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 número24Las observaciones geológicas de A. Z. Helms en 1789José Sánchez Labrador (1717-1798) y la Geología del Paraguay Natural índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
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Serie correlación geológica

versão On-line ISSN 1666-9479

Resumo

PASQUALI, Ricardo C  e  TONNI, Eduardo P. The discoveries of fossil mammals during the colonial period in the present territory of Argentina. Ser. correl. geol. [online]. 2008, n.24, pp.35-43. ISSN 1666-9479.

A review of the discoveries of fossil vertebrates in the colonial period and their historical context, is carried out in this paper. The discoveries of great size fossil vertebrates during this period, were awarded to an old race of giant humans. An alternative hypothesis, attributed the presence from these enormous bony remains to the capacity that possess certain terrains of "to increase the bones excessively." The Jesuit Thomas Falkner discovers in 1760 the first remains of a glyptodont. An interesting progress in the interpretation of this type of remains was the correct identification carried out for academic of the Real Academia de la Historia of Spain of a supposed "burial of rational with a giant stature" discovered in Arrecifes in 1766. The most significant discovery during the colonial period is that of the skeleton of Megatherium americanum (Luján, 1787); it was described by Georges Cuvier, being based on a notable unpublished study of the Spanish naturalist Juan Bautista Brú de Ramón.

Palavras-chave : Argentina; Fossil mammals; Colonial period; Glyptodonts; Megatherium.

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