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New Mexico Geological Society Downloaded from: http://nmgs.nmt.edu/publications/guidebooks/54 Tetrapod footprints from the Middle Triassic (Perovkan-Early Anisian) Moenkopi Formation, west-central New Mexico Spencer G. Lucas, Andrew B. Heckert, and Adrian P. Hunt, 2003, pp. 241-244 in: Geology of the Zuni Plateau, Lucas, Spencer G.; Semken, Steven C.; Berglof, William; Ulmer-Scholle, Dana; [eds.], New Mexico Geological Society 54 th Annual Fall Field Conference Guidebook, 425 p. This is one of many related papers that were included in the 2003 NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebook. Annual NMGS Fall Field Conference Guidebooks Every fall since 1950, the New Mexico Geological Society (NMGS) has held an annual Fall Field Conference that explores some region of New Mexico (or surrounding states). Always well attended, these conferences provide a guidebook to participants. Besides detailed road logs, the guidebooks contain many well written, edited, and peer-reviewed geoscience papers. These books have set the national standard for geologic guidebooks and are an essential geologic reference for anyone working in or around New Mexico. Free Downloads NMGS has decided to make peer-reviewed papers from our Fall Field Conference guidebooks available for free download. Non-members will have access to guidebook papers two years after publication. Members have access to all papers. This is in keeping with our mission of promoting interest, research, and cooperation regarding geology in New Mexico. However, guidebook sales represent a significant proportion of our operating budget. Therefore, only research papers are available for download. Road logs, mini-papers, maps, stratigraphic charts, and other selected content are available only in the printed guidebooks. Copyright Information Publications of the New Mexico Geological Society, printed and electronic, are protected by the copyright laws of the United States. No material from the NMGS website, or printed and electronic publications, may be reprinted or redistributed without NMGS permission. Contact us for permission to reprint portions of any of our publications. One printed copy of any materials from the NMGS website or our print and electronic publications may be made for individual use without our permission. Teachers and students may make unlimited copies for educational use. Any other use of these materials requires explicit permission.

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New Mexico Geological Society Guidebook, 54th Field Conference, Geology of the Zuni Plateau, 2003, p. 241-244. 241 TETRAPOD FOOTPRINTS FROM THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC (PEROVKAN- EARLY ANISIAN) MOENKOPI FORMATION, WEST-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO SPENCER G. LUCAS, ANDREW B. HECKERT AND ADRIAN P. HUNT New Mexico Museum of Natural History, 1801 Mountain Rd NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104 ABSTRACT. Tetrapod footprints from a locality near Prewitt, Cibola County, New Mexico, are in the lower part of the Anton Chico Member of the Moenkopi Formation. These Perovkan age (early Anisian) footprints represent three tetrapod ichnotaxa: swimming traces, Chirotherium and Therapsipus. These New Mexican Moenkopi tracks are part of a Euaramerican Chirotherium ichnofauna of Early-Middle Triassic age. They also reaffirm that the tetrapod ichnofauna of the Moenkopi Formation, which is archosaur and dicynodont dominated, is sampling a different vertebrate fauna than the temnospondyl-dominated body fossil assemblages of the unit. INTRODUCTION Tetrapod footprints have long been known from the Triassic Moenkopi Formation in Arizona, and Peabody (1948) described them in a now classic monograph. In 1988, one of us (SGL) discovered tetrapod footprints in the Moenkopi Formation of westcentral New Mexico. Lucas and Hayden (1989, p. 194, fig. 4d) mentioned this occurrence, illustrated reptile swimming traces, and noted that the ichnofauna is dominated by a large-manus Chirotherium. Hunt and Lucas (1993) briefly described and illustrated some tracks from the locality, attributing them to a new ichnotaxon similar to Therapsipus (named elsewhere in the same volume by Hunt et al., 1993) and to swimming traces. In this paper, we provide detailed documentation of the Moenkopi tetrapod footprints from west-central New Mexico. NMMNH refers to the New Mexico Museum of Natural History, Albuquerque. LOCALITY The Moenkopi track locality is NMMNH locality 356, in the NE1/4 NW1/4 SE1/4, sec. 36, T13N, R12W, Cibola County, about 6 km south of Prewitt (Fig. 1). Stratigraphically, the track-bearing bed is a ripple-laminated to massive, fine-grained sandstone in the lower 0.5 m of the Anton Chico Member of the Moenkopi Formation. The principal track-bearing layer preserves most tetrapod tracks in convex epirelief together with nondescript invertebrate feeding traces and abundant desiccation cracks. The Anton Chico Member is of Perovkan (early Anisian) age, and a correlative of the Holbrook Member of the Moenkopi Formation in Arizona (Morales, 1987; Lucas, 1998; Lucas and Schoch, 2002). Chinle Gp. (Zuni Mts. Fm.) 10 Moenkopi Formation (Anton Chico Mbr.) San Andres Formation 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 sandstone, limy sandstone pedoturbation siltstone sandstone, crossbedded limestone conglomerate scale = 2 m NMMNH locality 356 100 km ICHNOTAXA The NMMNH collection includes 13 catalogued specimens of Moenkopi tracks from NMMNH locality 356. Three discrete tetrapod ichnotaxa are present: tetrapod swimming traces, Chirotherium and Therapsipus (Figs. 2-3). Swimming Traces Tetrapod swimming traces are the most abundant tetrapod ichnofossils at NMMNH locality 356, and have been illustrated FIGURE 1. Index map and stratigraphic section showing the distribution of Triassic strata in New Mexico and the location of NMMNH locality 356 (star on inset map). by Lucas and Hayden (1989, fig. 4) and by Hunt and Lucas (1993, fig. 23c-d). NMMNH specimens 14147, 14148, 14150, 14155 and 14157 (Fig. 3A) are characteristic. Other swim traces were not collected. The NMMNH specimens consist of straight grooves (parallel scratch marks) up to 100 mm long and 15 mm wide. There are as many as five parallel grooves on some traces.

