Abstract

ABSTRACT The Coniacian-Santonian stages in western North America are characterized by a sparse fossil record. We present here the first account of dinosaur tracks from nine sites in the Frontier Formation (Coniacian-Santonian) of southwestern Montana. Tracks are largely preserved in distal alluvial facies as sandstone casts, with a single example of shallow epirelief impression interpreted as undertrack. Sandstone casts show significant relief, kinematic features (i.e., scale marks), and variable morphologies, arguing for a strong substrate control on their preservation. Putative producers are assigned to ornithopod, ankylosaurian, and theropod dinosaurs in decreasing order of abundance. This record reflects a composition similar to those of other middle Cretaceous formations in North America. Moreover, ankylosaurian tracks of the Frontier Formation represent the first known from Coniacian strata in North America. The incorporation of body and trace fossils yielded by the Frontier Formation indicates the presence of a fauna with North American endemic elements. The establishment of Coniacian-Santonian dinosaurian palaeocommunities akin to those observed in Campanian and Maastrichtian formations may reflect the trend towards provincialism attested for the end of the Mesozoic in North America.

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