The Alachua Formation is a Miocene geologic formation in Florida. The claystones, sandstones and phosphorites of the formation preserve many fossils of mammals, birds, reptiles and fish, among others megalodon.

Fossil content

The formation has provided the following fossils.

Mammals

Rodents

Carnivora

Ground sloths

Gomphotheres

Artiodactyls

Soricomorpha

Perissodactyls

Sirenians

Lipotyphla

Theriiformes

Birds

Reptiles

Turtles

Crocodiles

Snakes

  • Anilioides minuatus
  • Boa constrictor
  • Calamagras floridanus
  • Ogmophis pauperrimus
  • Paraoxybelis floridanus
  • Pseudocemophora antiqua
  • Pterygoboa sp.

Lizards

Amphibians

Anurans

Salamanders

Fish

Sharks

Rays

Others

See also

Bibliography

  • C. Pimiento. 2014. Carcharocles megalodon unpublished collections from Natural History Museums around the world
  • Hulbert, Richard C., Jr. (1988). (PDF). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences. 32 (3): 221–340.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Webb, S. David; MacFadden, Bruce J.; Baskin, Jon A. (May 1981). . American Journal of Science. 281 (5): 513–544. Bibcode:. doi:.
  • Hirschfeld, Sue E.; Webb, S. David (1968). (PDF). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum. 12 (5): 213–296.
  • Webb, S. David (August 1966). "A Relict Species of the Burrowing Rodent, Mylagaulus, from the Pliocene of Florida". Journal of Mammalogy. 47 (3): 401–412. doi:. JSTOR .
  • Auffenberg, Walter (1963). (PDF). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences. 7 (2): 53–97.
  • Pirkle, E. C. (December 1956). "The Hawthorne and Alachua Formations of Alachua County, Florida". Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences. 19 (4): 197–240. JSTOR .
  • White, T. E. (1942). . Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 92 (1): 1–49.
  • Simpson, George Gaylord (1930). . Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 59 (3): 1–64.