New Brontotheriidae (Mammalia, Perissodactyla) from the early and middle Eocene of Pakistan with implications for mammalian paleobiogeography

2011 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 665-677 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Missiaen ◽  
Gregg F. Gunnell ◽  
Philip D. Gingerich

Brontotheriids are common in Eocene faunas of North America and Asia but are poorly known from the Indian subcontinent. Here we describe three new late early Eocene brontotheriids from Pakistan, found in the upper part of the upper Ghazij Formation and representing the oldest Asian brontotheres. Eotitanops pakistanensis n. sp. is a small, primitive species, Balochititanops haqi n. gen. n. sp. is slightly larger and more derived, and fragmentary specimens identified as cf. Balochititanops sp. appear to represent a third, larger taxon.Improved knowledge of early brontotheres from North America permits better taxonomic resolution of some middle Eocene brontothere remains from Pakistan. ‘Eotitanops’ dayi from the Kuldana Formation is shown to be closer to Palaeosyops and is renamed Palaeosyops dayi n. comb. A new astragalus from the Baska Formation probably represents Pakotitanops latidentatus. A previously described humerus and a new calcaneum, both from the Subathu Formation, are tentatively referred to Mulkrajanops moghliensis.Phylogenetic interpretation suggests that Eotitanops pakistanensis is as primitive as the North American species of this basal brontothere genus, and also, within the limits of stratigraphic resolution, Eotitanops appeared on both continents at the same time. The origin of brontotheres is therefore equally likely to have been in Asia or in North America. The presence of the primitive brontotheres Eotitanops and Palaeosyops in Indo-Pakistan and North America indicates faunal exchange, almost certainly through Asia, although the direction of dispersal cannot be determined. The postulated high-latitude exchange coincides with a warm interval known as the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ethan G. Hyland ◽  
Katharine W. Huntington ◽  
Nathan D. Sheldon ◽  
Tammo Reichgelt

Abstract. Paleogene greenhouse climate equability has long been a paradox in paleoclimate research. However, recent developments in proxy and modeling methods have suggested that strong seasonality may be a feature of at least some greenhouse periods. Here we present the first multi-proxy record of seasonal temperatures during the Paleogene from paleofloras, paleosol geochemistry, and carbonate clumped isotope thermometry in the Green River Basin (Wyoming, USA). These combined temperature records allow for the reconstruction of past seasonality in the continental interior, which shows that temperatures were warmer in all seasons during the peak early Eocene climatic optimum and that the mean annual range of temperature was high, similar to the modern value (~ 26 °C). Proxy data and downscaled Eocene regional climate model results suggest amplified seasonality during greenhouse events. Increased seasonality reconstructed for the early Eocene is similar in scope to the higher seasonal range predicted by downscaled climate model ensembles for future high-CO2 emissions scenarios. Overall, these data and model comparisons have substantial implications for understanding greenhouse climates in general, and may be important for predicting future seasonal climate regimes and their impacts in continental regions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 973-978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregg F. Gunnell

Uintasoricines are diminutive plesiadapiforms that are found in the latest Paleocene through middle Eocene, predominantly in North America. They are not a diverse group but individual species may be locally abundant and they are a persistent element of the plesiadapiform radiation in North America surviving over a span of approximately 16 million years. Recent field work in southern Wyoming at South Pass has led to the discovery of a new genus and species of uintasoricine. The new form is smaller in tooth dimensions compared to other known uintasoricines, being slightly smaller thanUintasorex montezumicusfrom California. Both the newly described taxon andU. montezumicusare among the smallest plesiadapiforms yet known with body weights estimated to be 20 to 25 g. The sediments of the Cathedral Bluffs Tongue of the Wasatch Formation at South Pass contain a unique upland fauna—the presence of a distinctive uintasoricine in this assemblage adds further evidence to support the notion that this upland environment was a biodiversity hotspot during the latest early Eocene.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (8) ◽  
pp. 803-813
Author(s):  
Gerald Mayr ◽  
S. Bruce Archibald ◽  
Gary W. Kaiser ◽  
Rolf W. Mathewes

