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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

A radiation of arboreal basal eutherian mammals beginning in the Late Cretaceous of India

Anjali Goswami; G. V. R. Prasad; Paul Upchurch; Doug M. Boyer; Erik R. Seiffert; Omkar Verma; Emmanuel Gheerbrant; John J. Flynn

Indias Late Cretaceous fossil mammals include the only undisputed pre-Tertiary Gondwanan eutherians, such as Deccanolestes. Recent studies have suggested a relationship between Deccanolestes and African and European Paleocene adapisoriculids, which have been variably identified as stem euarchontans, stem primates, lipotyphlan insectivores, or afrosoricids. Support for a close relationship between Deccanolestes and any of these placental mammal clades would be unique in representing a confirmed Mesozoic record of a placental mammal. However, some paleogeographic reconstructions place India at its peak isolation from all other continents during the latest Cretaceous, complicating reconstructions of the biogeographic history of the placental radiation. Recent fieldwork in India has recovered dozens of better-preserved specimens of Cretaceous eutherians, including several new species. Here, we incorporate these new specimens into an extensive phylogenetic analysis that includes every clade with a previously hypothesized relationship to Deccanolestes. Our results support a robust relationship between Deccanolestes and Paleocene adapisoriculids, but do not support a close affinity between these taxa and any placental clade, demonstrating that Deccanolestes is not a Cretaceous placental mammal and reinforcing the sizeable gap between molecular and fossil divergence time estimates for the placental mammal radiation. Instead, our expanded data push Adapisoriculidae, including Deccanolestes, into a much more basal position than in earlier analyses, strengthening hypotheses that scansoriality and arboreality were prevalent early in eutherian evolution. This comprehensive phylogeny indicates that faunal exchange occurred between India, Africa, and Europe in the Late Cretaceous-Early Paleocene, and suggests a previously unrecognized ∼30 to 45 Myr “ghost lineage” for these Gondwanan eutherians.


Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology | 2011

Marine vertebrates from the ‘middle’ Cretaceous (early Cenomanian) of South India

Charlie J. Underwood; Anjali Goswami; Gvr Prasad; Omkar Verma; John J. Flynn

ABSTRACT Vertebrate fossils have been known from South Indias Cauvery Basin since the 1840s, but records of marine vertebrates from the late Albian to Turonian Karai Formation have been limited to a single set of ichthyosaur remains. Recent surface collecting and sieving of lower Cenomanian glauconitic mudstones has yielded the first ichthyosaur material reported in India over the last 140 years, as well as a diverse and previously unrecorded shark assemblage. The ichthyosaur material, including several teeth and vertebrae, is assigned to the sole described Cretaceous genus Platypterygius and to the species P. indicus (Lydekker, 1879). Eight species of shark (one squaliformes, two hexanchiformes, and five lamniformes) are recorded. A new hexanchiform genus Gladioserratus is erected, and two new species (Gladioserratus magnus, gen. et sp. nov., and Dwardius sudindicus, sp. nov.) are named. Many of the shark genera within this largely species-level endemic fauna are known from high paleolatitudes elsewhere, with many showing an antitropical distribution, but are absent in Tethyan areas. This first description of the Karai Formation marine fauna documents the previously unappreciated diversity and unique character of Indias Cretaceous marine vertebrates, and indicates a cool-water paleoenvironment for the marine vertebrate assemblage.


Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology | 2013

A NEW LATE CRETACEOUS VERTEBRATE FAUNA FROM THE CAUVERY BASIN, SOUTH INDIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR GONDWANAN PALEOBIOGEOGRAPHY

G. V. R. Prasad; Omkar Verma; John J. Flynn; Anjali Goswami

ABSTRACT Late Cretaceous vertebrate faunas of India are known predominantly from intertrappean deposits in the Deccan volcanic province of the central and western parts of the country. A thick and nearly continuous sequence of Early Cretaceous—Early Paleocene fossiliferous sediments exposed in the Cauvery Basin of South India has been comparatively poorly explored. Here, we present a preliminary description of a new fauna consisting of vertebrate fossils discovered from the continental Upper Cretaceous (late Maastrichtian) Kallamedu Formation. The Kallamedu Fauna includes ganoid fishes, amphibians, turtles, crocodiles, and dinosaurs, with many taxa suggesting Late Cretaceous biotic links between India and other Gondwanan landmasses. Teeth of abelisaurid dinosaurs, known previously from the Middle Jurassic of South America and the Late Cretaceous of Africa, Madagascar, and central and western India, support a pan-Gondwanan distribution for this group oftheropod dinosaurs. Of greatest significance, however, is the first discovery of a Simosuchus-like notosuchian crocodile outside of Madagascar. This report of the first Indian Simosuchus-like notosuchian crocodile further strengthens earlier evidence from other vertebrate groups for close biotic links between India and Madagascar in the Late Cretaceous, most likely through dispersal via the Seychelles block, Amirante Ridge, and Providence Bank.


