Continuity in the Use of Shallow Sites of the Salado River Basin in the Pampean Region, Argentina

Radiocarbon ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 921-933
Author(s):  
María Magdalena Frère ◽  
María Isabel González ◽  
Catriel Greco

AbstractThis article presents 24 radiocarbon dates of different materials (animal and human bones, charcoal, and pottery) recovered from hunter-gatherer-fisher archaeological sites from the Salado River microregion, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. We used a microregional design strategy, and considered the 14C dates as a group to analyze them with Bayesian statistics. This was essential to the analysis of the chronology of these shallow sites, in which the soil dynamics add the archaeological materials into the A horizon sedimentary matrix. In these types of sites, the occupational events are difficult to identify, so archaeological indicators are needed to assess the temporal contexts.

Quaternary ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Paula D. Escosteguy ◽  
Alejandro E. Fernandez ◽  
María Isabel González

The La Guillerma archaeological locality is located in the northeast sector of Buenos Aires province (Argentina). Two of its sites (LG1 and LG5), dated between ca. 1400- and 600-years BP, have a great amount of faunal remains including deer, rodents, fish and small birds that are subjected to taphonomic agents and processes (e.g., weathering, manganese, roots). Previous studies have shown osteophagic behaviour in different insects (e.g., Coleoptera, Blattodea). In this paper, we evaluate their incidence on La Guillerma faunal assemblage. We performed an analysis on marks that were identified in bone remains of various taxa and applied the criteria for identifying bone alteration by insects (i.e., by measuring each trace and comparing them with the types of insect marks described in the literature). Fifteen specimens (LG1 = 6 and LG5 = 9) exhibited different types of modifications (e.g., pits with striae in base, pits with emanating striae, striations) that are related to the action of insects. Although the proportion of affected bones is low in relation to the total sample, we highlight our study as the first detailed analysis of insect marks on archaeological bones from Argentina. We also emphasize the significance of addressing insect-produced modifications on Argentinean archaeological sites.


2018 ◽  
Vol 289 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-138
Author(s):  
José L. Prado ◽  
María T. Alberdi ◽  
Ricardo Bonini ◽  
Héctor Crispiani

Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (9) ◽  
pp. 966-966 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Carmona ◽  
M. Scandiani ◽  
A. Luque