We survey the known avian fossils from Ypresian (early Eocene) fossil sites of the North American Okanagan Highlands, mainly in British Columbia (Canada). All specimens represent taxa that were previously unknown from the Eocene of far-western North America. Wings from the McAbee site are tentatively referred to the Gaviiformes and would constitute the earliest fossil record of this group of birds. A postcranial skeleton from Driftwood Canyon is tentatively assigned to the Songziidae, a taxon originally established for fossils from the Ypresian of China. Two skeletons from Driftwood Canyon and the McAbee site are tentatively referred to Coliiformes and Zygodactylidae, respectively, whereas three further fossils from McAbee, Blakeburn, and Republic (Washington, USA) are too poorly preserved for even a tentative assignment. The specimens from the Okanagan Highlands inhabited relatively high paleoaltitudes with microthermal climates (except Quilchena: lower mesothermal) and mild winters, whereas most other Ypresian fossil birds are from much warmer lowland paleoenvironments with upper mesothermal to megathermal climates. The putative occurrence of a gaviiform bird is particularly noteworthy because diving birds are unknown from other lacustrine Ypresian fossil sites of the Northern Hemisphere. The bones of the putative zygodactylid show a sulphurous colouration, and we hypothesize that this highly unusual preservation may be due to the metabolic activity of sulphide-oxidizing bacteria.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 1387-1410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher K. West ◽  
David R. Greenwood ◽  
Tammo Reichgelt ◽  
Alexander J. Lowe ◽  
Janelle M. Vachon ◽  
...  

Abstract. Early Eocene climates were globally warm, with ice-free conditions at both poles. Early Eocene polar landmasses supported extensive forest ecosystems of a primarily temperate biota but also with abundant thermophilic elements, such as crocodilians, and mesothermic taxodioid conifers and angiosperms. The globally warm early Eocene was punctuated by geologically brief hyperthermals such as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), culminating in the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO), during which the range of thermophilic plants such as palms extended into the Arctic. Climate models have struggled to reproduce early Eocene Arctic warm winters and high precipitation, with models invoking a variety of mechanisms, from atmospheric CO2 levels that are unsupported by proxy evidence to the role of an enhanced hydrological cycle, to reproduce winters that experienced no direct solar energy input yet remained wet and above freezing. Here, we provide new estimates of climate and compile existing paleobotanical proxy data for upland and lowland midlatitude sites in British Columbia, Canada, and northern Washington, USA, and from high-latitude lowland sites in Alaska and the Canadian Arctic to compare climatic regimes between the middle and high latitudes of the early Eocene – spanning the PETM to the EECO – in the northern half of North America. In addition, these data are used to reevaluate the latitudinal temperature gradient in North America during the early Eocene and to provide refined biome interpretations of these ancient forests based on climate and physiognomic data.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kristina Michaela Pascher