Historical Biology | 2015

Paleobiota from the Deccan volcano-sedimentary sequences of India: paleoenvironments, age and paleobiogeographic implications

Ashu Khosla; Omkar Verma

Paleobiotic assemblages from the Deccan infra- and intertrappean beds are reviewed in great detail. Three distinct paleoenvironments (fluvio-lacustrine/terrestrial, brackish water and marine) have been identified within the infra- and intertrappean biotic assemblages of peninsular India. Recently, marine incursions have been recorded in a few of the Deccan intertrappean beds exposed in central and south-eastern India. The intertrappean beds have yielded marine planktic foraminiferans and freshwater/brackish water ostracods. The affinities of the paleobiotas are commonly considered to show a mixed pattern resulting from the addition of Gondwanan and Laurasian elements to endemic Indian taxa. During the last four decades, various biogeographic models (southern and northern connections) have been proposed to explain the presence of anomalous biogeographic biota in the Late Cretaceous of India. Based on the recovered fauna and flora assemblages, the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary has been marked and a Late Cretaceous to Early Paleocene age has been assigned to these Deccan volcano-sedimentary sequences.


Historical Biology | 2017

Myliobatid and pycnodont fish from the Late Cretaceous of Central India and their paleobiogeographic implications

Omkar Verma; Ashu Khosla; Jasdeep Kaur; M. Prashanth

Abstract Bulk sampling from Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Deccan volcano-sedimentary sequences at Kisalpuri (District Dindori, Madhya Pradesh) and Pisdura–Dongargaon (Chandrapur District, Maharashtra) in Peninsular India has yielded the dental remains of myliobatid and pycnodont fish. This fish fauna comprises Igdabatis indicus, Pycnodontoidea indet. and Pycnodontidae indet., and resembles assemblages known from Upper Cretaceous deposits in Africa and Europe. While paleobiogeographically speaking, the presence of Igdabatis suggests a series of shallow marine dispersals that may have occurred between Africa and India, possibly along the margins of the Kohistan–Ladakh island arc during the latest Cretaceous; the record of pycnodont fish favours instead a Gondwanan dispersal event.


Comptes Rendus Palevol | 2010

First mammal evidence from the Late Cretaceous of India for biotic dispersal between India and Africa at the KT transition

G. V. R. Prasad; Omkar Verma; Emmanuel Gheerbrant; Anjali Goswami; Ashu Khosla; Varun Parmar; Ashok Sahni


Naturwissenschaften | 2010

New postcrania of Deccanolestes from the Late Cretaceous of India and their bearing on the evolutionary and biogeographic history of euarchontan mammals

Doug M. Boyer; G. V. R. Prasad; David W. Krause; Marc Godinot; Anjali Goswami; Omkar Verma; John J. Flynn


Nature Communications | 2013

A troodontid dinosaur from the latest Cretaceous of India

Anjali Goswami; Gvr Prasad; Omkar Verma; John J. Flynn; Roger B. J. Benson


Cretaceous Research | 2012

Ptychodus decurrens Agassiz (Elasmobranchii: Ptychodontidae) from the Upper Cretaceous of India

Omkar Verma; G. V. R. Prasad; Anjali Goswami; Varun Parmar


Comptes Rendus Palevol | 2015

Testudoid and crocodiloid eggshells from the Upper Cretaceous Deccan Intertrappean Beds of Central India

G. V. R. Prasad; Aatreyee Sharma; Omkar Verma; Ashu Khosla; Lourembam R. Singh; Rajkumari Priyadarshini

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Anjali Goswami

University College London

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John J. Flynn

American Museum of Natural History

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Emmanuel Gheerbrant

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Paul Upchurch

University College London

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