New Late Cretaceous Mammals from the Intertrappean Beds of Rangapur, India and Paleobiogeographic Framework

New Late Cretaceous Mammals from the Intertrappean Beds of Rangapur, India and Paleobiogeographic Framework

New Late Cretaceous mammals from the Intertrappean beds of Rangapur, India and paleobiogeographic framework Rajendra S. Rana and Gregory P. Wilson Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 (3), 2003: 331-348 A new mammal-bearing locality from the Intertrappean beds (Maastricthian) of Rangapur, Andhra Pradesh, India provides isolated teeth referable to Deccanolestes and a new eutherian, Sahnitherium rangapurensis. Dental comparisons with Cimolestes, Procerberus, and Aboletylestes do not support proposed "palaeoryctoid" affinities for Deccanolestes. Although similarities exist with Otlestes and Batodon, Deccanolestes is currently considered to be of uncertain familial affinities. Sahnitherium rangapurensis exhibits similarities to Procerberus , Paranyctoides, Alostera, Aboletylestes, and Avitotherium, but it is here placed within Eutheria incertae sedis. Despite family level taxonomic uncertainties, the new material confirms the presence of eutherians on the Indian subcontinent during the Late Cretaceous. A Eurasian connection via an early collision or some other dispersal route may explain these paleobiogeographic data, but other hypotheses are considered. In particular, paleogeographic, paleontological, and molecular systematic data hint that boreosphenidan mammals may have had wider distribution on Gondwana during the Cretaceous than previously supported. Key words: Mammals, Eutheria, biogeography, Late Cretaceous, Gondwana, India. Rajendra S. Rana [[email protected]], Department of Geology, HNB Garwhal University, Srinagar (Garhwal), Uttaranchal, India−246174; Gregory P. Wilson [[email protected]], Department of Integrative Biology and Museum of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley, California, 94720−4780, USA. (to whom correspondence should be directed) This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (for details please see creativecommons.org), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Full text (1,103.1 kB) Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org).

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