242 LUCAS, HECKERT AND HUNT A B 20 mm NMMNH P-26037 (Figs. 2A, 3C) is a tridactyl print that is 65 mm wide and 72 mm long. We identify it as a partial manus imprint preserving digits 2, 3 and 4, which are subequal in length. These specimens show diagnostic features of Chirotherium, to which they are assigned (cf. Peabody, 1948; Haubold, 1971, 1984). With a pes length of almost 11 cm, the Chirotherium specimens from NMMNH locality 356 are medium sized, about the size of C. minus, C. barthi or C. coltoni (Peabody, 1948). However, given their poor preservation and the oversplit ichnospecies-level taxonomy of Chirotherium, we only identify the locality 356 specimens as Chirotherium sp. Therapsipus Several specimens (NMMNH P-14153, 14154, 14156 and 14161) from locality 356 are assignable to Therapsipus, a tetrapod ichnogenus described by Hunt et al. (1993) from the Holbrook Member of the Moenkopi Formation in eastern Arizona. These specimens (e.g., Figs. 2C, 3D) have pes prints that are 120-140 mm wide, 130-150 mm long and have five digits, each about 50 mm long. They are the tracks of a quadruped with a pentadactyl manus and pes of nearly equal size, with a low pace angulation and without a divergent digit 5. The digit tips are acute. NMMNH P-14153 (Fig. 3E) is a trackway of about 10 prints, and indicates a trackway width of about 380 mm, a feature that also distinguishes them from the much narrower trackways of Chirotherium. These tracks most closely resemble Therapsipus, to which they are assigned (Hunt et al., 1993). However, given their poor preservation, we only assign them to Therapsipus sp. C FIGURE 2. Outline drawings of selected tetrapod footprints from NMMNH locality 356. A. NMMNH P-26037, incomplete manus? impression of Chirotherium sp. B. NMMNH P-14146, right pes impression of Chirotherium sp. C. NMMNH P-14161, right pes impression of Therapsipus sp. Similar traces from the Moenkopi Formation in Wyoming and Utah have been interpreted as tetrapod swimming traces, and we follow this interpretation (Boyd and Loope, 1984). Clearly, they indicate subaqueous conditions at the time the traces were made. Chirotherium Two collected specimens appear to belong to the characteristic Early-Middle Triassic tetrapod ichnogenus Chirotherium. These are the tracks of pentadactyl quadrupeds with clawed digits in which the pes is much larger than the manus. NMMNH P-14146 (Figs. 2B, 3B) is a five-toed track that is 98 mm wide and 106 mm long. We identify it as a right pes impression with digit 5 well displaced postero-laterally from the row of digits 1-4. Digit 3 is longest and slightly longer than digit 4, which is longer than digit 2. DISCUSSION The presence of tetrapod tracks in the Anton Chico Member of the Moenkopi Formation is not surprising and further supports correlation of the Anton Chico Member to the Holbrook Member in Arizona, which also yields Chirotherium tracks. Indeed, there appears to be a global tetrapod ichnoassemblage characterized by tracks of Chirotherium in red beds of late Early (Olenekian = Nonesian) and early Middle (Anisian = Perovkan) Triassic age. Key localities are: 1. German Buntsandstein, where most Chirotherium tracksites are of Nonesian age, but some are of Perovkan age (e.g., Haubold, 1971, 1984; Haderer et al., 1995). 2. Buntsandstein of France, correlative to the Buntsandstein records in Germany. 3. Middle Triassic of the Italian Dolomites (Avanzini et al., 2001). 4. Early and Middle Triassic Moenkopi Formation, Arizona and Utah (Peabody, 1948). 5. The New Mexican Moenkopi record documented here. The Chirotherium ichnofauna can thus be considered a Euramerican ichnofauna of Nonesian-Perovkan age. The tetrapod ichnofauna previously reported from the Moenkopi Formation is dominated by tracks of archosaurs (Chirotherium) and of therapsids (Therapsipus) (Peabody, 1948; Hunt et al., 1993). The locality reported here is consistent with this conclu-

