Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T07:07:30.528Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The first specimen of Deinotherium indicum (Mammalia, Proboscidea, Deinotheriidae) from the late Miocene of Kutch, India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2020

Ningthoujam Premjit Singh
Affiliation:
Centre for Advanced Study in Geology, Department of Geology, Panjab University, Chandigarh, 160014India
Advait M. Jukar*
Affiliation:
Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, D.C.20560, USA
Rajeev Patnaik
Affiliation:
Centre for Advanced Study in Geology, Department of Geology, Panjab University, Chandigarh, 160014India
K. Milankumar Sharma
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Central University of Punjab, City Campus, Bathinda, 151001India
Nongmaithem Amardas Singh
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Central University of Punjab, City Campus, Bathinda, 151001India
Yumlembam Priyananda Singh
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Central University of Punjab, City Campus, Bathinda, 151001India
*
*Corresponding author

Abstract

Deinotheriidae Bonaparte, 1845 is a family of browsing proboscideans that were widespread in the Old World during the Neogene. From Miocene deposits in the Indian subcontinent, deinotheres are known largely from dental remains. Both large and small species have been described from the region. Previously, only small deinothere species have been identified from Kutch in western India. In the fossiliferous Tapar beds in Kutch, dental remains have been referred to the small species Deinotherium sindiense Lydekker, 1880, but the specimens are too fragmentary to be systematically diagnostic. Here, we describe a large p4 of a deinothere from the Tapar beds and demonstrate that it is morphologically most similar to Deinotherium indicum Falconer, 1845, a large species of deinothere, thereby confirming the identity of deinotheres at Tapar. Deinotherium indicum from Tapar is larger than other deinotheres identified from Kutch and is the first occurrence of the species in the region. This new specimen helps constrain the age of the Tapar beds to the Tortonian and increases the biogeographic range of this species—hitherto only known from two localities on the subcontinent. This specimen also highlights the morphological diversity of South Asian deinothere p4s and allows us to reassess dental apomorphies used to delimit Indian deinothere species. Lastly, we argue that by the late Miocene, small deinotheres in Kutch were replaced by the large Deinotherium indicum.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2020, The Paleontological Society

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andrews, C.W., 1911, On a new species of Dinotherium (Dinotherium hobleyi) from British East Africa: Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, v. 81, p. 943945.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Antoine, P.-O., Métais, G., Orliac, M.J., Crochet, J.Y., Flynn, L.J., Marivaux, L., Rajpar, A.R., Roohi, G., and Welcomme, J.-L., 2013, Mammalian Neogene biostratigraphy of the Sulaiman Province, Pakistan, in Wang, X., Flynn, L.J., and Fortelius, M., eds., Fossil Mammals of Asia: New York, Columbia University Press, p. 400422, doi:10.13140/2.1.3584.5129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arambourg, C., 1934, Le Dinotherium des gisements de l'Omo: Compte Rendu Sommaire des Séances de la Société Géologique de France, v. 1934, p. 8687.Google Scholar
