The Mangrullo Formation is notable for being the oldest known Konservat-Lagerstätte in South America. Fossils in some layers are exceptionally preserved, retaining details of soft tissue (including bone sutures, blood vessels, and nerves). Coprolites and gut contents of mesosaurs reveal that they preyed mainly on pygocephalomorph crustaceans and may have engaged in cannibalism. It is also the source of several fossil embryos, a hatchling, and very small mesosaurids; all of which are the oldest known evidence of amnioticontogeny.[5][9]
Taphonomy
The locality is believed to have been a shallow lagoon-like inland sea. Its early conditions were probably estuarine or brackish, and the fossils found in the lower mudstone and claystone layers are of bioturbating invertebrates, bivalves and fish. It had an open coastal barrier to marine water but also had extensive inflow of freshwater from melting glaciers. Overlying the earlier mudstone and claystone layers is a layer of limestone deposited with noticeable rippling, an effect of wave motion on very shallow sediment. It is believed that the connection to the sea was lost and the basin gradually began to dry out, becoming more and more hypersaline as it became shallower. It produced anoxic conditions near the bottom which resulted in the exceptional preservation of fossils during this period. Most of the earlier organisms disappeared and was replaced by mesosaurs and pygocephalomorphs, both inferred to have been capable of tolerating hypersaline environments. The connection to the sea was reestablished later on in the top layers, and fossils of mesosaurs disappeared to be replaced once again by fish and bioturbating organisms.[5]
De Santa Ana, H.; Goso, C.; Daners, G. (2006), Cuencas Sedimentarias de Uruguay: Geología, Paleontología y Recursos Minerales, Paleozoico - Cuenca Norte: estratigrafía del Carbonífero y Pérmico, DIRAC, University of the Republic, pp. 147–208, ISBN9789974003163
Pinto, I. D.; Piñeiro, G.; Verde, M. (2000), "First Permian insects from Uruguay", Pesquisas, 27: 89–96