Age and Paleogeographical Origin of Dominican Amber
- 27 September 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 273 (5283) , 1850-1852
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.273.5283.1850
Abstract
The age and depositional history of Dominican amber-bearing deposits have not been well constrained. Resinites of different ages exist in Hispaniola, but all of the main amberiferous deposits in the Dominican Republic (including those famous for yielding biological inclusions) were formed in a single sedimentary basin during the late Early Miocene through early Middle Miocene (15 to 20 million years ago), according to available biostratigraphic and paleogeographic data. There is little evidence for extensive reworking or redeposition, in either time or space. The brevity of the depositional interval (less than 5 million years) provides a temporal benchmark that can be used to calibrate rates of molecular evolution in amber taxa.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Venous thromboembolism deserves your attention.Critical Care, 2001
- Mammal bones in Dominican amberNature, 1996
- Tectonostratigraphic correlation of the NW Caribbean: Dominican RepublicJournal of Petroleum Geology, 1994
- DNA Sequences from a Fossil Termite in Oligo-Miocene Amber and their Phylogenetic ImplicationsScience, 1992
- An Upper Eocene Frog from the Dominican Republic and Its Implication for Caribbean BiogeographyScience, 1987
- AMBER FROM THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: ANALYSIS BY NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPYArchaeometry, 1985
- On the relative geological ages of amber and copalJournal of Natural History, 1983
- Amber with Insect and Plant Inclusions from the Dominican RepublicScience, 1960