12 results on '"Casadío, Silvio A."'
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2. Taphonomy and sequence stratigraphic significance of oyster-dominated concentrations from the San Julián formation, Oligocene of Patagonia, Argentina
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Parras, Ana and Casadío, Silvio
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MARINE sediments , *OCEAN bottom , *SEDIMENTS , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys - Abstract
Abstract: Oligocene siliciclastic shallow marine sediments of the San Julián Formation in southeastern Patagonia (Argentina) are interpreted as a deepening–shallowing cycle that represents a depositional sequence in which lowstand system tract deposits are not present. There are no significant compositional differences in the assemblages, all are dominated by the large oyster Crassostrea? hatcheri. However, four types of shell concentrations can be distinguished by differences in stratigraphic, sedimentologic, palaeoecological, and taphonomic features. These four types of shell concentrations are found in distinct positions within the depositional sequence: as a transgressive lag at the early phase of the transgressive system tract (TST), at the top of the TST, at the early phase of the high stand system tract (HST), and at the top of the HST. Oyster-dominated concentration in the early TST has a distinct basal erosional surface (ravinement surface), and the shells are completely disarticulated, fragmented and abraded with a chaotic orientation, suggesting reworking of previous deposited sediments, and deposition in a shoreface environment. Concentration at the end of the TST is a hiatal concentration formed from continued sea-level rise in the context of backlap deposition. It is characterized by high percentages of articulated oysters in life position, with high grades of bioerosion and encrustation. This concentration was accumulated during times of high rates of production of biogenic hard parts and low sedimentation rates, below fair weather wave base in an offshore environment. Concentrations over the maximum flooding surface in the early HST are in situ event concentrations (Census assemblages), characterized by high percentages of individual articulated adult specimens and clusters of juvenile oysters with well-developed endolithic bioerosion and encrustation, formed by rapid sedimentation in an offshore to lower shoreface environment. Concentrations at the top of the HST are multiple-event concentrations formed by densely fossiliferous deposits with completely disarticulated, convex-up oysters with low grades of abrasion and high grades of bioerosion and encrustation, intercalated with repeating beds with benthic colonizers. They were originated below fair weather wave base, in an offshore to lower shoreface environment, by sporadic high-energy events. The basic pattern of condensed deposits formed in the context of onlap, backlap, downlap, and toplap can be applied to the studied deposits. However, some differences are recorded, and these are attributed mostly to differences in the basin characteristics and to the high productivity and high preservation potential of large, thick-shelled oysters. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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3. CORRELATION OF MIDDLE TO UPPER EOCENE UNITS FROM HIGH LATITUDE SOUTHWESTERN ATLANTIC SITES.
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AMENÁBAR, CECILIA RODRÍGUEZ, GUERSTEIN, G. RAQUEL, ALPERIN, MARTA, DANERS, GLORIA, CASADÍO, SILVIO, and RAISING, MARTÍN RoDRÍGUEZ
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EOCENE Epoch , *NANNOFOSSILS , *WATER depth , *PALEOCEANOGRAPHY - Abstract
To understand the important significant climatic and paleoceanographic changes occurred in the Southern Hemisphere during the Paleogene, and especially those related to the opening of the Drake Passage, is essential to correlate the Eocene lithostratigraphic units in areas adjacent to this passage, such as those from the Austral-Magallanes and James Ross basins, to the north and to the south, respectively. For many years, there was no correlation between these units due to the absence of reliable chronostratigraphic and biostratigraphic information. Recently, other authors published U/Pb data for the Austral-Magallanes Basin and introduced important modifications to the previous stratigraphic scheme. Subsequently, due to reinterpretating the available isotope data together with U/Pb ages, the chronostratigraphic model has modified again, also including the James Ross Basin. In light of an updated quantitative dinoflagellate cyst dataset from the units adjacent to the Drake Passage, we performed a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to discuss the correlation between the studied sections. The PCA groups assemblages with a high contribution of Antarctic taxa (e.g., Enneadocysta dictyostila, Deflandrea antarctica) containing in the Upper Member of the Río Turbio Formation (lower part), Man Aike, Leticia, and La Meseta formations, being Bartonian in age. The other group joined assemblages with younger ages, Priabonian, dominated by Antarctic species (Vozzhennikovia-Spinidinium) and cosmopolitan taxa, corresponding to the Upper Member of the Río Turbio Formation (upper part). This study reinforces the most recent chronostratigraphic proposal and proves the biostratigraphic useful of some taxa for sites near the Drake Passage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. First Jurassic brittlestar from Neuquén Basin, Argentina.
