4.2 Article

AN ENIGMATIC NEW UNGULATE-LIKE MAMMAL FROM THE EARLY EOCENE OF INDIA

Journal

PAPERS IN PALAEONTOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 497-520

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/spp2.1288

Keywords

Mammalia; Eutheria; ungulate; Eocene; Cambay Shale Formation; India

Categories

Funding

  1. Willi Hennig Society
  2. Leakey Foundation
  3. National Science Foundation [NSF DEB 1456826]
  4. National Geographic Society
  5. Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology
  6. Belgian Science Policy Office (Belspo BRAIN project) [BR/121/A3/PalEurAfrica]

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The newly discovered herbivorous mammal, Pahelia mysteriosa, has features that do not closely match those of any known mammal, but show some similarities to a variety of ungulates from Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America. The preserved morphology is insufficient to confidently assess the affinities of the new taxon, but a link to Quettacyonidae, endemic to the Indian subcontinent, is plausible morphologically and biogeographically.
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 P-3-M-3. Pahelia has incipiently selenolophodont molars with strong exodaenodonty, absent paraconids, weak but distinct entolophids, and prominent ectostylids. Molar size increases distally, but M-3 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.

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