PALAIOS
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PALAIOS; September 2007; v. 22; no. 5; p. 465-475; DOI: 10.2110/palo.2005.p05-137r
© 2007 SEPM Society for Sedimentary Geology
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A VERTEBRATE NESTING SITE IN NORTHEASTERN ITALY REVEALS UNEXPECTEDLY COMPLEX BEHAVIOR FOR LATE CARNIAN REPTILES

MARCO AVANZINI*,1, FABIO M. DALLA VECCHIA2, PAOLO MIETTO3, DANIELE PIUBELLI3, NEREO PRETO3, MANUEL RIGO3 and GUIDO ROGHI4

1 Museo Tridentino di Scienze Naturali, Via Calepina, 14, 38100, Trento, Italy, and Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Padova, Via Giotto, 1, 35137, Padua, Italy
2 Museo Friulano di Storia Naturale, Via Marangoni, 39, I-33100, Udine, Italy
3 Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Padova, Via Giotto, 1, 35137, Padua, Italy
4 Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse, C.so Garibaldi, 37, 3513, Padua, Italy avanzini{at}mtsn.tn.it

We interpret 13 large subcircular or horseshoe-shaped depressions discovered in Late Triassic peritidal carbonate rocks of the Dogna Valley in Udine Province, northeastern Italy, to be reptile nests. These trace fossils show truncation of strata, elevated ridges of massive sediment, and sediment infill within the depression differing in shape and sedimentary structures from the host sediment. The palynological assemblage of a shaly interbed close to the nest layer indicates a Tuvalian age (late Carnian). Archosaurian footprints, produced possibly by aetosaurs, are on a surface 130 cm above the nest-bearing layer. The trackmakers are considered the most probable nest makers.







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