Finds of fragmentary bird skeletons in the Middle Miocene of the northern Caucasus
- Authors: Zelenkov N.V.1
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Affiliations:
- Borissiak Paleontological Institute
- Issue: Vol 477, No 1 (2017)
- Pages: 223-226
- Section: General Biology
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/0012-4966/article/view/154160
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0012496617060072
- ID: 154160
Cite item
Abstract
The first anatomically assembled skeletal remains of Neogene birds in Russia have been found. The head and a fragment of the vertebral column of a duck (Anatidae) and a hind limb of a perching bird (Passeriformes) from the Middle Miocene of the Krasnodar Region (Tsurevsky Formation) comprise the earliest known Miocene birds from European Russia. The skull of a very small duck (smaller than any extant species of Eurasian ducks) shows a combination of morphological characters characteristic of the extant species of Tadorna and Nettapus, and could belong to a representative of the fossil genus Mioquerquedula. This discovery supports a separate generic status for small-sized middle Miocene anatids from Eurasia, and suggests that they were more primitive than the extant Anatinae.
About the authors
N. V. Zelenkov
Borissiak Paleontological Institute
Author for correspondence.
Email: nzelen@paleo.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow
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