Mesozoic Biological Events and Ecosystems in East Asia

Mesozoic Biological Events and Ecosystems in East Asia covers a wide range of topics, encompassing palaeoenvironments, palaeoecosystems and important vertebrate, invertebrate and plant fossils, some found in amber with excellent preservation of delicate morphological features. Fifty-three authors from a number of different disciplines – geochronology, palaeontology, stratigraphy, sedimentology, tectonics and geochemistry – contribute to the 18 articles in the volume.
Well-preserved fossils and rocks continue to be found from marine and terrestrial sediments across East Asia. Over some years, the palaeontological and geological evidence discovered from this region has significantly improved our understanding of Mesozoic environments. In discussing feathered dinosaurs, primitive birds, early mammals, diverse insects, amber inclusions, the oldest-known flowers and research utilizing new, advanced methods, this volume explores Earth's history in even greater detail. What other exciting discoveries are waiting to be unveiled in the future?
Jehol fossils from the Jiaolai Basin of Shandong, North China: review and new perspectives
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Published:July 29, 2022
Abstract
Starting in the early 1950s, palaeontologists began to discover a wide range of Cretaceous terrestrial fossils in the Laiyang, Qingshan and Wangshi groups of the Jiaolai Basin, which resides in the eastern part of the Shandong Peninsula of northern China. Significant specimens from these deposits include various dinosaur eggs, footprints and fossils, including hadrosauroids, tyrannosaurids and ankylosaurids. These expanded the understanding of evolution, biodiversity and palaeoecology in East Asia. While many examples of the Jehol Biota from this area are not well constrained in terms of their stratigraphy and geochronology, previous studies have generally suggested that fossils from this region represent the second or third phase of Jehol Biota development. This paper reviews fossils, stratigraphic correlations, tectonic history and age estimates for the less well-studied outcrops of the Shandong Peninsula that host the Jehol Biota. We report three new 40Ar/39Ar ages for the Qingshang Group and discuss how these somewhat imprecise ages still constrain chronostratigraphic interpretation for the fossil-rich units.
- absolute age
- Ankylosauria
- Ar/Ar
- Archosauria
- Arthropoda
- Asia
- Ceratopsia
- China
- Chordata
- Coelurosauria
- Cretaceous
- Diapsida
- dinosaurs
- eggs
- Far East
- fossils
- Hadrosauridae
- Insecta
- Mandibulata
- Mesozoic
- microfossils
- Ornithischia
- Ornithopoda
- Pterosauria
- Reptilia
- Saurischia
- Shandong China
- Shandong Peninsula
- Sulu Terrane
- Tancheng-Lujiang Fault
- Tetrapoda
- Theropoda
- tracks
- Tyrannosauridae
- Tyrannosaurus
- Vertebrata
- Jiaolai Basin
- Jehol biota
- Qingshang Group