Barry, J.C., Lindsay, E.H., and Jacobs, L.L., 1982, A biostratigraphic zonation of the Middle and Upper Siwaliks of the Potwar Plateau of northern Pakistan: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, v. 37, p. 95130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhandari, A., Mohabey, D.M., Bajpai, S., Tiwari, B.N., and Pickford, M., 2010, Early Miocene mammals from central Kutch (Gujarat), western India: Implications for geochronology, biogeography, eustacy and intercontinental dispersals: Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, v. 256, p. 6997, doi:10.1127/0077-7749/2009/0034.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhandari, A., Pickford, M., and Tiwari, B.N., 2015, Basal late Miocene mammal fauna from Tapar and Pasuda, Kachchh: Münchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen, Reihe A, Geologie und Paläontologie, v. 43, p. 140.Google Scholar
Bhandari, A., Kay, R.F., Williams, B.A., Tiwari, B.N., Bajpai, S., and Hieronymus, T., 2018, First record of the Miocene hominoid Sivapithecus from Kutch, Gujarat State, western India: PLoS ONE, v. 13, p. e0206314, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0206314.Google ScholarPubMed
Biswas, S.K., 1992, Tertiary stratigraphy of Kutch: Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, v. 37, p. 129.Google Scholar
Bonaparte, C.L., 1845, Catalogo Metodico dei Mammiferi Europei: Milan, Italy, Valenciennes, 36 p.Google Scholar
Burmeister, H., 1837, Handbuch der Naturgeschichte: Zum Gebrauch bei Vorlesungen: Berlin, Enslin, 526 p.Google Scholar
Catuneanu, O., and Dave, A., 2017, Cenozoic sequence stratigraphy of the Kachchh Basin, India: Marine and Petroleum Geology, v. 86, p. 11061132, doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2017.07.020.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Blainville, H.M.D., 1816, Sur plusieurs espèces d'animaux mammifères, de l'ordre Ruminants: Bulletin des Sciences par la Société Philomathique de Paris, v. 8, p. 7382.Google Scholar
Dehm, R., 1963, Paläontologische und geologische Untersuchungen im Tertiar von Pakistan, 3, Dinotherium in der Chinji-Stufe der Unteren Siwalik-Schichten: Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften NF, v. 114, p. 134.Google Scholar
Depéret, C., 1887, Recherches sur la succession des faunes de vertébrés Miocènes de la Vallée du Rhone: Archives du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle de Lyon, v. 4, p. 45307.Google Scholar
Éhik, G., 1930, Prodinotherium hungaricum n. g., n. sp.: Geologica Hungarica Series palaeontologica, v. 6, p. 124.Google Scholar
Eichwald, E., 1835, De pecorum et pachydermorum reliquiis fossilibus in Lithuania, Volhynia et Podolia repertis: Nova Acta Physico-Medica, Academiae Caesareae Leopoldino-Carolinae, Naturae Curiosorum, v. 17, p. 677760.Google Scholar
Falconer, H., 1845, Description of some fossil remains of Dinotherium, giraffe, and other Mammalia, from the Gulf of Cambay, western coast of India, chiefly from the collection presented by Captain Fulljames, of the Bombay Engineers, to the Museum of the Geological Society: Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, v. 1, p. 356372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falconer, H., 1868, Notes on fossil remains found in the valley of the Indus below Attock, and at Jubbulpoor, in Murchison, C., ed., Palaeontological Memoirs and Notes of the Late Hugh Falconer, A.M., M. D., Volume 1: Fauna Antiqua Sivalensis: London, Robert Hardwicke, p. 414417.Google Scholar
Flynn, L.J., Lindsay, E.H., Pilbeam, D., Raza, S.M., Morgan, M.E., Barry, J.C., Badgley, C.E., Behrensmeyer, A.K., Cheema, I.U., Rajpar, A.R., and Opdyke, N.D., 2013, The Siwaliks and Neogene evolutionary biology in South Asia, in Wang, X., Flynn, L.J., and Fortelius, M., eds., Fossil Mammals of Asia: New York, Columbia University Press, p. 353372, doi:10.7312/Columbia/9780231150125.001.0001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forster-Cooper, C., 1922, Miocene Proboscidia from Baluchistan: Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, v. 92, p. 609626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gasparik, M., 1993, Deinotheres (Proboscidea, Mammalia) of Hungary: Annales Historiconaturales Musei Nationalis Hungarici, v. 85, p. 317.Google Scholar
