Abstract
The Botucatu Formation (Paraná Basin, Brazil and the southern neighboring countries) comprises one of the richest tetrapod ichnological deposits of the Lower Cretaceous in South America. The ichnofossils are found in reddish sandstones lithofacies -interpreted to be dune and interdune deposits. The sandstones of Botucatu Formation originally covered a surface estimated in at least 1,300,000 km2, the largest known fossil desert in the Earth's history. The distribution area of the Botucatu paleodesert presents one of the world's largest megatracksites. The tetrapod ichnofauna from the Botucatu Formation comprises minor bipedal dinosaur tracks (almost all attributable to theropods, with one exception, a doubt ornithopod trackway) along with many thousands of footprints of early mammals, and a single trackway of a lacertiform reptile. Among the bipedal dinosaur footprints, the most common and typical are considered theropod tracks, with long strides and high step angle and always with an acuminate termination. These trackways are straight and very narrow, with long strides and step angles showing high values. The footprints have a relatively large and very wide III digit and small, short, pointed, bladelike outer digits. The most special characteristic is that the II digit is longer and more important than the IV digit. Because of this morphology, the general outline of the footprint often reminds that of a waterdrop and, although it is structurally tridactyl, it usually looks like functionally monodactylous. These tracks are herein assigned to small theropods adapted to desert life with a prevalently cursorial gait, probably ancestors of clades such as noasaurs and velocisaurs. Due its unique morphological aspects it is defined a new ichnogenus and ichnospecies, Farlowichnus rapidus new ichnogen., new ichnosp.
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