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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 30, 2018 - Issue 5
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Articles

First report of rodents from the late Hemphillian (late Miocene) Zwiebel Channel and a revised late Neogene biostratigraphy/biochronology of the Sand Draw area of Nebraska

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Pages 636-645 | Received 09 Feb 2017, Accepted 27 Mar 2017, Published online: 07 Apr 2017
 

Abstract

A new late Hemphillian (late Miocene) rodent assemblage is reported from Zwiebel Channel, a channel cut into underlying Ash Hollow Miocene sediments along Sand Draw, Brown County, Nebraska. This locality extends the temporal range of rodent history in the Sand Draw area. A new biostratigraphic hypothesis proposes that previously described assemblages with Ogmodontomys are older than those with Ophiomys, as is the case in the Meade Basin of southwestern Kansas. Consequently, two Pliocene temporal zones are recognised. Based on a phylogenetic analysis of Ophiomys, rodent biostratigraphy, and paleomagnetic profiles, Sand Draw assemblages with Ogmodontomys are considered to have been deposited about 3.0–2.8 Ma, while those with Ophiomys were laid down between about 2.8–2.5 Ma. The 1.6 Ma date previously suggested for Ophiomys parvus from Froman Ferry, Idaho is probably too young; it is more likely that O. parvus became extinct in Idaho prior to the North American Microtus immigration event at about 2.0 Ma, inhabiting the Snake River basin until around 2.2 Ma.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dan Zwiebel for generously allowing access to the Zwiebel Channel area on his land and Shane Tucker of the Highway Salvage Paleontology Program, Nebraska State Museum and Erin McGavic, former Murray State University student, for help in the field. The comments of two anonymous reviewers are appreciated.

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