Gräf, I.E., 1957, Die prinzipien der artbestimmung bei Dinotherium: Palaeontographica A, v. 108, p. 131185.Google Scholar
Haeckel, E., 1866, Generelle Morphologie der Organismen, Volume 2: Berlin, Georg Reimer, 462 p.Google Scholar
Harris, J.M., 1973, Prodeinotherium from Gebel Zelten, Libya: Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology, v. 23, p. 283348.Google Scholar
Harris, J.M., 1976, Cranial and dental remains of Deinotherium bozasi (Mammalia: Proboscidea) from East Rudolf, Kenya : Journal of Zoology, v. 178, p. 5775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, J.M., 1978, Deinotheroidea and Barytherioidea, in Maglio, V.J., and Cooke, H.B.S., eds., Evolution of African Mammals: Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, p. 315332.Google Scholar
Harris, J.M., 1983, Family Deinotheriidae, in Harris, J.M., ed., Koobi Fora Research Project: The Fossil Ungulates: Proboscidea, Perissodactyla, and Suidae, Volume 2: Oxford, UK, Clarendon Press, p. 2239.Google Scholar
Huttunen, K., 2002a, Deinotheriidae (Proboscidea, Mammalia) dental remains from the Miocene of lower Austria and Burgenland: Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien, ser. A, v. 103, p. 251285.Google Scholar
Huttunen, K., 2002b, Systematics and taxonomy of the European Deinotheriidae (Proboscidea, Mammalia): Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien, ser. A, v. 103A, p. 237250.Google Scholar
Huttunen, K., and Göhlich, U.B., 2002, A partial skeleton of Prodeinotherium bavaricum (Proboscidea, Mammalia) from the middle Miocene of Unterzolling (Upper Freshwater Molasse, Germany): Geobios, v. 35, no. 4, p. 489514, doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(02)00042-6.Google Scholar
Illiger, C.D., 1811, Prodromus Systematis Mammalium et Avium Additis Terminis Zoographicis Uttriusque Classis, Eorumque Versione Germanica [Prelude to the Systematics of Mammals and Birds with Added Zoographic Terms of Each Class, and Their German Version]: Berlin, Sumptibus C. Salfeld, 301 p.Google Scholar
Kapur, V.V., Pickford, M., Chauhan, G., and Thakkar, M.G., 2019, A middle Miocene (~14 Ma) vertebrate assemblage from Palasava, Rapar Taluka, Kutch (Kachchh) District, Gujarat State, western India: Historical Biology, doi:10.1080/08912963.2019.1648451.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaup, J.J., 1829, Deinotherium giganteum: Isis von Oken, v. 22, p. 401404.Google Scholar
Khan, A., Raghavendra Rao, V., Ganju, J.L., and Sankaran, R.V., 1971, Discovery of invertebrate and vertebrate fossils from Upper Murree Formation of Palkhai Syncline near Udhampur, Jammu and Kashmir State, India: Journal of the Paleontological Society of India, v. 16, p. 1620.Google Scholar
Koufos, G.D., Zouros, N., and Mourouzidou, O., 2003, Prodeinotherium bavaricum (Proboscidea, Mammalia) from Lesvos Island, Greece: The appearance of deinotheres in the eastern Mediterranean: Geobios, v. 36, no. 3, p. 305315, doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(03)00031-7.Google Scholar
Larramendi, A., 2016, Shoulder height, body mass and shape of proboscideans: Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, v. 61, p. 537574, doi:10.4202/app.00136.2014.Google Scholar
Lydekker, R., 1876, Molar teeth and other remains of Mammalia: Memoirs of the Geological Society of India, Palaeontologia Indica, ser. 10, v. 1, p. 1969.Google Scholar
Lydekker, R., 1880, Siwalik and Narbada Proboscidia: Memoirs of the Geological Society of India, Palaeontologia Indica, ser. 10, v. 1, p. 182294.Google Scholar
