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The Puercan North American Stage on the geologic timescale is the first North American faunal stage of the Paleocene epoch, according to the North American Land Mammal Ages (NALMA) chronology. It spans an interval from around 66,000,000 to 63,800,000 years Before Present, lasting 2.2 million years.[1]

The Puercan is the first of four NALMAs corresponding to the Paleocene, followed by the Torrejonian, Tiffanian, and Clarkforkian. The Puercan directly follows the Lancian NALMA, which corresponds to the Maastrichtian age of the Late Cretaceous. The K-Pg boundary and K-Pg mass extinction at 66 million years ago approximates the boundary between the Lancian and Puercan. The Puercan is followed by the Torrejonian NALMA stage.[2]

Mammal fauna

Few Puercan mammals are closely related to modern North American mammals, most belong to an early adaptive radiation in the aftermath of the K-Pg mass extinction. Some are holdovers from the Cretaceous, such as a diverse array of rodent-like multituberculates alongside marsupial-like mammals (such as Peradectes and Thylacodon)[3] and cimolestans (such as Cimolestes). Other groups first appearing in North America during the Puercan include:[2]

Substages

The Puercan is considered to contain the following substages:[2]

  • Puercan 1 (Pu1): The oldest substage, starting at the first appearance of the “condylarth” Protungulatum donnae and ending at the first appearance of the periptychid Ectoconus. The marsupial-like mammal Peradectes was sometimes used to characterize the start of Puercan 1, in cases where Protungulatum was regarded as a Cretaceous mammal.[2] The earliest Peradectes fossils are now classified as Thylacodon.[3]
    • Some authors have proposed alternate names for the lowermost part of the Puercan, which may show a transition from Cretaceous to Paleocene faunas: “Mantuan” (named after Mantua Lentil site of Wyoming), “Bugcreekian” (named after the Bug Creek area of Montana), or “Puercan 0“. None of these names found widespread adoption.[2]
  • Puercan 2 (Pu2): The second substage, starting at the first appearance of Ectoconus and ending at the first appearance of the multituberculate Taeniolabis.
  • Puercan 3 (Pu3): The youngest substage, starting at the first appearance of Taeniolabis and ending at the first appearance of the periptychid Periptychus carinidens, which marks the start of the succeeding Torrejonian NALMA.

Fossil localities

The Puercan is named after the “Puerco marls” or “Puerco Formation”, historical terms for the lower part of the Nacimiento Formation in San Juan Basin, New Mexico. Some examples of strata preserving Puercan-age fossils include:[2]

References

  1. ^ Barnosky, A. D.; Holmes, M.; Kircholtes, R.; Lindsey, E.; Maguire, K. C.; Poust, A. W.; Stegner, M. A.; Sunseri, J.; Swartz, B.; Swift, J.; Villavicencio, N. A. (2014). “Prelude to the Anthropocene: Two new North American land mammal ages (NALMAs)”. The Anthropocene Review. 1 (3): 225–242. doi:10.1177/2053019614547433. S2CID 128697655.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lofgren, Donald L.; Lillegraven, Jason A.; Clemens, William A.; Gingerich, Philip D.; Williamson, Thomas E. (2004), Woodburne, Michael O. (ed.), “3. Paleocene Biochronology: The Puercan Through Clarkforkian Land Mammal Ages”, Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America, Columbia University Press, pp. 43–105, doi:10.7312/wood13040-005, ISBN 978-0-231-13040-0, JSTOR 10.7312/wood13040.9, retrieved 2026-04-07{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  3. ^ a b Williamson, Thomas E.; Brusatte, Stephen L.; Carr, Thomas D.; Weil, Anne; Standhardt, Barbara R. (2012-12-01). “The phylogeny and evolution of Cretaceous–Palaeogene metatherians: cladistic analysis and description of new early Palaeocene specimens from the Nacimiento Formation, New Mexico”. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 10 (4): 625–651. doi:10.1080/14772019.2011.631592. ISSN 1477-2019.
  4. ^ Atteberry, Madelaine R.; Eberle, Jaelyn J. (2021-04-18). “New earliest Paleocene (Puercan) periptychid ‘condylarths’ from the Great Divide Basin, Wyoming, USA”. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 19 (8): 565–593. doi:10.1080/14772019.2021.1924301. ISSN 1477-2019.