Abstract

We describe the sedimentology, geochronology, and geochemistry of the Early Cretaceus Sao Khua Formation of the Khorat Basin, northeastern Thailand, and report a temporal range adjustment for its dinosaurian assemblage. Facies analysis and architectural studies reveal that sedimentation occurred within a floodplain setting fed by large meandering bedload-rich channels. Interfluve areas comprised freshwater lakes and emergent areas subject to pedogenic modification. Multiple paleosol types are identified and geochemistry is indicative of a stable humid subtropical climate regime. Based on radiometric dating of detrital zircons (via LA-ICP-MS), we interpret that the middle part of the Sao Khua Formation was deposited no later than 133.8 (±1.8) Ma (late Valanginian), and grain ages collected from the overlying lowermost Phu Phan Fm constrain sedimentation of the upper part of the Sao Khua Formation to no earlier than 132.4 (±2.0) Ma (early Hauterivian). In consideration of the Early Cretaceous regional tectonic framework, we interpret that youthful igneous zircon grains are derived from the adjacent South China-Vietnam South Borneo Volcanic Arc. We establish that the entombed dinosaur biota (including members of the Ornithomimosauria, Spinosauridae, Megaraptora, and Somphospondylia) is ~5–9 million years older than previously recognized and that these records are among the oldest known globally for these clades. Constraining the age of the Sao Khua Formation indicates that the shift from sauropod-dominated, ornithischian depauperate ecosystems of the Sao Khua Formation to iguanodontian-rich ecosystems of the Khok Kruat Formation occurred sometime between the early Hauterivian and Aptian on the Khorat Plateau.

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