@article{Mietto_Avanzini_Belvedere_Bernardi_Dalla Vecchia_D'Orazi Porchetti_Gianolla_Petti_2020, title={Triassic tetrapod ichnofossils from Italy: the state of the art}, volume={12}, url={https://rosa.uniroma1.it/rosa04/mediterranean_earth_sciences/article/view/17066}, DOI={10.3304/jmes.2020.17066}, abstractNote={<p>We provided here the most complete census of the Italian Triassic tetrapod ichnosites ever published based on an extensive literature review, integrated with previously unpublished data. Most ichnosites are located in the Southern Alps but track-bearing localities are also described in the Western Alps and in Northern Apennines. The stratigraphic distribution of tetrapod footprints can be framed in two macro-sets.</p> <p>A first set ranges from the late Early Triassic (Olenekian) to the Middle Triassic (Late Anisian, Illyrian) where ichnoassociations are dominated by lizard-like footprints (e.g. <em>Rhynchosauroides</em> isp.) with gradual increase through time of footprints referable to crurotarsal archosaurs (e.g. chirotheriids).</p> <p>After a hiatus ranging up to the basal part of the Carnian (basal Julian), a second set of ichnoassociations spreads the whole Late Triassic. This second set is dominated by crurotarsal footprints from its base but, in correspondence with the abrupt global climate of the Carnian Pluvial Episode, shows a marked shift to dinosaur-footprints dominance.</p>}, journal={Journal of Mediterranean Earth Sciences}, author={Mietto, Paolo and Avanzini, Marco and Belvedere, Matteo and Bernardi, Massimo and Dalla Vecchia, Fabio Marco and D'Orazi Porchetti, Simone and Gianolla, Piero and Petti, Fabio Massimo}, year={2020}, month={Sep.} }