Lydekker, R., 1885, Catalogue of the remains of Siwalik Vertebrata contained in the Geological Department of the Indian Museum, Calcutta, Part I, Mammalia: Kolkata, India, Government Printing, 116 p.Google Scholar
Matthew, W.D., 1929, Critical observations upon Siwalik mammals (exclusive of Proboscidea): Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, v. 56, p. 437560.Google Scholar
Osborn, H.F., 1936, Proboscidea: A Monograph of the Discovery, Evolution, Migration and Extinction of the Mastodonts and Elephants of the World: Volume 1, Moeritherioidea, Deinotherioidea, Mastodontoidea: New York, The American Museum Press, 802 p.Google Scholar
Palmer, R.W., 1924, An incomplete skull of Dinotherium, with notes on the Indian forms: Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, Palaeontologia Indica, n. ser., v. 7, p. 114.Google Scholar
Patnaik, R., Sharma, K.M., Mohan, L., Williams, B.A., Kay, R.F., and Chatrath, P., 2014, Additional vertebrate remains from the early Miocene of Kutch, Gujarat: Special Publication of the Paleontological Society of India, v. 5, p. 335351.Google Scholar
Pickford, M., and Pourabrishami, Z., 2013, Deciphering Dinotheriensande deinotheriid diversity: Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, v. 93, p. 121150, doi:10.1007/s12549-013-0115-y.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pilgrim, G.E., 1908, The Tertiary and post-Tertiary freshwater deposits of Baluchistan and Sind with notices of new vertebrates: Records of the Geological Survey of India, v. 37, p. 139171.Google Scholar
Pilgrim, G.E., 1910, Notices of new mammalian genera and species from the Tertiaries of India: Records of the Geological Survey of India, v. 40, p. 6371.Google Scholar
Pilgrim, G.E., 1912, The vertebrate fauna of the Gaj series in the Bugti Hills and the Punjab: Memoirs of The Geological Survey of India, Palaeontologica Indica, v. 4, p. 183.Google Scholar
Pilgrim, G.E., 1917, Preliminary note on some recent mammal collections from the basal beds of the Siwaliks: Records of the Geological Survey of India, v. 48, p. 98101.Google Scholar
Pilgrim, G.E., 1926, The fossil Suidae of India: Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, Palaeontologia Indica, n. ser., v. 8, p. 165.Google Scholar
Pillans, B., Williams, M., Cameron, D., Patnaik, R., Hogarth, J., Sahni, A., Sharma, J., Williams, F., and Bernor, R.L., 2005, Revised correlation of the Haritalyangar magnetostratigraphy, Indian Siwaliks: Implications for the age of the Miocene hominids Indopithecus and Sivapithecus, with a note on a new hominid tooth: Journal of Human Evolution, v. 48, p. 507515, doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2004.12.003.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Poulakakis, N., Lymberakis, P., and Fassoulas, C., 2005, Deinotherium giganteum (Proboscidea, Deinotheriidae) from the late Miocene of Crete: Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, v. 25, p. 732736, doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2005)025[0732:DGPDFT]1.0.CO;2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Qiu, Z.-X., Wang, B.-Y., Li, H., Deng, T., and Sun, Y., 2007, First discovery of deinothere in China: Vertebrata PalAsiatica, v. 45, p. 261277.Google Scholar
Raza, S.M., Barry, J.C., Grant, E.M., and Martin, L., 1984, Preliminary report on the geology and vertebrate fauna of the Miocene Manchar Formation, Sind, Pakistan: Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, v. 4, p. 584599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roger, O., 1904, Wirbeltierreste aus dem Obermiocän der bayerisch-schwäbischen Hochebene: Bericht des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereines für Schwaben und Neuburg, v. 36, p. 122.Google Scholar
