Vertebrate Fossils in Fatha, Injana and Mukdadiya Formations in Iraq

Authors

  • Aqeel Abbas Al- Zubaidi Natural History Museum, University of Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq
  • Saadi Khan Jan Natural History Museum, University of Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq

Keywords:

geology, vertebrate, fossils, bones, ecosystem, Iraq

Abstract

This study showed that the rock bed units of Fatha (M. Miocene) includes mold of fish fossils imprint on marly limestone; Injana (L. Miocene) includes large femur bone of Mastodont and large number of bone remains; and review study of Mukdadiya Formations (Pliocene) showed more than 21 mamalian species such as: Mastodont, Hipparion, Gazzella, Felidae, Bovidae, Antilopini, Caprinae, Crocodilia, and others. Those vertebrate fossils bones were deposited and preserved within rock bed units of fluvial and evaporite marine environments. Paleoenvironment of fluvial ecosystem made up of food chain, which were includes producer, herbivores as a primary consumer as Mastodon, Hipparion and Gazelle, carnivores as a secondary consumer as felidea and crocodilia and omnivores as aves; and restricted marine ecosystem were includes producer, minute foraminifera and primary or secondary consumer as fish.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2023-03-30

Issue

Section

Geology

How to Cite

Vertebrate Fossils in Fatha, Injana and Mukdadiya Formations in Iraq. (2023). Iraqi Journal of Science, 57(3A), 1983-1988. https://ijs.uobaghdad.edu.iq/index.php/eijs/article/view/9950

Similar Articles

1-10 of 4324

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.