Abstract

The sinusoidal decapod crustacean burrow Sinusichnus sinuosus is documented from the Upper Cretaceous Hidden Lake Formation of James Ross Island (Antarctica), the Upper Oligocene-Lower Miocene Naricual Formation of the Eastern Venezuela Basin, and the Middle Miocene Socorro Formation of the Falcon Basin of Western Venezuela, significantly expanding its geographical and palaeolatitudinal range. These burrows may have served for bacterial farming in relatively stressful settings characterized by deltaic progradation. Sinusichnus sinuosus seems to display a broad latitudinal range, from low latitude tropical settings (Venezuela) to intermediate latitude temperate areas (Spain and France), and high latitude cold waters (Antarctica). The appearance of S. sinuosus in the Cretaceous reveals the acquisition of more sophisticated feeding strategies by decapod crustaceans, reflecting the dominance of the Modern Evolutionary Fauna.

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