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Orange County, Florida paleontological sites

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Orange County, Florida paleontological sites
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The Orange County paleontological sites are assemblages of Late Pleistocene vertebrates occurring in Orange County, Florida.

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Orange County during the Miocene with most of the county as dry land.
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Florida during the Late Pleistocene 2 million to 10,000 years ago.

Age

Era: Neogene
Period: Pleistocene
Faunal stage: Rancholabrean 126,000—11,000 years ago, calculates to a period of approximately 0.115 million years.

Sites

  • Rock Spring site (Pleistocene). Time period: ~126,000—11,000 thousand years ago. Specimens were collected by H. J. Gut, J. Mann, J. Todd, G. Lintner, circa 1939.[1] The site was recorded as bone-bearing argillaceous sandstone overlaying Ocala Limestone containing macrofossils. "The bones are well mineralized, and most are unworn; frequent occurrence in association of bones from what appear to be the same individual indicates that the material has not been reworked." (Glen E. Woolfenden 1959).[2][3][4]

Coordinates: 28.7°N 81.5°W / 28.7; -81.5

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Specimens

Birds

Mammals

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Further reading

  • Kathryn A. Hoppe1, Paul L. Koch, Richard W. Carlson and S. David Webb, Tracking mammoths and mastodons: Reconstruction of migratory behavior using strontium isotope ratios.

References

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