The start date of the Blancan has not been fully established. There is general agreement that it is between 4.9[3] and 4.3 mya (million years ago).[4] The often-cited GeoWhen database places it at 4.75 mya.[1]
There is even stronger disagreement about the end of the Blancan. Some stratigraphers argue for the 1.808 mya date that corresponds better with the end of the Pliocene and the start of the Pleistocene (1.808 mya). This conforms with the extinction of Borophagus, Hypolagus, Paenemarmota, Plesippus, Nannippus, and Rhynchotherium faunal assemblage between 2.2 and 1.8 mya.[2] Other paleontologists find continuity of the faunal assemblages well into the Pleistocene, and argue for an end date of 1.2 mya. This corresponds with the extinction of stegomastodons and related species and the appearance of mammoths in southern North America.[5]
^ abLundelius, E.L. Jr. et al. (1987): The North American Quaternary Sequence. In: Woodburne, Michael O. (ed.): Cenozoic mammals of North America: geochronology and biostratigraphy: 211–235. University of California Press, Berkeley. ISBN0-520-05392-3
^Cassiliano, Michael L. (1999). "Biostratigraphy of Blancan and Irvingtonian mammals in the Fish Creek–Vallecito Creek section, southern California, and a review of the Blancan-Irvingtonian boundary". J. Vertebr. Paleontol.19 (1): 169–186. doi:10.1080/02724634.1999.10011131.
^Woodburne, Michael O. & Swisher, C.C. III (1995): Land mammal high-resolution geochronology, intercontinental overland dispersals, sea level, climate, and vicariance. Society for Economic Paleontology and Mineralogy Special Publications54: 335–364. ISBN1-56576-024-7
Lourens, L. et al. (2004): The Neogene Period. In: Gradstein, F.; Ogg, J. & Smith, A.G. (eds.): A Geologic Time Scale 2004. Cambridge University Press. ISBN0-521-78142-6