TY - JOUR
T1 - An enigmatic new ungulate-like mammal from the early Eocene of India
AU - Zack, Shawn P.
AU - Rose, Kenneth D.
AU - Holbrook, Luke T.
AU - Kumar, Kishor
AU - Rana, Rajendra S.
AU - Smith, Thierry
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank N. Egi, E. Gheerbrant, P.D. Gingerich and R. Tabuce for providing casts of comparative taxa. We are grateful to staff at the Duke University SMIF facility for preparing the microCTs of GU/RSR/TAD 9201 and 9203 and to Ulysse Lef?vre for scanning GU/RSR/TAD 9608. Jonathan Perry provided insights into the potential significance of features of the mandible of GU/RSR/TAD 9608. We thank Cecilia Cousin, Rachel Dunn, Annelise Folie, Ross MacPhee, Waqaz Mirsa, Corentin Noiret, Raman Patel, Abhishek Singh, and Thomas Steeman for field assistance. Nathan Vall?e-Gillette prepared the Pahelia specimens. This manuscript was greatly improved through the input of two anonymous reviewers. The Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation facilitated excavations at Tadkeshwar mine. TnT is made available with the sponsorship of the Willi Hennig Society. Fieldwork and research were supported by grants from the Leakey Foundation to KDR and TS and a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF DEB 1456826) to LTH. Additional support from the National Geographic Society, Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, and Belgian Science Policy Office (Belspo BRAIN project BR/121/A3/PalEurAfrica) is gratefully acknowledged.
Funding Information:
We thank N. Egi, E. Gheerbrant, P.D. Gingerich and R. Tabuce for providing casts of comparative taxa. We are grateful to staff at the Duke University SMIF facility for preparing the microCTs of GU/RSR/TAD 9201 and 9203 and to Ulysse Lefèvre for scanning GU/RSR/TAD 9608. Jonathan Perry provided insights into the potential significance of features of the mandible of GU/RSR/TAD 9608. We thank Cecilia Cousin, Rachel Dunn, Annelise Folie, Ross MacPhee, Waqaz Mirsa, Corentin Noiret, Raman Patel, Abhishek Singh, and Thomas Steeman for field assistance. Nathan Vallée‐Gillette prepared the Pahelia specimens. This manuscript was greatly improved through the input of two anonymous reviewers. The Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation facilitated excavations at Tadkeshwar mine. TnT is made available with the sponsorship of the Willi Hennig Society. Fieldwork and research were supported by grants from the Leakey Foundation to KDR and TS and a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF DEB 1456826) to LTH. Additional support from the National Geographic Society, Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, and Belgian Science Policy Office (Belspo BRAIN project BR/121/A3/PalEurAfrica) is gratefully acknowledged.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Palaeontological Association
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - We report a new genus and species of herbivorous mammal, Pahelia mysteriosa, from the early Eocene Cambay Shale Formation, Tadkeshwar Lignite Mine, Gujarat, India. The new taxon, approximately the size of a small phenacodontid (e.g. Ectocion parvus), is represented by three mandibular fragments, the most complete of which documents nearly the entire symphysis and mandibular body plus P3–M3. Pahelia has incipiently selenolophodont molars with strong exodaenodonty, absent paraconids, weak but distinct entolophids, and prominent ectostylids. Molar size increases distally, but M3 does not develop a prominent third lobe. Premolars are simple, with prominent protoconids and short talonids but little development of other trigonid cusps. The mandibular symphysis is strongly fused, and there is an enlarged alveolus for an anterior tooth. The combination of features present in the new taxon does not closely match that of any known mammal, but there are some similarities to a diversity of ungulates from Africa, Asia, Europe and North America. Preserved morphology is insufficient to assess the affinities of the new taxon with confidence, but a link to Quettacyonidae, also endemic to the Indian subcontinent, is morphologically and biogeographically plausible. If this scenario is correct, it suggests that P. mysteriosa could be a part of the endemic mammalian fauna of India prior to its initial faunal contact with Asia.
AB - We report a new genus and species of herbivorous mammal, Pahelia mysteriosa, from the early Eocene Cambay Shale Formation, Tadkeshwar Lignite Mine, Gujarat, India. The new taxon, approximately the size of a small phenacodontid (e.g. Ectocion parvus), is represented by three mandibular fragments, the most complete of which documents nearly the entire symphysis and mandibular body plus P3–M3. Pahelia has incipiently selenolophodont molars with strong exodaenodonty, absent paraconids, weak but distinct entolophids, and prominent ectostylids. Molar size increases distally, but M3 does not develop a prominent third lobe. Premolars are simple, with prominent protoconids and short talonids but little development of other trigonid cusps. The mandibular symphysis is strongly fused, and there is an enlarged alveolus for an anterior tooth. The combination of features present in the new taxon does not closely match that of any known mammal, but there are some similarities to a diversity of ungulates from Africa, Asia, Europe and North America. Preserved morphology is insufficient to assess the affinities of the new taxon with confidence, but a link to Quettacyonidae, also endemic to the Indian subcontinent, is morphologically and biogeographically plausible. If this scenario is correct, it suggests that P. mysteriosa could be a part of the endemic mammalian fauna of India prior to its initial faunal contact with Asia.
KW - Cambay Shale Formation
KW - Eocene
KW - Eutheria
KW - India
KW - Mammalia
KW - ungulate
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U2 - 10.1002/spp2.1288
DO - 10.1002/spp2.1288
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85074246764
SN - 2056-2802
VL - 7
SP - 497
EP - 520
JO - Papers in Palaeontology
JF - Papers in Palaeontology
IS - 1
ER -