Geochemical investigation of the mixed Máriahalom vertebrate fauna at the Paleogene–Neogene
boundary in the Central Paratethys: environmental conditions and age constrain
The fossil vertebrate fauna of Máriahalom contains remains from a wide range of ecologies
including terrestrial and aquatic mammals, crocodiles, sharks, and rays among others.
All these were found mixed in mollusc-rich, shallow water, coastal deposits. The aim
of the study is to trace the origin of the fossils using their rare earth element
(REE) content and their respective ecology with stable oxygen isotopic compositions.
In addition, marine vertebrates and calcareous marine fossils were analysed for their
Sr isotope composition to provide a new age estimate for the locality. The REE content
and their distribution in the fossils indicate similar early diagenetic environments
and possible contemporaneous fossilization for the entire vertebrate assemblage. Reworked
fossils of significantly different age can be excluded. The enamel/enameloid-derived
phosphate oxygen isotope composition of selected fossil taxa fit well with previously
inferred habitats that include marine, brackish, and terrestrial environments. Notably,
the stem-pinniped Potamotherium valletoni is best interpreted as freshwater dweller
instead of marine, consistent with the sedimentology of other occurrences. Our novel
87 Sr/ 86 Sr data suggest an Aquitanian age (21.4 ± 0.5 Ma) for the Máriahalom site
that is younger than the previously proposed Late Oligocene age based on biostratigraphy
(MP28–30 European Mammal Paleogene Reference Levels). An Aquitanian age raises the
possibility that the index fossil taxon, the anthracothere mammal Microbunodon minimum
, may have vanished earlier in Western Europe than in the Central Paratethys region.