Abstract:
Until very recently, there was no record of early Eocene terrestrial mammals
from India. Lack of this record has been a major hindrance in understanding
India's terrestrial faunal relationships in a geodynamic framework, particularly,
in the context of evolving affinities in response to the India-Asia collision
around the Paleocene-Eocene boundary (ca. 55 Ma). Investigations carried
out during the present doctoral work have led to the discovery of a remarkable
assemblage of early Eocene terrestrial vertebrate faunas from the Cambay
Shale deposits in the Vastan Lignite Mine, District Surat, Gujarat, western
India. This assemblage, presently dated at 53.5 Ma on the basis of the
benthic foraminifer Nummulites globulus includes members of atleast 10
placental orders: Chiroptera, Insectivora, Proteutheria, Apatotheria, Rodentia,
Primates, Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, Creodonta and Condylartha. A
possible marsupial is also included in the fauna. This assemblage represents
the oldest known terrestrial Cenozoic mammal fauna from South Asia. As
many as 35 taxa have already been described. Most of them new at genus or
even family level and the collection includes a number of dentaries and
hundreds of isolated teeth.
Emphasis is placed in this dissertation on small mammals from the
Vastan Lignite Mine, comprising insectivores, chiropterans, proteutherians,
apatotherians, rodents, primates and didelphid marsupials. Insectivores are
the dominant group in the Vastan fauna, both taxonomically and numerically,
followed by bats. Insectivores are represented by atleast 8 taxa, all new and
pertaining to 4 families (including one new, the Vastanidae), and also record
the first occurrence of the remaining three families (Geolabididae,
Nyctitheriidae, Adapisoriculidae) from the Indian subcontinent. Geolabidids
are being recorded for the first time outside of North America. Proteutherians,
comprising two taxa (Anthraryctes and Suratilestes) also constitute the first
Indian records. Apatotherians are also being reported for the first time from
the subcontinent. The Vastan primates, represented atleast by 5 taxa,
constitute the single largest sample of early Eocene primates from South
Asia. Rodents are poorly represented, and as presently known, comprise two
ctenodactyloid species. The didelphid from Vastan (Indodelphis) is the second
Until very recently, there was no record of early Eocene terrestrial mammals
from India. Lack of this record has been a major hindrance in understanding
India's terrestrial faunal relationships in a geodynamic framework, particularly,
in the context of evolving affinities in response to the India-Asia collision
around the Paleocene-Eocene boundary (ca. 55 Ma). Investigations carried
out during the present doctoral work have led to the discovery of a remarkable
assemblage of early Eocene terrestrial vertebrate faunas from the Cambay
Shale deposits in the Vastan Lignite Mine, District Surat, Gujarat, western
India. This assemblage, presently dated at 53.5 Ma on the basis of the
benthic foraminifer Nummulites globulus includes members of atleast 10
placental orders: Chiroptera, Insectivora, Proteutheria, Apatotheria, Rodentia,
Primates, Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, Creodonta and Condylartha. A
possible marsupial is also included in the fauna. This assemblage represents
the oldest known terrestrial Cenozoic mammal fauna from South Asia. As
many as 35 taxa have already been described. Most of them new at genus or
even family level and the collection includes a number of dentaries and
hundreds of isolated teeth.
Emphasis is placed in this dissertation on small mammals from the
Vastan Lignite Mine, comprising insectivores, chiropterans, proteutherians,
apatotherians, rodents, primates and didelphid marsupials. Insectivores are
the dominant group in the Vastan fauna, both taxonomically and numerically,
followed by bats. Insectivores are represented by atleast 8 taxa, all new and
pertaining to 4 families (including one new, the Vastanidae), and also record
the first occurrence of the remaining three families (Geolabididae,
Nyctitheriidae, Adapisoriculidae) from the Indian subcontinent. Geolabidids
are being recorded for the first time outside of North America. Proteutherians,
comprising two taxa (Anthraryctes and Suratilestes) also constitute the first
Indian records. Apatotherians are also being reported for the first time from
the subcontinent. The Vastan primates, represented atleast by 5 taxa,
constitute the single largest sample of early Eocene primates from South
Asia. Rodents are poorly represented, and as presently known, comprise two
ctenodactyloid species. The didelphid from Vastan (Indodelphis) is the second
record of marsupials from the Eocene of Indo-Pakistan. A previously
described didelphid (Jaegeria) is transferred here to Chiroptera.
Overall, the Vastan small mammals are holarctic and are endemic at genus or even family level. Some of them share a number of primitive
characters with allied taxa from the northern continents. The small mammal
fauna from Vastan indicate a migration into India around the time of initiation
of India-Asia collision possibly through Dras-Kohistan island arcs and the
other emergent crustal blocks within the Neotethys. Of the medium/largesized
mammals, however, the dentally primitive cambaythere perissodactyls may have originated in India. This possibility is consistent with the Out of India
hypothesis, but can only be tested when related forms are discovered from
older intervals (latest Paleocene-earliest Eocene).
Summing up, the Vastan section has provided a long-awaited source of
early Eocene terrestrial mammals in the subcontinent. The discoveries
already made clearly point to the need for sustained work in order to fully
uncover the taxonomic diversity and to understand the phylogenetic relations of the Vastan mammals based on greater anatomical coverage.