TETRAPOD FOOTPRINTS FROM THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC MOENKOPI FORMATION, NEW MEXICO 243 FIGURE 3. Selected tetrapod footprints from NMMNH locality 356. A. NMMNH P-14157, reptile swimming traces. B. NMMNH P-14146, right pes impression of Chirotherium sp. C. NMMNH P-26037, incomplete manus? impression of Chirotherium sp. D. NMMNH P-14161, right manus and pes impressions of Therapsipus sp. E. NMMNH P-14153, left pes impression of Therapsipus sp. Scale bars on the photographs are in cm. sion. However, the body fossil fauna of the Moenkopi Formation is temnospondyl dominated, with much less common archosaurs and no documented therapsids (Morales, 1987; Boy et al., 2001; Lucas and Schoch, 2002). This indicates that different parts of the vertebrate fauna during Moenkopi time are being sampled by the body fossil and ichnofossil records. It also suggests that dicynodont body fossils should be discovered in the Moenkopi Formation. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Pete Reser and several NMMNH volunteers assisted in the field. Martin Lockley and Kate Zeigler provided helpful reviews of the manuscript. REFERENCES Avanzini, M., Ceoloni, P., Conti, M. A., Leonardi, G., Manni, R., Mariotti, N., Mietto, P., Muraro, C., Nicosia, U., Sacchi, E., Santi, G. and Spezzamonte, M., 2001, Permian and Triassic tetrapod ichnofaunal units of northern Italy: Their potential contribution to continental biochronology: Natura Bresciana, no. 25, p. 89-107. Boy, J. A., Schoch, R. R. and Lucas, S. G., 2001, The Moenkopi Formation in east-central New Mexico: Stratigraphy and vertebrate fauna: New Mexico Geological Society, Guidebook 52, p. 103-109. Boyd, D. W. and Loope, D. B., 1984, Probable vertebrate origin for certain sole marks in Triassic red beds in Wyoming: Journal of Paleontology, v. 58, p. 467-476. Haderer, F., Demathieu, G. R. and Böttcher, R., 1995, Wirbeltier-Fährten aus dem Rötquarzit (Oberer Buntsandstein, Mittlere Trias) von Hardheim bei Wertheim/Main (Süddeitschland): Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde Serie B, no. 230, 31 p. Haubold, H., 1971, Ichnia Amphibiorum et Reptiliorum fossilium: Handbook of Paleoherpetology, v. 18, 124 p. Haubold, H., 1984, Saurierfährten. Wittenberg Lutherstadt, A. Ziemsen Verlag, 231 p. Hunt, A. P. and Lucas, S. G., 1993, Tetrapod footprints from the Middle Triassic Moenkopi Formation, west-central New Mexico: New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, Bulletin 3, p. G20. Hunt, A. P., Santucci, V. L., Lockley, M. G. and Olson, T. J., 1993, Dicynodont trackways from the Holbrook Member of the Moenkopi Formation (Middle

244 LUCAS, HECKERT AND HUNT Triassic: Anisian), Arizona, USA: New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 3, p. 213-218. Lucas, S. G., 1998, Global Triassic tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeogeography, v. 143, p. 347-384. Lucas, S.G. and Hayden, S.N., 1989, Triassic stratigraphy of west-central New Mexico: New Mexico Geological Society, Guidebook 40, p. 191-211. Lucas, S. G. and Schoch, R. R., 2002, Triassic temnospondyl biostratigraphy, biochronology and correlation of the German Buntsandstein and North American Moenkopi Formation: Lethaia, v. 35, p. 97-106. Morales, M., 1987, Terrestrial fauna and flora from the Triassic Moenkopi Formation of the southwestern United States: Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science, v. 22, p. 1-20. Peabody, F. E., 1948, Reptile and amphibian trackways from the Lower Triassic Moenkopi Formation of Arizona and Utah: University of California Publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geological Sciences, v. 27, p. 295-420.