dr. George Konidaris
Prof. Dr. Dimitris S. Kostopoulos
Dr. Joan Madurell Malapeira
Prof. Dr. Raffaele Sardella
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- biochronology
- bioevent
- paleoecology
- paleobiogeography
- dispersal
- faunal correlation
- faunal turnover
- mammals
- Europe
- Mediterranean
- Pleistocene
- quaternary
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