<p>This thesis investigates the effect of climatic and oceanographic changes on the distribution of fossil radiolarian assemblages from the early Eocene to early Oligocene (~56–30 Ma) in the Southwest Pacific. Radiolarian assemblages have been analysed from a series of archived cores collected by the Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). The selected cores form a latitudinal transect designed to investigate the ecological change associated with the transition from the warm ‘greenhouse’ climate of the Eocene into the cooler Oligocene, when continental-scale glaciation is believed to have intiated in Antarctica. High-latitude sites were sampled on the Campbell Plateau (DSDP Site 277), Tasman Rise (DSDP sites 280 and 281) and the Tasman Sea (DSDP Site 283 and ODP Site 1172), while mid-latitude sites were sampled both to the west of New Zealand (DSDP sites 207, 206, 592) and east of New Zealand (ODP Site 1123). New foraminifer oxygen (δ¹⁸O) and carbon (δ¹³C) stable isotope data from DSDP sites 277, 207 and 592 are presented and provide additional age control and insights in the climatic and oceanographic changes in the Southwest Pacific during the early Eocene to early Oligocene.  This thesis contributes a comprehensive taxonomic review of Eocene radiolarian taxa with the intention of standardising nomenclature and to resolve synonymies. 213 out of 259 counting groups have been reviewed and assigned to species or subspecies level and 7 new species are yet to be described. All sites have been correlated to the Southern Hemisphere radiolarian zonation, from the upper Paleocene to upper Oligocene (RP6SH to RP17SH). Alternative datums for the base of RP10SH (LO of Artobotrys auriculaleporis) and the base of RP12SH (LO of Lophocyrtis longiventer) are proposed.  The early Eocene climatic optimum (EECO, ~53–49 Ma) can be identified by a negative excursion in foraminiferal δ¹⁸O values at Site 207. The radiolarian assemblages at sites 207 (paleolatitude ~46°S) and 277 (paleolatitude ~55°S) during the EECO are dominated by taxa with low-latitude affinities (Amphicraspedum spp. represents up to 89% of total fauna), but many typical low-latitude genera (e.g. Thyrsocyrtis, Podocyrtis, Phormocyrtis) are absent. Following the EECO, low-latitude taxa decrease at Site 207 and disappear at Site 277. Radiolarians are abundant and very diverse at mid-latitude sites 207 and 206 (paleolatitude ~42°S) during the middle Eocene, and low-latitude taxa are common (up to ~15% of the total fauna at Site 207 and ~10% at Site 206). The middle Eocene climatic optimum (MECO, ~40 Ma), although truncated by poor drilling recovery at Site 277, is identified by a negative shift in foraminiferal δ18O values at this site and is associated by a small increase in radiolarian taxa with low-latitude affinities (up to ~5% of total fauna).  Early in the late Eocene (~37 Ma), a positive shift in δ¹⁸O values at Site 277 is correlated with the Priabonian oxygen isotope maximum (PrOM). Within this cooling event, radiolarian abundance, diversity and preservation, as well as diatom abundance, increase abruptly at Site 277. A negative δ¹⁸O excursion above the PrOM is correlated to a late Eocene warming event (~36 Ma) and is referred to as the late Eocene climatic optimum (LECO). The LECO is identified using stable isotopes at sites 277 and 592. Radiolarian abundance and diversity decline within this event at Site 277 although taxa with low-latitude affinities increase (up to ~10% of total fauna). At Site 592, radiolarian-bearing sediments are only present during this event with up to ~6% low-latitude taxa. Apart from the LECO, late Eocene radiolarian assemblages at Site 277 are characterised by abundant high-latitude taxa. High-latitude taxa are also abundant during the late Eocene and Oligocene (~38–27 Ma) at DSDP sites 280, 281, 283, and ODP sites 1172 and 1123 and are associated with very high diatom abundance.  Radiolarian assemblages are used for reconstructing the evolution of oceanic fronts. The composition of the assemblages suggests that the oscillation between warm subtropical and cool subtropical conditions can be explained by the varying influence of the warm proto-East Australian Current and cold proto-Ross Gyre. In contrast to temperature reconstructions based on geochemical proxies (TEX₈₆, UK’₃₇ and Mg/Ca), which indicate tropical temperatures throughout most of the Eocene, radiolarians indicate warm subtropical conditions during the EECO. Warm surface water masses may have been transported by the proto-East Australian Current to ~55°S during the EECO. During the middle to late Eocene, cool subtropical conditions prevailed in the Southwest Pacific. Localised occurrences of abundant diatoms indicate upwelling areas close to the Tasman Rise in the middle Eocene. The proliferation of radiolarian assemblages and expansion of high-latitude taxa onto the Campbell Plateau in the latest Eocene is explained by a northward expansion of proto-Ross Gyre. In the early Oligocene (~32 Ma), there is an overall decrease in radiolarian abundance and diversity on the Campbell Plateau (Site 277) and diatoms disappear. Major hiatuses in the region indicate intensified bottom-water currents associated with the establishment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. A frontal system similar to present day developed in the early Oligocene, with nutrient-depleted subantarctic waters bathing the southern Campbell Plateau, resulting in a more restricted radiolarian assemblage at Site 277.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 35-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald MAYR ◽  
Thierry SMITH

We describe new avian remains from Paleocene localities of Belgium and France. Four bones from the early to middle Selandian of Maret (Belgium) are among the earliest Cenozoic avian remains known from Europe and include the oldest temporally well constrained European records of the Gastornithidae, as well as tentative records of the palaeognathous Lithornithidae and the Ralloidea. A more comprehensive fossil assemblage from the middle Thanetian of Templeuve (France) contains multiple bones of the Lithornithidae as well as a record of the Pelagornithidae. Specimens from the latest Thanetian of Rivecourt-Petit Pâtis (France) are tentatively assigned to the Ralloidea and Leptosomiformes (cf. Plesiocathartes). Because of the fragmentary nature of the fossils, the taxonomic identity of a number of other specimens remains uncertain. We note, however, that Paleocene avifaunas of Europe and North America appear to have had different compositions and only a few taxa, such as the palaeognathous Lithornithidae, are known from both continents. This suggests that the very similar early Eocene avifaunas of Europe and North America are the result of early Cenozoic dispersal events.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher K. West ◽  
David R. Greenwood ◽  
Tammo Reichgelt ◽  
Alex J. Lowe ◽  
Janelle M. Vachon ◽  
...  

