Abstract:
The early Eocene terrestrial fossil record of India, particularly for the 52-55
Ma interval, is crucially important in understanding the dispersal patterns of many of
the modern mammalian orders, particularly in the context of India-Asia collision and
the Out-of- India hypothesis. Until recently, there was virtually no record of
terrestrial vertebrates from the Indian early Eocene. Investigations carried out as
part of the present doctoral work have led to the recent discovery of a significant
early Eocene terrestrial vertebrate fauna from the Cambay Shale deposit in the
Vastan Lignite Mine, District Surat, Gujarat, western India. This fauna,
approximately 53.5 m.y. old, is remarkably diverse and consists of an admixture of
terrestrial and aquatic vertebrates (fishes, amphibians, lizards, snakes, birds,
turtles, and most importantly, mammals). Mammals are the most diverse group
(with as many as 25 taxa already recovered) and include members of at least ten
placental mammalian orders: perissodactyls, artiodactyls, creodonts, condylarths,
primates, insectivores, apatotherians, proteutherians, chiropterans, rodents. In
addition, marsupials have also been discovered for the first time from the Indian
Eocene. Most of these taxa are new at family or genus level, and constitute the
oldest known Cenozoic records in South Asia. The collection comprises a large
number of jaws (mainly dentaries, but also a few maxillae), hundreds of isolated
teeth and postcranial remains including long bones, in some cases associated.
Special emphasis is placed in this dissertation on certain groups that appeared
virtually simultaneously across the northern continents during the intense warming
interval (Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, PETM) around 55 Ma, i.e.
artiodactyls, perissodactyls, primates and hyaenodontid creodonts. Perissodactyls
are the dominant group in the Vastan fauna (both taxonomically and numerically)
and include a new family Cambaytheriidae, characterized by remarkably bunodont
teeth without any loph development. Tapirs represent the second perissodactyl
group in the assemblage known from well-preserved maxilla placed in a new taxon.
Primates are represented by least 4 taxa, two of which are possible omomyids and
the third, an adapiform, probably pertains to an as yet unnamed family. Artiodactyls
are represented by a single species belonging to a new genus Gujaratia. The
remainder of the described mammals- creodonts and condylarths- are also new. On
the whole, the Vastan mammals are holarctic, endemic at family or genus level, and
share a number of primitive characters with allied taxa from the northern continents.
The discovery of this remarkable fauna raises an important question as to their
biogeographic origins. Two possible, but poorly tested, hypotheses are i) that they
originated in the Indian subcontinent and ii) that they indicate dispersal from the
northern continents, followed by renewed isolation, around the time of initiation of
India-Asia collision. The latter possibility is tentatively favoured here considering the
slightly younger age of the Vastan mammals relative to their oldest holarctic
relatives.
Apart from the Vastan fauna, a second, slightly younger (late early Eocene),
vertebrate fauna was recovered from Naredi Formation at the Panandhro Lignite
Mine, District Kutch, Gujarat. Unlike theVastan fauna, this assemblage is
predominantly marine and comprises fishes, snakes, crocodiles, turtles and rare
marine mammals. Mammals form the most important component of the Panandhro
fauna, and are represented mainly by archaic cetaceans (primitive whales)
belonging to the family Remingtonocetidae, characterized by narrow, long-snouted
taxa. The recovered material comprises fragmentary skulls and jaws and a few
isolated teeth. If the early Eocene age of the whale-yielding strata is correct, then
these specimens are possibly amongst the oldest known remains of fossil whales.
These finds reinforce the importance of the Kutch Eocene in understanding the
origin and early radiation of whales.
Summing up, the Vastan Lignite Mine has opened up a long-awaited source
of early Eocene terrestrial mammals in the Indian subcontinent. Work so far done
clearly shows that this fauna is potentially important in understanding the pattern of
events (including the India-Asia contact) that led to the diversification and dispersal
of a number of modern mammalian orders. However, much work remains to be
done to fully uncover the taxonomic diversity, and to understand the phylogenetic
relations of the Vastan mammals based on increased anatomical coverage. In
addition, it is important to search for mammals in the older intervals, particularly in
the latest Paleocene to earliest Eocene deposits in India.