Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Identification of a new snake fossil from the Canary Islands using micro-CT techniques

This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.

Full text: Unavailable

Question mark in circle
Preprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Postprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Published version: policy unknown

Abstract

Abstract and keywords in English and Spanish ; There are no native snakes on the Canary Islands today. The recovery of a boid vertebra from Miocene deposits on Fuertaventura suggested snakes could have been present in the past, but this single small vertebra could have reached the island from the nearby African continent in the gut of a bird. Now, however, the articulated remains of a snake have been found in a volcanic cave on Fuerteventura. The specimen is covered by a calcitic matrix and is of uncertain age. Given the fragility of the remains and the difficulty of removing the matrix, we used micro-Ct scans to make three-dimensional digital models for study. These reveal that the bones belong to a 'colubrid' snake. = En el Mioceno de las Islas Canarias se ha citado la presencia de una vértebra de boido, que por su pequeño temaño pudo haber llegado a las islas desde el cercano continente africano en el tracto digestivo de un ave. Sin embargo, en un tubo volcánico de Fuerteventura se han encontrado restos de vértebras y costillas articuladas, cubiertas por una capa de calcita y de edad incierta, que pertenecen a una seriente de la familia 'Colubridae'. Para su estudio, dadas la fragilidad de los restos y la dificultad para eliminar la calcita, se utilizó un escáner micro CT para obtener modelos digitales tridimensionales. ; Evans, S.E., Martín-González, E., Jones, M.E.H., Sánchez-Pinto, L. & García-Talavera, F.