Abstract
Brazilian Miocene fluvial and lacustrine deposits are mainly found in the southwestern Amazon basin in the state of Acre, where fossiliferous sections from the Middle to Late Miocene of the Solimões Formation (Fm.) emerge in riverbanks during the dry season and low river-water level periods. The Solimões Fm. is notable for its high fossil vertebrate diversity (Myliobatiformes, Siluriformes, Ceratodontiformes, Osteoglossiformes, Characiformes, Acregoliathidae, Squamata, Crocodilia, Testudines, Suliformes, Rodentia, Notoungulata, Litopterna, Astrapotheria, Proboscidea, Didelphimorphia, Pilosa, Sirenia, Cetacea, Primates, Chiroptera, and Artiodactyla) deposited in the paleo-Amazon context. This fossiliferous faunal assemblage reflects the major geological and paleoclimatic Miocene/Pliocene transition events that triggered the greatest extinction of megafauna and other groups of animals in the Paleo-Amazon and, alongside the establishment of the largest Amazon transcontinental river in South America, led to species turnover and the diversity explosion to current levels. Paleontological expeditions carried out between 1950s and 1970s at Solimões Fm. outcrops along the Acre and Upper Juruá rivers allowed the recovery of an extraordinary vertebrate paleontological collection, albeit published in fragmentary contributions. Despite supporting the largest continental fish fauna, comprising ca. 2400 valid extant species, the Amazon hydrographic system harbors a still poorly known fossil ichthyofauna. This study describes a fossil fish assemblage from the Solimões Fm. for the first time based on high accuracy data acquired by improved microCT techniques, computerized systems, and examinations of the best recent and fossil fish collections. This fish assemblage is employed to elucidate ancestral Amazonian fauna paleodiversity and paleoenvironmental context interpretations and explore the elements that led to coeval paleo-ichthyofauna from the northwestern paleo-Amazon region. Miocene species Phractocephalus (†P. acreornatus and †P. nassi) are proposed as fossil guides.
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