Special Issue dedicated to Francisco Hervé: Global tectonic processes of the ancient southwestern Gondwana margin in South America and the Antarctic Peninsula
Edited by:
- Mauricio Calderón, PhD, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile
- Paula Castillo, PhD, Universität Münster, Deutschland
- Robert Pankhurst, PhD ScD, United Kingdom
Submission status: Extended until September 30, 2025
Special Issue: Geoethics in Chile and Latin America - Contextual reflections for responsible geoscience
Edited by:
- Luisa Pinto, Universidad de Chile
- Hernán Bobadilla, Politecnico di Milano
- Tania Villaseñor, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Pablo Ramírez, Universidad de Chile
- Millarca Valenzuela, Universidad Católica del Norte
Submission status: Open between August 15, 2025, and March 31, 2026
Instituto Patagónico de Geología y Paleontología, IPGP (CCT CONICET-CENPAT), Boulevard Alte. Brown 2915, (9120) Puerto Madryn, Provincia de Chubut, Argentina Argentina
Robert B. Blodgett
Blodgett and Associates, LLC, 2821 Kingfisher Drive, Anchorage, Alaska 99502, USA United States
Montana S. Hodges
California State University Sacramento, 6000 J Street, Sacramento, California 95819, USA United States
Christopher L. Hodges
California State University Sacramento, 6000 J Street, Sacramento, California 95819, USA United States
Early Jurassic (middle Hettangian) marine gastropods from the Pogibshi Formation (Alaska) and their paleobiogeographical significance
Mariel Ferrari, Robert B. Blodgett, Montana S. Hodges, Christopher L. Hodges
Abstract
A middle Hettangian marine gastropod assemblage is reported from the Kenai Peninsula of south-central Alaska supplying new paleontological evidence of this group in Lower Jurassic rocks of North America. Pleurotomaria pogibshiensis sp. nov. is described from the middle Hettangian marine succession informally known as Pogibshi formation, being the first occurrence of the genus in the Kenai Peninsula and the oldest occurrence of the genus in present-day Alaska and North America. One species of the genus Lithotrochus, namely Lithotrochus humboldtii (von Buch), is also reported for the first time from the Kenai Peninsula. Lithotrochus has been considered as endemic to South America for a time range from the early Sinemurian to the late Pliensbachian. The newest occurrence of Lithotrochus in rocks of the Pogibshi formation extends the paleobiogeographical and chronostratigraphical distribution of the genus into the present-day Northern Hemisphere. However, the Southern Hemisphere affinities are consistent with the hypothetical interpretations (although supported both by paleobiogeographical and paleomagnetic data) that the Peninsular terrane of south-central Alaska is far-traveled and may have originated at much more southerly paleolatitudes than its present-day position. Two other Early Jurassic caenogastropods typical of the Andean region of South America and of the Tethyan epicontinental seas are described for the first time in the Pogibshi formation, and these are Pseudomelania sp. and Pictavia sp. The new gastropod assemblage reported here shows close affinities with coeval South American and European gastropod faunas, supplying new evidence to interpret their distribution during the Early Jurassic.