First mammal evidence from the Late Cretaceous of India for biotic dispersal between India and Africa at the KT transition |
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Authors: | Guntupalli V.R. Prasad Omkar Verma Emmanuel Gheerbrant Anjali Goswami Ashu Khosla Varun Parmar Ashok Sahni |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geology, University of Delhi, Delhi – 110 007, India;2. Centre for Biodiversity Studies, School of Biosciences and Biotechnology, Baba Ghulam Shah Badshah University, Rajouri 185 131, Jammu and Kashmir, India;3. UMR 7207 du CNRS, CR2P, CP 38, département histoire de la Terre, centre de recherches sur la paléobiodiversité et les paléoenvironnements, Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, 8, rue Buffon, 75005 Paris, France;4. Department of Genetics, Evolution, and Environment, University College London, Wolfson House 408, 4, Stephenson Way, London NW1 2HE, UK;5. CAS in Geology, Panjab University, Chandigarh 160 014, India;6. Department of Geology, University of Jammu, Jammu 180 006, India |
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Abstract: | The Late Cretaceous record of mammals from India assumes great significance in view of the fact that it is the only Gondwanan landmass that has yielded definitive eutherian mammals. These mammals have variously been assigned to palaeoryctids, archontans or Eutheria incertae sedis. Well preserved lower molars recovered from a new mammal-yielding Deccan intertrappean site near Kisalpuri village, Dindori District, Madhya Pradesh (state), India, are described here under a new species Deccanolestes narmadensis sp. nov. The new fossil material indicates close phylogenetic relationship between Deccanolestes from India and Afrodon (Adapisoriculidae) from the Late Palaeocene of Africa and Europe. In view of older age and more primitive state of Deccanolestes teeth, it is inferred that Deccanolestes represents an ancestral morphotype from which the African/European adapisoriculid Afrodon may have been derived. This is the first compelling terrestrial fossil evidence for an early dispersal between India and Africa. Such a dispersal possibly involved an East African contact with India at the KT transition. |
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