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Gračanica paleontological site

Gračanica Site is a paleontological site located within an open coal mine near Bugojno, Bosnia and Herzegovina with fossils dating to the middle Miocene. There are a large number of groups found at the site including mammals, reptiles, fish, and invertebrates though mammals are only found at the lower layers of the coal mine. A transition from a swampy woodland environment to a more open lake environment is preserved at the site. By the upper layers of the site, the area represents a part of the Bugojno palaeolake, a lake that was once a part of the Dinarides Lake System.

History
Coal has been collected from the pit since 1938 though it didn't become an opencast mine till 1977. Before paleontological work had begun at the site, the presence of large mammal fossils had been known due to chance finds by miners at the site. To this day, most large mammal fossil at the site are found by them. Paleontological collection of the mine started in 2007 where a team with O. Mandic along with a number of small mammal specialists to screen wash the sediment though not much turned up in their time there. Fieldwork on the section wouldn't start till 2008 where a team with O. Mandic, M. Mandic, de Leeuw and W. Krijgsman present marked two sections to conduct research. == Description ==
Description
The site is found within the Gračanica open cast mine located around 10 km south-southeast of the city of Bugojno, with the sediment being a part of the large, intramountainous Bugojno Basin. It has a thickness of around 40 m with the lower 20 being the strata that contain the brown coal and dark lignites collected by the company “Gračanica”. Along with the dark lignites, the mammal fossils of the site along with a crocodilian come from these lower layers. The upper section, where the other animal and plant fossils are found, lacks lignites and is made up of light-colored sandstones, siltstones, marls, and limestones. At the site, this cycle lays on the Permian and Triassic basement of the area. Throughout the section, there are changes in the transgressive lacustrine successions represented by both lateral and vertical facies. == Dating ==
Dating
The Gračanica site dated to the middle Miocene though in the past there had been problems getting the exact age of the material . Originally, the mollusk fauna suggests an age of less than 15 million years; the, at the time, small amount of mammal fossils point towards a slightly later date of during MN4-6 (16.6-13.7 Ma). On top of that, the suid fauna of the site suggested an even earlier date of 14.0 and 13.7 Ma. Paleoclimate proxies also suggest a different age of the site being between 14.8 and 13.8 Ma. Since the originally studies, more small mammals have been found suggesting a dates of between 15.8─15.4 Ma. it can be determined that the sediment was deposited over a range of 200 thousand years. == Paleobiota ==
Paleobiota
Actinopterygii Amphibia Artiodactyla Carnivora Crocodylia Crustacea Insecta Mollusca Perissodactyla Porifera Proboscidea Rodentia Squamata Angiospermae Chrysophyta Charophyta Chlorophyta Diatoms Gymnospermae Pteridophyta == Paleoenvironment ==
Paleoenvironment
The Gračanica site is made up of sediments deposits in what was once the Bugojno palaeolake, a part of the Dinarides Lake System. The lake measured around 718 m long and 260 m wide, with the lake being at an altitude of 616 m a.s.l. The water would have came from the Zaneski stream along with direct precipitation and the outflow of the intramontane basin would have gone to the River Vrbas. Throughout the sites, there is a deepening of the body of water with the lowermost section being a woody-lowland swamp (0-8 m) that over time became a marsh (8-20.5 m) and eventually an open lake (20.5–39.5 m). The climate would have been subtropical to humid with annual mean temperatures most likely ranging from 15-18°C with an annual precipitation of between 8-12 cm. These temperatures are consistent with others measured in the Central Paratethys during the late Egerian and early Badenian. The forest preserved by the site is most similar to mixed mesophytic forests seen today in places like the southeastern United States and Asia. == References ==
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