Abstract. Early Eocene climates were globally warm, with ice-free conditions at both poles. Early Eocene polar landmasses supported extensive forest ecosystems of a primarily temperate biota, but also with abundant thermophilic elements such as crocodilians, and mesothermic taxodioid conifers and angiosperms. The globally warm early Eocene was punctuated by geologically brief hyperthermals such as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), culminating in the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO), during which the range of thermophilic plants such as palms extended into the Arctic. Climate models have struggled to reproduce early Eocene Arctic warm winters and high precipitation, with models invoking a variety of mechanisms, from atmospheric CO2 levels that are unsupported by proxy evidence, to the role of an enhanced hydrological cycle to reproduce winters that experienced no direct solar energy input yet remained wet and above freezing. Here, we provide new estimates of climate, and compile existing paleobotanical proxy data for upland and lowland mid-latitudes sites in British Columbia, Canada, and northern Washington, USA, and from high-latitude lowland sites in Alaska and the Canadian Arctic to compare climatic regimes between mid- and high latitudes of the early Eocene – spanning the PETM to the EECO – of the northern half of North America. In addition, these data are used to reevaluate the latitudinal temperate gradient in North America during the early Eocene, and to provide refined biome interpretations of these ancient forests based on climate and physiognomic data.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kristina Michaela Pascher

<p>This thesis investigates the effect of climatic and oceanographic changes on the distribution of fossil radiolarian assemblages from the early Eocene to early Oligocene (~56–30 Ma) in the Southwest Pacific. Radiolarian assemblages have been analysed from a series of archived cores collected by the Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). The selected cores form a latitudinal transect designed to investigate the ecological change associated with the transition from the warm ‘greenhouse’ climate of the Eocene into the cooler Oligocene, when continental-scale glaciation is believed to have intiated in Antarctica. High-latitude sites were sampled on the Campbell Plateau (DSDP Site 277), Tasman Rise (DSDP sites 280 and 281) and the Tasman Sea (DSDP Site 283 and ODP Site 1172), while mid-latitude sites were sampled both to the west of New Zealand (DSDP sites 207, 206, 592) and east of New Zealand (ODP Site 1123). New foraminifer oxygen (δ¹⁸O) and carbon (δ¹³C) stable isotope data from DSDP sites 277, 207 and 592 are presented and provide additional age control and insights in the climatic and oceanographic changes in the Southwest Pacific during the early Eocene to early Oligocene.  This thesis contributes a comprehensive taxonomic review of Eocene radiolarian taxa with the intention of standardising nomenclature and to resolve synonymies. 213 out of 259 counting groups have been reviewed and assigned to species or subspecies level and 7 new species are yet to be described. All sites have been correlated to the Southern Hemisphere radiolarian zonation, from the upper Paleocene to upper Oligocene (RP6SH to RP17SH). Alternative datums for the base of RP10SH (LO of Artobotrys auriculaleporis) and the base of RP12SH (LO of Lophocyrtis longiventer) are proposed.  The early Eocene climatic optimum (EECO, ~53–49 Ma) can be identified by a negative excursion in foraminiferal δ¹⁸O values at Site 207. The radiolarian assemblages at sites 207 (paleolatitude ~46°S) and 277 (paleolatitude ~55°S) during the EECO are dominated by taxa with low-latitude affinities (Amphicraspedum spp. represents up to 89% of total fauna), but many typical low-latitude genera (e.g. Thyrsocyrtis, Podocyrtis, Phormocyrtis) are absent. Following the EECO, low-latitude taxa decrease at Site 207 and disappear at Site 277. Radiolarians are abundant and very diverse at mid-latitude sites 207 and 206 (paleolatitude ~42°S) during the middle Eocene, and low-latitude taxa are common (up to ~15% of the total fauna at Site 207 and ~10% at Site 206). The middle Eocene climatic optimum (MECO, ~40 Ma), although truncated by poor drilling recovery at Site 277, is identified by a negative shift in foraminiferal δ18O values at this site and is associated by a small increase in radiolarian taxa with low-latitude affinities (up to ~5% of total fauna).  Early in the late Eocene (~37 Ma), a positive shift in δ¹⁸O values at Site 277 is correlated with the Priabonian oxygen isotope maximum (PrOM). Within this cooling event, radiolarian abundance, diversity and preservation, as well as diatom abundance, increase abruptly at Site 277. A negative δ¹⁸O excursion above the PrOM is correlated to a late Eocene warming event (~36 Ma) and is referred to as the late Eocene climatic optimum (LECO). The LECO is identified using stable isotopes at sites 277 and 592. Radiolarian abundance and diversity decline within this event at Site 277 although taxa with low-latitude affinities increase (up to ~10% of total fauna). At Site 592, radiolarian-bearing sediments are only present during this event with up to ~6% low-latitude taxa. Apart from the LECO, late Eocene radiolarian assemblages at Site 277 are characterised by abundant high-latitude taxa. High-latitude taxa are also abundant during the late Eocene and Oligocene (~38–27 Ma) at DSDP sites 280, 281, 283, and ODP sites 1172 and 1123 and are associated with very high diatom abundance.  Radiolarian assemblages are used for reconstructing the evolution of oceanic fronts. The composition of the assemblages suggests that the oscillation between warm subtropical and cool subtropical conditions can be explained by the varying influence of the warm proto-East Australian Current and cold proto-Ross Gyre. In contrast to temperature reconstructions based on geochemical proxies (TEX₈₆, UK’₃₇ and Mg/Ca), which indicate tropical temperatures throughout most of the Eocene, radiolarians indicate warm subtropical conditions during the EECO. Warm surface water masses may have been transported by the proto-East Australian Current to ~55°S during the EECO. During the middle to late Eocene, cool subtropical conditions prevailed in the Southwest Pacific. Localised occurrences of abundant diatoms indicate upwelling areas close to the Tasman Rise in the middle Eocene. The proliferation of radiolarian assemblages and expansion of high-latitude taxa onto the Campbell Plateau in the latest Eocene is explained by a northward expansion of proto-Ross Gyre. In the early Oligocene (~32 Ma), there is an overall decrease in radiolarian abundance and diversity on the Campbell Plateau (Site 277) and diatoms disappear. Major hiatuses in the region indicate intensified bottom-water currents associated with the establishment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. A frontal system similar to present day developed in the early Oligocene, with nutrient-depleted subantarctic waters bathing the southern Campbell Plateau, resulting in a more restricted radiolarian assemblage at Site 277.</p>