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CAMPETELLA, DÉBORA M., PALÓPOLO, EVANGELINA E., RODRÍGUEZ, MAXIMILIANO N., THUY, BEN, PONCE, JUAN J., CARMONA, NOELIA B., and CASADÍO, SILVIO
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MARINE transgression , *TAPHONOMY , *SANDSTONE , *EOCENE Epoch , *LEVEES , *MIOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Articulated fossil ophiuroids from South America were reported for the Devonian, Cretaceous, Eocene, and Miocene. Here we report the first Jurassic record of an articulated ophiuroid from the Sierra Chacaicó Formation (early Pliensbachian-Sinemurian) in Neuquén Basin, Argentina, and discuss the taphonomic processes that allowed its preservation. The Sierra Chacaicó Formation represents the onset of the Early Jurassic extensive marine transgression in the basin. The basal section comprises shoreface and offshore Gilbert-type delta system, which was affected by hyperpycnal discharges. The middle and upper sections are represented by offshore deposits, affected by storms and eroded by hyperpycnal channel-levee systems. The ophiuroid specimen was found in levels of massive, fine, tuffaceous sandstone beds and covered by coarse sandstone containing a large amount of plant debris and organic matter. It was preserved articulated, with a complete disc and almost complete arms. Based on the microstructure of the spine-bearing lateral arm plates, the ophiuroid is assigned to Sinosura, an extinct genus of the family Ophioleucidae, widespread in the Lower Jurassic deposits of Europe but previously unknown from other parts of the world. The posture of the ophiuroid, with one arm curved distally and extended in one direction and the other four arms symmetrically oriented in the opposite direction, suggests a walking or escape movement frozen in time. This implies that the ophiuroid was buried alive by sediment thick enough to prevent successful escape. The taphonomic and sedimentologic evidence indicates that the fossil material was found in hyperpycnal deposits accumulated in offshore positions, which carried a high concentration of sediment in suspension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. First Jurassic brittlestar from Neuquén Basin, Argentina.
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CAMPETELLA, DÉBORA M., PALÓPOLO, EVANGELINA E., RODRÍGUEZ, MAXIMILIANO N., THUY, BEN, PONCE, JUAN J., CARMONA, NOELIA B., and CASADÍO, SILVIO
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MARINE transgression , *TAPHONOMY , *SANDSTONE , *EOCENE Epoch , *LEVEES , *MIOCENE Epoch , *SEDIMENTS - Abstract
Articulated fossil ophiuroids from South America were reported for the Devonian, Cretaceous, Eocene, and Miocene. Here we report the first Jurassic record of an articulated ophiuroid from the Sierra Chacaicó Formation (early Pliensbachian-Sinemurian) in Neuquén Basin, Argentina, and discuss the taphonomic processes that allowed its preservation. The Sierra Chacaicó Formation represents the onset of the Early Jurassic extensive marine transgression in the basin. The basal section comprises shoreface and offshore Gilbert-type delta system, which was affected by hyperpycnal discharges. The middle and upper sections are represented by offshore deposits, affected by storms and eroded by hyperpycnal channel-levee systems. The ophiuroid specimen was found in levels of massive, fine, tuffaceous sandstone beds and covered by coarse sandstone containing a large amount of plant debris and organic matter. It was preserved articulated, with a complete disc and almost complete arms. Based on the microstructure of the spine-bearing lateral arm plates, the ophiuroid is assigned to Sinosura, an extinct genus of the family Ophioleucidae, widespread in the Lower Jurassic deposits of Europe but previously unknown from other parts of the world. The posture of the ophiuroid, with one arm curved distally and extended in one direction and the other four arms symmetrically oriented in the opposite direction, suggests a walking or escape movement frozen in time. This implies that the ophiuroid was buried alive by sediment thick enough to prevent successful escape. The taphonomic and sedimentologic evidence indicates that the fossil material was found in hyperpycnal deposits accumulated in offshore positions, which carried a high concentration of sediment in suspension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Eocene palaeoenvironments and palaeoceanography of areas adjacent to the Drake Passage: insights from dinoflagellate cyst analysis.
