Abstract

The Maastrichtian dinosaur-bearing Chorrillo Formation in southern Patagonia (⁓50° S, Austral-Magallanes Basin, Argentina) is a pedogenically modified fluvial succession, which records sediment deposition at mid–high paleolatitudes in the Southern Hemisphere. In order to reconstruct the paleoenvironment and paleoclimates for the Chorrillo Formation, we performed a paleopedological study (abiotic components) of the unit within a well-defined sedimentological–paleontological context, and considering new paleobotanical data of the unit. Using detailed macro and micromorphological features and clay mineralogy of the paleosols, we show that the Chorrillo Formation paleosols are overall smectite-rich soils with vertic and redoximorphic features (i.e., moderately developed hydromorphic Vertisol-, calcic Vertisol-, poorly developed hydromorphic Vertisol-, Histosol-, and argillic Vertisol-like paleosols). The small-scale or high-frequency stacking of such paleosols indicates that they developed under different hydrologic conditions, and subtle differences in grain-size (parent material) and topographic relief on a distal floodplain. Conversely, the large-scale or small-frequency vertical stacking of different paleosols is linked to avulsion processes. Paleobotanical remains through the Chorrillo succession demonstrates different ecological requirements for the inhabited part of the fluvial floodplain. Abiotic and biotic climate proxies suggest that these paleosols formed under a broadly temperate–warm and seasonally humid climate. Overall, these combined data record environmental and climatic conditions during the uppermost Cretaceous, and preserve a record of Maastrichtian terrestrial conditions in the Southern Hemisphere.

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