Las cáscaras de huevo de cocodrilo más antiguas de Australia

Autores/as

  • Xavier Panadés Instituto Catalán de Paleontología Miguel Crusafont image/svg+xml Autor/a
  • Ángel Galobart Museu de la Conca Dellà, Isona, Catalonia Autor/a
  • Mike Archer University of New South Wales Autor/a
  • Suzanne Hand University of New South Wales Autor/a
  • Albert Sellés Instituto Catalán de Paleontología Miguel Crusafont image/svg+xml Autor/a

Palabras clave:

Cáscaras de huevo, Mekosuchinae, Eoceno, Australia, Biología reproductiva

Resumen

Mekosuchine crocodiles were a significant clade of endemic predators
from Australia during the Cenozoic. Despite there is an abundant skeletal
fossil record of this group, there has been no fossil evidence relating to
their reproductive biology. Here, we describe Australia’s oldest crocodylian
eggshells from the early Eocene Tingamarra Local Fauna from Murgon
(Australia). These eggshells are tentatively attributed to the genus Kambara,
copious in the Tingamarra deposits and being the only crocodylian genus
described in the area.

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Referencias

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Las cáscaras de huevo de cocodrilo más antiguas de Australia. (2026). Zubía. Revista De Ciencias, 42, 161-166. https://publicacionesier.es/zubia/article/view/66

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