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Amenábar, Cecilia R., Guerstein, G. Raquel, Alperin, Marta I., Palma, Elbio D., Casadío, Silvio, Belgaburo, Alexandra, Rodríguez Raising, Martín, and Coxall, Helen
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DINOFLAGELLATE cysts , *EOCENE Epoch , *OCEAN circulation , *OCEAN currents , *PALEOGENE , *URANIUM-lead dating , *OCEAN temperature - Abstract
A proper understanding of the palaeoceanographic evolution of the Drake Passage during the Palaeogene is hampered by the lack of precise tools to date and correlate the sedimentary units of areas adjacent to the region. In this work, considering recently published radiometric U–Pb dates, we revised the age of a previous dinoflagellate zones for the middle to upper Eocene units of the Austral–Magallanes Basin. The quantitative analysis of middle to late Eocene dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from different localities close to the Drake Passage allowed us to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental conditions and the possible surface ocean currents during this time in the area. Assemblages dated between 41.3 and 38.1 Ma represent relatively warm waters in inner shelf settings, while those ranged between 36 and 35 Ma reflect coastal areas with cool, nutrient‐rich surface waters. The proposed surface ocean circulation pattern, based on dinoflagellate cysts distribution between 41.3 and 38.1 Ma, agrees with the results of a palaeoclimatic numerical model simulation performed with a Drake Passage shallow opening of 100 m depth. At c. 36 Ma, several Antarctic gonyaulacacean taxa tolerant to relatively warmer waters were replaced by some Antarctic peridinacean species better adapted to colder conditions. This change could be linked to a progressive deepening of the Drake Passage that is estimated to have reached 1000 m depth promoting a cooling in the South Atlantic. Such passage depth would have enabled stronger flows from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean, which is reflected by the increase of cosmopolitan species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Mosasaurs (Reptilia) from the late Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous) of northern Patagonia (Río Negro, Argentina)
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Fernández, Marta, Martin, James, and Casadío, Silvio
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REPTILES , *VERTEBRATES , *AMNIOTES , *HERPETOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: A diverse assemblage of mosasaurs was recently recovered from the Jagüel Formation (late Maastrichtian) exposed at three localities of northern Patagonia (Río Negro, Argentina). Four taxa (three mosasaurines and a plioplatecarpine) have been identified, and three of these marine reptiles can be identified at lower taxonomic levels: Mosasaurus sp. aff. M. hoffmanni, Plioplatecarpus sp., and Prognathodon sp. These occurrences are significant because they represent the first diagnostic material at generic level exhumed from Patagonia and include one of the youngest mosasaurs found worldwide. One of the specimens described herein was found only 1.5m below the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary. Only mosasaurs from Antarctica found within a meter of the boundary are known to occur higher in the geologic section. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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8. First marine ichthyofauna from the late Eocene of Santa Cruz province, patagonia, Argentina.
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Agnolin, Federico L., Bogan, Sergio, and Casadío, Silvio
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FOSSILS , *PROVINCES , *CHONDRICHTHYES , *EOCENE Epoch - Abstract
The fossil record of chondrichthyans in Argentina is still poorly known. The aim of the present contribution is to describe teeth representing a chondrichthyan assemblage from Man Aike Formation (late Eocene) exposed in the Lago Argentino area, at Santa Cruz province, Argentina. This report includes Striatolamia macrota, Macrorhizodus praecursor, Carcharias sp., a possible member of the family Pristiophoridae, for the Argentine territory. Previous Eocene reports of Striatolamia macrota from Argentina are based on incorrect determination of specimens. The shark association, especially the abundance of lamniforms, may be indicative of litoral and shallow (less than 30 m depth) temperate to cold waters, as suggested by micropaleontological content. • For the first time a late Eocene chondrichthyan assemblage is described from Santa Cruz province, Argentina. • Striatolamia macrota , Macrorhizodus praecursor , Carcharias sp., and Pristiophoridae are reported. • Species here described are frequent in fish faunas from the North Atlantic seas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Correlation and paleoenvironments of middle Paleogene marine beds based on dinoflagellate cysts in southwestern Patagonia, Argentina.