Sahni, A., and Gupta, V.J., 1982, Deinotherium indicum from the Middle Siwaliks of the Kangra foothills, Himachal Pradesh, India: Recent Researches in Geology, v. 8, p. 351355.Google Scholar
Sahni, A., and Mishra, V.P., 1975, Lower Tertiary vertebrates from western India: Monographs of the Palaeontological Society of India, v. 3, p. 148.Google Scholar
Sahni, M.R., and Tripathi, C., 1957, A new classification of the Indian deinotheres and description of D. orlovii sp. nov: Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, Palaeontologia Indica, n. ser., v. 33, p. 133.Google Scholar
Sanders, W.J., Kappelman, J., and Rasmussen, D.T., 2004, New large-bodied mammals from the late Oligocene site of Chilga, Ethiopia: Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, v. 49, p. 365392.Google Scholar
Sanders, W.J., Gheerbrant, E., Harris, J.M., Saegusa, H., and Delmar, C., 2010, Proboscidea, in Werdelin, L., and Sanders, W.J., eds., Cenozoic Mammals of Africa: Berkeley, California, University of California Press, p. 161251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sankhyan, A.R., and Sharma, S.L., 2014, In situ dental remains of Deinotherium from Northwest Indian Siwaliks: Himalayan Geology, v. 35, p. 7581.Google Scholar
Sickenberg, O., 1971, Deinotherium im Tertiär Nordthailands: Beihefte zum Geologischen Jahrbuch, v. 89, p. 461471.Google Scholar
Tassy, P., 1989, The ‘Proboscidean Datum Event’: How many proboscideans and how many events?, in Lindsay, E.H., Fahlbusch, V., and Mein, P., eds., European Neogene Mammal Chronology: New York, Plenum Press, p. 237252.Google Scholar
Theobald, W., 1881, The Siwalik group of the sub-Himalayan region: Records of the Geological Survey of India, v. 14, no. 1, p. 66121.Google Scholar
Tiwari, B.N., Verma, B.C., and Bhandari, A., 2006, Record of Prodeinotherium (Proboscidea: Mammalia) from mid-Tertiary Dharmsala Group of Kangra Valley, NW Himalaya, India: Biochronological and palaeobiogeographical implications: Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, v. 51, p. 93100.Google Scholar
Tobien, H., 1988, Contributions à l’étude du gisement Miocène supérieur de Montredon (Hérault): Les grands mammifères, 7: Les proboscidiens Deinotheriidae: Palaeovertebrata, v. 18 (Mémoire Extraordinaire), p. 135175.Google Scholar
Tóth, C., and Hyžný, M., 2013, Prodeinotherium bavaricum (Proboscidea, Mammalia) from middle Miocene tuffaceous sediments near Svinná (Danube Basin, Slovakia): Acta Geologica Slovaca, v. 5, no. 2, p. 135140.Google Scholar
Vasishat, R.N., 1985, Antecedents of Early Man in Northwestern India: Paleontological and Paleoecological Evidences: New Delhi, Inter-India Publications, 230 p.Google Scholar
Vergiev, S., and Markov, G.N., 2010, A mandible of Deinotherium (Mammalia: Proboscidea) from Aksakovo near Varna, northeast Bulgaria: Palaeodiversity, v. 3, p. 241247.Google Scholar
von Meyer, H., 1833, Beiträge zue Petrefaktenkunde, 3, Das Dinotherium bavaricum, mit Rückshicht auf die riesenmäßige fossile Thier-gattung der Deinotherien überhaupt, und auf die Struktur der Mahlzähne in den Tapiren: Nova Acta Physico-Medica, Academiae Caesareae Leopoldino-Carolinae, Naturae Curiosorum, v. 16, p. 425520.Google Scholar
von Meyer, H., 1866, Über die fossilen Reste von Wirbelthieren, welche die Herren con Schlagintwcit von ihren Reisen in Indien und Hoch-Asien mitgebracht haben: Palaeontographica, v. 15, p. 140.Google Scholar
West, R.M., Lukacs, J.R., Munthe, J., and Hussain, S.T., 1978, Vertebrate fauna from Neogene Siwalik Group, Dang Valley, western Nepal: Journal of Paleontology, v. 52, p. 10151022.Google Scholar
Wynne, A.B., 1872, Memoir on the geology of Kutch, to accompany a map compiled by A.B. Wynne and F. Fedden, during the seasons of 1867–68 and 1868–69: Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, v. 9, p. 1289.Google Scholar