The Freixial Formation is a Late Jurassic geologic formation with outcrops in central Portugal. The formation has produced the fossils of many vertebrates, including non-avian dinosaurs. It was deposited during the Tithonian age of the Late Jurassic.
Stratigraphy and paleoenviroment
Outcrops of the Freixial Formation are located in the Lusitanian Basin of Central Portugal. It is considered to represent the youngest Jurassic rocks in the region, and it overlies the more well-known Lourinhã Formation. The depositional environment is interpreted as comprising deltaic and distal fluvial environments. The formation was deposited during the Tithonian age, spanning around 150.8 to 146.5 million years ago. The thickest outcrops are 150 metres (490 ft) tall. It had once been considered synonymous with the Assenta Member of the Lourinha Formation, but more papers treat the Freixial Formation as a distinct unit.[2] In the south of the basin, it interfingers with rocks of the Lourinha Formation.[3][1][4]
Various large and small footprints, with smaller footprints interpreted as coming from a dryosaurid and larger footprints interpreted as coming from large, Camptosaurus-like taxa.
A brachiosauridsauropod. Freixial material originally regarded by Mannion and colleagues as indeterminate. Thus the Freixial material is referrable to Lusotitan. However Mocho and colleagues noticed depressions on the front of the posterior caudal vertebrate of the Freixial specimen,a diagnostic trait of Lusotitan.
A turiasaur. Teeth attributed to Indeterminate turiasaurians
Theropods
Various theropod teeth from the Freixial Formation have been referred to the genera Allosaurus, Torvosaurus, and Ceratosaurus on the basis of cladistic and multivariate analysis.[2] According to Mateus et al. 2024, a combination of both methods is strong enough to confidently assign teeth on the genus level.[13]
^Escaso, Fernando; Ortega, Francisco; Malafaia, Elisabete; Mocho, Pedro; Narváez, Iván; Silva, Bruno Camilo; Gasulla, José Miguel; Sanz, José Luis (2015-07-08). "New dryosaurid-bearing beds from the Upper Jurassic of Portugal". ResearchGate. Archived from the original on 2015-10-29. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
^Malafaia, Elisabete; Mocho, Pedro; Escaso, Fernando; Ortega, Francisco (2020-01-02). "A new carcharodontosaurian theropod from the Lusitanian Basin: evidence of allosauroid sympatry in the European Late Jurassic". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 40 (1) e1768106. Bibcode:2020JVPal..40E8106M. doi:10.1080/02724634.2020.1768106. ISSN0272-4634.
^Adán Pérez-García; Francisco Ortega (2014). "A new species of the turtle Hylaeochelys (Eucryptodira) outside its known geographic and stratigraphic ranges of distribution". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 13 (3): 183–188. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2013.10.009.
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