- Author
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Guerstein, G. Raquel, González Estebenet, M. Sol, Alperín, Marta I., Casadío, Silvio A., and Archangelsky, Sergio
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PALEOENVIRONMENTAL studies , *PALEOGENE , *PALEOCEANOGRAPHY , *MARINE ecology , *DINOFLAGELLATE cysts - Abstract
An understanding of paleonvironmental and paleoceanographic evolution of the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean during the Palaeogene is prevented by the lack of precise tools to date and correlate the sedimentary units. Palynological samples collected in the upper portion of the Man Aike Formation, which crops out southern Lago Argentino area, in the southwest of the Austral Basin (50°21′45″S–72°14′30″W), contain well preserved marine organic dinoflagellate cysts, which are potentially important biostratigraphic and paleoenvironmental indicators. Herein we describe the composition of the Man Aike Formation's dinoflagellate cyst assemblages and compare them to similar assemblages collected in the same basin in the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation using Compositional Statistical Analysis. The dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from the upper part of the Man Aike Formation are highly correlated to the assemblages from the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation from outcropping sections (51°31′13″S–72°15′11″W) and with the lower part of sediment cores drilled by Yacimientos Carboníferos Fiscales in the Río Turbio Formation area. These dinoflagellate cyst assemblages show a very low correlation with the assemblages from the upper part of the Yacimientos Carboníferos Fiscales's cores. The comparison of our results with the high-resolution Southern Pacific Ocean dinoflagellate cyst zonation for the late Palaeocene to late Eocene allow us to date some of the dinoflagellate events recorded in formations of southwestern Patagonia. The assemblages from the Man Aike Formation and the lower part of the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation relate to the zones SPDZ11 and SPDZ12 and are assigned to the mid-middle Eocene (late Lutetian to early Bartonian). The biostratigraphy proposed herein constrains the age of the Man Aike Formation and equivalent units based on calcareous microfossil data, mollusks affinities and 87Sr/86Sr isotopic values to an age ranging between ∼42 and 39 Ma. The assemblages from the upper part of the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation relate to the SPDZ13 Zone, which corresponds to the late Eocene (early Priabonian). The dinoflagellate cyst assemblages indicate that they were under the influence of relatively warm, marine open waters in an inner-shelf environment for the lower part of the sections. In the upper part of the sections, the assemblages suggest shallow marine waters associated with coastal areas and high trophic levels, possibly as a result of freshwater inputs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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10. Environmental variability of Macaronichnus ichnofabrics in Eocene tidal-embayment deposits of southern Patagonia, Argentina.
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Pearson, Nadine J., Gabriela Mángano, M., Buatois, Luis A., Casadío, Silvio, and Raising, Martin R.