Author(s):  
Alan Graham

During the Middle Miocene through the Pliocene the Appalachian Mountains underwent continued erosion and approached modern elevations. The Rocky Mountains had undergone uplift to half or more of their present elevation during the Late Cretaceous to Middle Eocene Laramide Revolution; after a lull during the Middle Eocene through the Early Miocene, there was increased tectonic activity beginning ~12 Ma and especially between 7 and 4 Ma. Locally some highlands may have approached or attained modern elevations. The increasingly high mountains and plateaus of Asia and North America deflected the major air streams southward, bringing colder polar air into the middle latitudes of North America. An extensive Antarctic ice sheet further cooled ocean waters and contributed to the spread of seasonally dry climates. The elimination of most of the Asian exotics from the North American flora dates to the Late Miocene-Pliocene as a result of a decline in summer rainfall. The Sierra Nevada attained about two-thirds of their present elevation within the past 10 Ma. They were appreciably elevated at ~5 Ma, stood at ~2100 m at 3 Ma, and have risen ~950 m since 3 Ma (Huber, 1981). The California Coast Ranges and Cascade Mountains attained significant heights by 3 Ma, and there was a rapid rise of the Alaska Range at ~6 Ma. Temperatures increased between ~18 and 16 Ma. In the absence of major plate reorganization and intense volcanic activity and with increased erosion from continued replacement of the dense evergreen forest by deciduous forest and shrubland (increasing albedo), atmospheric CO2 concentration decreased and a sharp lowering of temperature occurred in the Middle Miocene between 15 and 10 Ma. Eolian dust deposits increased in the Late Cenozoic, suggesting greater aridity (Rea et al., 1985). This is supported by kaolinite records from North Atlantic deep sea sediments (Chamley, 1979). At ~4.8~4.9 Ma global cooling and a marine regression of ~40~50 m combined to isolate the Mediterranean Basin from the ocean and to concentrate large volumes of salt as water evaporated. The biota was destroyed, giving rise to the term Messinian salinity crisis.


2002 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 899-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaelyn J Eberle ◽  
Malcolm C McKenna

We describe the leptictid Prodiacodon; the pantolestids Palaeosinopa sp.nov., cf. Palaeosinopa, and Pantolestidae, gen. et sp. indet.; the creodonts Palaeonictis and Prolimnocyon; the carnivorans Viverravus, cf. Vulpavus, and Miacis; and the mesonychid Pachyaena from early Eocene (i.e., Wasatchian) strata of the Eureka Sound Group on central Ellesmere Island, Nunavut. Palaeosinopa and Palaeonictis may have originated in mid-latitude North America and subsequently migrated to Europe via a north Atlantic land bridge, while Prolimnocyon and Pachyaena probably originated in Asia. Additionally, the occurrence of Pachyaena in the Early Eocene of Europe probably is best explained by dispersal from high-latitude North America to Europe via a north Atlantic land bridge. We update the Eureka Sound Group mammalian faunal list.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document