Abstract

The first detailed geological and paleontological survey of the Santa Cruz Formation (Early–Middle Miocene; Burdigalian–early Langhian) along the Río Santa Cruz was carried out in 1887 by Carlos Ameghino, who recovered more than 2000 fossil remains. In that same year, his brother Florentino studied and reported these remains, recognizing 122 taxa, of which 110 were new species. Fourteen of these new species were of sloths (Xenarthra, Folivora). In this contribution we report and describe new fossil sloth remains recovered in recent expeditions (between 2013 and 2014) along the southern banks of the Río Santa Cruz. The new specimens were recovered from two localities: Barrancas Blancas and Segundas Barrancas Blancas. We review the taxonomic richness of fossil sloths, in comparison with other Santacrucian localities recently studied, e.g, from the Atlantic coast and from the Andean region. An analysis of the original taxa erected by Ameghino is also included. As several of the original fossils on which these taxa are based are no longer available, we explore the value of the new collection in helping resolve systematic issues, as well as considering the specimens that formed the basis for the species erected by Ameghino in 1887. Further, the degree to which W.B. Scott’s systematic decisions on the Santacrucian sloths, published in 1903 and 1904, should continue to be recognized is also assessed.

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