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New perspectives on lagomorph and rodent biochronology in the Anza-Borrego Desert of southern California, USA
 
Lyndon K. Murray,
Dennis R. Ruez, Jr., and 
Christopher J. Bell
 
ABSTRACT
Faunal compilations and biochronologies of the late Pliocene to early Pleistocene often include some or all of the Anza-Borrego Desert records of Lepus, Microtus with five closed triangles, Microtus meadensis, and Lasiopodomys, especially because they are among the oldest, if not the oldest, reported records for those taxa in North America. The purported Lepus specimens are represented by three partial dentaries with incomplete dentitions, each retaining the third premolar, one of which is incomplete. The arvicoline specimens include one edentulous dentary and three isolated lower first molars, one of which is incomplete. We provide a detailed review of background documentation and identify inaccuracies in taxonomic assignment, stratigraphic origin, and general curatorial documentation that affect the identity and reliability of the individual specimens and have important ramifications for Pliocene-Pleistocene biochronology. As a result of our review, we reassign all Lepus records to Leporinae, genus and species indeterminate. The specimen of Microtus with five closed triangles cannot be placed in a reliable stratigraphic context, and the edentulous jaw is diagnosable only to Arvicolinae, genus and species indeterminate. The locality that produced the Microtus meadensis specimen is stratigraphically higher and in a different section of the Anza-Borrego Desert than previously reported, lowering the age of the specimen by nearly a million years. We retain the Lasiopodomys designation although we are hesitant to accept 'Lasiopodomys' as a higher order taxon; the specimen is from reversed polarity sediments dating to between 1.77 and 1.07 Ma, making it the oldest reported specimen of the Lasiopodomys morphotype.
 
Lyndon 
K. Murray. Jackson School of Geosciences, and Vertebrate Paleontology Laboratory, Texas Natural Science Center, The University of Texas at Austin R7600, J.J. Pickle Research Campus PRC 
6, 10100 Burnet Road. Austin, Texas 78758 USA Current address:Colorado Desert District, 200 Palm Canyon Drive, Borrego 
Springs, California 92004
 USA
 Dennis R. Ruez, Jr. Department of 
Environmental Studies, One University Plaza, PAC 308, University of Illinois at 
Springfield, Springfield, Illinois 62703-5407
 Christopher J. Bell. Jackson School 
of Geosciences, Department of Geological Sciences, 1 University Station, C 1100, 
The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712-0254 USA
 
KEY WORDS:  Vallecito Creek - Fish Creek; Microtus californicus?; Microtus (= Terricola) meadensis; Lasiopodomys morphotype; Lepus cf. callotis
 
PE Article Number: 
        14.3.36ACopyright:  Society of 
Vertebrate Paleontology November 2011
 Submission: 15 June 2007. Acceptance: 27 March 2011
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