Аннотации:
© 2019 Elsevier B.V. Quadruped trackways of large pentadactyl footprints are reported from the Middle Triassic (Anisian-Ladinian) Cerro de las Cabras Formation of the Cuyo Basin, Mendoza Province, central-western Argentina. The track-bearing strata are interpreted as deposited by sheetfloods in a mixed flat where water was ponded in a playa-lake setting. The vertebrate trackways are assigned to the ichnogenus Pentasauropus, originally described from the Upper Triassic Elliot Formation of South Africa, based on the presence of five equally spaced digit imprints that form an anteriorly convex broad arcuate pattern. A new ichnospecies, Pentasauropus argentinae nov. isp., is erected for the Argentinian material because of the distinct heteropody, inward rotation of the pes and outward rotation of the manus imprints, and the presence of palm/sole traces, and the diagnosis of the ichnogenus is emended. Pes/manus set arrangement and trackway patterns indicate a sprawling limbed trackmaker with an abducted posture for the fore-limbs and at least a semi-abducted posture for the hindlimbs, which suggests that the trackmaker was a kannemeyeriiform dicynodont. Associated archosaur ichnotaxa (Chirotherium barthii, Chirotherium cf. C. rex, Isochirotherium cf. I. coureli) point to a Middle Triassic age for the trackway-bearing strata in agreement with bracketing geochronological data. The rare occurrence of the therapsid footprint Dicynodontipus isp. is also compatible with the inferred age. The moderate abundance and oldest occurrence of Pentasauropus from three areas in Argentina suggest an origin for this ichnogenus in southwestern Gondwana, and presumably this area was a faunal exchange gate between southeastern and southwestern Gondwana and south Gondwana and North America.