Abstract
Patterns of Late Cretaceous terrestrial vertebrate diversity across North America have been interpreted primarily in terms of biogeographic provincialism driven by latitude or coastal-inland habitat gradients. A major difficulty in determining the influence of these two gradients is the existence of some large gaps in the terrestrial fossil record, notably the ‘Bearpaw gap’ caused by a transgression of the inland Bearpaw Seaway during the latter part of the Campanian. In this context, the terrestrial fauna preserved in the Campanian deposits of the Wapiti Formation (west-central Alberta, Canada) is crucial for addressing the information deficit. Deposited at the edge of the palaeo-circumpolar region, Unit 3 of the strictly terrestrial Wapiti Formation (WU3) is coeval with the ‘Bearpaw gap’, a period when the terrestrial record from better-sampled areas elsewhere in Canada and the U.S.A. gives way to marine sediments. Here we show, based largely on evidence from the recently discovered DC (Dinosaur-Chelonian) Bonebed locality, that the diverse WU3 vertebrate fauna shares similarities with lowland to marginal marine ecosystems in the Oldman and Dinosaur Park formations which were deposited in southern Alberta prior to the Bearpaw gap. In addition, a major change in faunal composition demarcates the upper boundary of WU3, related to the disappearance of the Bearpaw Sea in Canada. Data presented here help, first and foremost, to bridge an ~1.2-million-year gap in the North American record of Campanian terrestrial vertebrates. Resemblances between the WU3 vertebrate fauna and slightly older assemblages from southern Alberta underscore the importance of determining the spatiotemporal changes in environmental factors (e.g., coastal proximity). The occurrence of one seemingly endemic lizard, together with differences in relative taxon abundance, suggest additional latitude-correlated factors, implicating both latitudinal and coastal-inland habitat gradients in driving the taxonomic composition of Late Cretaceous terrestrial faunas. • We introduce a new microvertebrate site from the late Campanian of western Canada. • A diverse non-marine fauna coeval with the Bearpaw Formation is discussed. • Vertebrate community is compared with others from the Campanian of Alberta. • Data help filling the information deficit related to the ‘Bearpaw Gap’.
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