Large- and small-mammal distribution patterns and chronostratigraphic boundaries from the Late Pliocene to the Middle Pleistocene of the Italian peninsula.
Over the last 50 years the studies on terrestrial mammals of the Italian peninsula have provided a large volume of data and a more
detailed knowledge of faunal events during the Late Pliocene and Quaternary. Moreover geological, sedimentological, palynological and
magnetostratigraphical investigations on the Pliocene–Pleistocene continental sedimentary basins have yielded the possibility of a
detailed calibration of the faunal successions. Thus, palaeontologists have been able to reconstruct faunal sequences and to propose
biochronological scales based on large and small mammals, respectively. In the present contribution an integration of the two
biochronological scales is proposed, and the successions of bioevents are carefully compared. This integrated approach allows the
constraint of the sequence of large- and small-mammal events in a more reliable way, and therefore it results in a more detailed and
consistent chronological use of mammalian assemblages. Particular attention is paid to the faunal changes that correspond to the
Middle–Late Pliocene (2.6 ma), Pliocene–Pleistocene (1.8 ma) and Early–Middle Pleistocene (Gauss–Matuyama transition) chronostratigraphical
boundaries
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