Frogeye leaf spot of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) caused by Cercospora sojina Hara was reported to be severe from 1998 to 1999 in northwest Argentina (2). Although the disease was detected at low prevalence (5 to 25%), incidence, and severity in the Pampean Region from 2005 to 2008, no severe outbreaks have been recorded in the provinces of Córdoba, Santa Fe, and Buenos Aires. During the 2008–2009 growing season, disease spread rapidly throughout most soybean-growing areas of the Pampean Region. Disease was observed on almost all varieties of maturity group (MG) III, IV, and V. Symptoms on leaves were circular, reddish brown-to-gray spots (1 to 6 mm) and bordered by typical, narrow, reddish purple margins. Morphology of the fungi was examined on infected tissues. Conidiophores were light-to-dark brown, fasciculate, geniculate, and measured 110 to 203 μm long. Conidia were 1 to 9 septate, hyaline, elongate to fusiform, and measured 26 to 111 (47.3 ± 14.7) × 5.2 to 7.4 μm (6.1 ± 0.7). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on seedlings of a susceptible cultivar by spraying leaves of each of 80 plants at the V3 growth stage with 18 ml of a conidial suspension (3 × 104 conidia/ml) with a hand-held atomizer. Plants were covered with plastic bags and placed in a greenhouse at 28 to 30°C for 48 h. The plastic bags were removed and plants were maintained in high humidity at the same temperature. The same number of noninoculated plants was used as controls. After 10 to 12 days, all inoculated plants showed typical symptoms. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by isolating C. sojina from inoculated plants. Control plants remained healthy. Foliar lesions and morphological characteristics of the pathogen were consistent with C. sojina (1). Disease assessments were made for the middle and upper canopy from 15 arbitrarily collected plants. Soybean plants were in growth stages between R3 and R5 during the survey. Incidence (percentage of plants affected) and severity (percentage of leaf area affected with lesions) were visually estimated from each of the 30 soybean-production fields located in Monte Cristo, Alta Gracia, Jesús María, W. Escalante, Monte Buey, (10 fields, Córdoba Province), Venado Tuerto, Villa Cañás, Cristophersen, María Teresa, (12 fields, Santa Fe Province), Pergamino, Rojas, and Salto (8 fields, Buenos Aires Province). Incidence was 100% in all fields from Córdoba and Santa Fe. Incidence in Buenos Aires was 0 to 100%. Highest severity levels were quantified from fields in Córdoba (severity of 30 to 60%). Lesions also developed on stems and pods. In samples from Buenos Aires, severity levels were ≤10% in the eight soybean fields. Number of lesions per leaflet was recorded from central leaflets in samples from Monte Cristo, Alta Gracia, Venado Tuerto, and María Teresa with 20 to 55 typical lesions per leaflet. Since the disease was always more important in northwest Argentina, genetic resistance is more commonly available in varieties of MG VII to VIII, so most of the varieties of MG III, IV, and V frequently planted in Pampean Region are susceptible. This fact in combination with rainfall, warm temperatures, and high relative humidity in no-till fields during this summer have encouraged the severe outbreak of frogeye leaf spot, especially in the province of Córdoba and in some regions of Santa Fe. References: (1) D. V. Phillips. Page 20 in: Compendium of Soybean Diseases. 4th ed. The American Phytopathological Society. St. Paul, MN, 1999. (2) D. L. Ploper et al. Plant Dis. 85:801, 2001.


Zootaxa ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2005 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANCISCO J. GOIN ◽  
NATALIA ZIMICZ ◽  
MARTÍN DE LOS REYES ◽  
LEOPOLDO SOIBELZON

We describe Thylophorops lorenzinii sp. nov. (Marsupialia, Didelphidae), the largest known didelphid opossum, living or extinct. Its type specimen comes from Late Pliocene levels at Punta San Andrés, southeastern Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. With an estimated body mass between 4.8 and 7.4 kg, it obviously surpasses that of the (up to now) largest didelphid, the living Didelphis virginiana Kerr. In addition to its larger size, the new species differs from T. chapalmalensis Ameghino and T. perplanus Ameghino in that its lower molars have more labially salient hypoconids and proportionally large hypoconulids which are not antero-posteriorly compressed.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alberto L Cione ◽  
Aníbal J Figini ◽  
Eduardo P Tonni

A date of 4300 ± 90 BP for extinct megafauna in Argentina is discussed. The fossil remains come from the Guerrero Member (area) of the Luján Formation near the city of Luján, Buenos Aires Province. The age of the top of the Guerrero Member is constrained by more than 60 radiocarbon dates obtained from the overlying Río Salado Member of Luján Formation, Las Escobas Formation, and Puesto Callejón Viejo Soil, most of them older than 4300 BP. In view of its low collagen content, the 14C measurement of bone sample from Luján should not be accepted uncritically. Because of the poor bone preservation and the possible introduction of “young” contaminants that were not completely eliminated, the 14C date of 4300 ± 90 BP is not reliable. Both biostratigraphic and 14C dating evidence indicates that the date of 4300 BP for the last representative of extinct megafauna in South America is unsupported.


Author(s):  
María Isabel González ◽  
Paula D. Escosteguy ◽  
Mónica C. Salemme ◽  
M. Magdalena Frère ◽  
Celeste Weitzel ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 129-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Fucks ◽  
M.F. Pisano ◽  
R.A. Huarte ◽  
C.V. Di Lello ◽  
F. Mari ◽  
...  

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