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SAND dunes , *EOCENE Epoch , *COLONIZATION (Ecology) , *BIOTURBATION - Abstract
The Middle Eocene Man Aike Formation of southern Patagonia, Argentina, offers the opportunity to study the palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental significance of Macaronichnus ichnofabrics in a tide-dominated, coastal embayment compound-dune complex. Four recurrent Macaronichnus ichnofabrics are recognized: Macaronichnus IF-1 characterized by Macaronichnus segregatis segregatis; Macaronichnus IF-2 with M. segregatis segregatis, Ophiomorpha nodosa, Skolithos linearis and rare Palaeophycus tubularis; Macaronichnus IF-3 typified by M. segregatis segregatis, O. nodosa, Asterosoma radiciforme and rare S. linearis; and Macaronichnus IF-4 consisting of M. segregatis segregatis, Nereites missouriensis, A. radiciforme, O. nodosa, Rosselia socialis, S. linearis, P. tubularis, Planolites isp. and Chondrites isp. Variations in these ichnofabrics are linked to changes in local hydraulic conditions in the upper and lower trough areas of the compound dunes. In high-energy, shallow and marginal marine environments, the Macaronichnus tracemaker is commonly the first to colonize the shifting, sandy substrates. Overprinting by other ichnoguilds occurs only after the physiochemical conditions became favourable and the colonization window length increases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Ichnology, sedimentology, and sequence stratigraphy of outer-estuarine and coastal-plain deposits: Implications for the distinction between allogenic and autogenic expressions of the Glossifungites Ichnofacies
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Pearson, Nadine J., Mángano, M. Gabriela, Buatois, Luis A., Casadío, Silvio, and Rodriguez Raising, Martin
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ICHNOLOGY , *SEDIMENTOLOGY , *ESTUARINE ecology , *COASTAL plains , *FLOODPLAIN ecology , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
Abstract: Integration of sedimentologic, ichnologic and sequence-stratigraphic data supports that the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation records sediment accumulation in tide-dominated, outer-estuarine and coastal-plain environments. Outer-estuarine assemblages comprise facies that were deposited in channel-thalweg, subtidal-sandbar complex, oyster-reef and reef-margin environments. Coastal-plain facies assemblages include distributary-channel, floodplain, salt-marsh, swamp, and swamp margin deposits. Twelve ichnogenera assigned to soft-, stiff- and firmground suites were identified. Surfaces demarcated by autogenic and allogenic expressions of the Glossifungites Ichnofacies were recognized. The trace fossils Thalassinoides, Psilonichnus, and Bergaueria were documented within the autogenic stiffground suites, whereas Gastrochaenolites was found in both autogenic and allogenic firmground suites. Allogenically produced surfaces occur on a regional scale, creating major discontinuities, while minor autogenically produced surfaces extended laterally only over a few meters. Integrating the data derived from the substrate-controlled ichnofacies with the vertical and lateral distribution of the paleoecological data provided a more thorough understanding of the importance and scale of the erosional discontinuities. Estuarine and coastal-plain deposits contain low-diversity trace fossil assemblages inferred to have been produced by opportunistic, impoverished marine infauna, indicative of brackish-water settings. The overall distribution of ichnocoenoses within the lower portion of the upper member of the Río Turbio Formation appears to have been controlled largely by the salinity gradient, with other factors such as energy and sedimentation rate playing a more limited role. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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12. Correlation of marine beds based on Sr- and Ar-date determinations and faunal affinities across the Paleogene/Neogene boundary in southern Patagonia, Argentina
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Parras, Ana, Griffin, Miguel, Feldmann, Rodney, Casadío, Silvio, Schweitzer, Carrie, and Marenssi, Sergio
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PALEOGENE stratigraphic geology , *NEOCENE stratigraphic geology , *CRASSOSTREA , *MARINE ecology - Abstract
Abstract: The San Julián and Monte León formations (“Patagonian”) are exposed along the Atlantic coast of Patagonia, whereas in the west equivalent rocks are known as Centinela Formation. Sixteen 87Sr/86Sr measurements on the oyster Crassostrea? hatcheri (Ortmann) from the San Julián and Centinela formations and an 40Ar/39Ar-date from a whole-rock sample from the Centinela Formation yielded ages that allow more precise correlation between the two areas. 87Sr/86Sr measurements from the San Julián Formation yielded ages between 23.83 and 25.93Ma, while for the Centinela Formation the ages ranged between 21.24 and 26.38Ma. The 40Ar/39Ar analysis of a sample of the Centinela Formation yielded an age of 20.48±0.27Ma. The age data suggest a late Oligocene (Chattian) age for the San Julián Formation and the lowermost beds of the Centinela Formation (northernmost exposures). The Monte León Formation along the East coast and the entire section of the Centinela Formation in the southern area – and the middle and upper beds of this same unit in the northernmost localities – were deposited at the end of the Oligocene and early Miocene (Chattian–Burdigalian). The invertebrate fauna present in these units shows diverse preservation patterns that makes these fossils, especially the mollusks, not useful – at this stage – for correlation purposes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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