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You are here: Home / Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2025 OA / India as a “Noah’s Ark” before Collision with Eurasia: Palaeoenvironment and Palaeobiogeography of the Continental Early Eocene Vertebrate Fauna of Gujarat

Thierry Smith (2025)

India as a “Noah’s Ark” before Collision with Eurasia: Palaeoenvironment and Palaeobiogeography of the Continental Early Eocene Vertebrate Fauna of Gujarat

Proceedings of the Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences, 2(2):289-317.

For the past twenty years, an Indian-American-Belgian team carried out twelve seasons of collaborative fieldwork in search of vertebrates from the Cambay Formation in lignite mines of Gujarat, western India. Here is a summary of our main discoveries in the Vastan, Mangrol, and Tadkeshwar mines, including an updated overview of the whole vertebrate fauna. The fauna is around 54.5 million years old, representing tropical rainforest conditions in a coastal brackish palaeoenvironment. It includes the earliest modern mammals from the Indian subcontinent as well as endemic taxa. The most important result at the palaeobiogeographical level is the discovery of several vertebrate taxa of Gondwanan affinities, indicating that the early Eocene was a crucial period in India when Laurasian taxa with western European affinities co-existed with relict taxa from Gondwana before the actual collision of India and Eurasia. Terrestrial faunas could have dispersed to or from Europe when the Indian subcontinent came into contact, episodically, with different island blocks, such as the Kohistan-Ladakh island-arc system, along the northern margin of Neotethys Ocean.
Peer Review, Open Access, PDF available