4.6 Article

Miocene vegetation shift and climate change: Evidence from the Siwalik of Nepal

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 161, Issue -, Pages 108-120

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.12.001

Keywords

C-4 plants; Churia Group; Fossils; Himalaya; Indian summer monsoon; Surai Khola

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We reconstruct climate and vegetation applying the Coexistence Approach (CA) methodology on two palaeo-floras recovered from the Lower (middle Miocene; similar to 13-11 Ma) and Middle Siwalik (late Miocene; 9.5-6.8 Ma) sediments of Surai Khola section, Nepal. The reconstructed mean annual temperature (MAT) and cold month mean temperature (CMT) show an increasing trend, while warm month mean temperature (WMT) remains nearly the same during the period. The reconstructed precipitation data indicates that the summer monsoon precipitation was nearly the same during the middle and late Miocene, while the winter season precipitation significantly decreased in the late Miocene. The overall precipitation infers increased rainfall seasonality during the late Miocene. The vegetation during the middle Miocene was dominated by wet evergreen taxa, whereas deciduous ones increased significantly during the late Miocene. The reconstructed climate data indicates that high temperature and significantly low precipitation during the winter season (dry season) in the late Miocene might have enhanced forest fire which favoured the expansion of C-4 plants over C-3 plants during the period. This idea gets further support not only from a recent forest fire in northern India that was caused by the weakening of winter precipitation, but also from the burnt wood recovered from the late Miocene Siwalik sediments of northern India.

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