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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dionysopithecus From Southern Pakistan and the Biochronology and Biogeography of Early Eurasian Catarrhines

Bernor, Raymond L., Flynn, Lawrence J., Harrison, Terry, Hussain, S. Taseer, Kelley, Jay 01 January 1988 (has links)
New specimens of a small, advanced catarrhine primate from the Manchar Formation in Sind, southern Pakistan, are referred to Dionysopithecus sp. Their age is biochronologically estimated to be close to the early/middle Miocene boundary. Dionysopithecus is considered closely related to, and possibly congeneric with, Micropithecus from the East African early Miocene. The Manchar Dionysopithecus is among the earliest of Eurasian catarrhines. Catarrhines may have first emigrated from Afro-Arabia around 16·5 Ma, coincident with a major short-term eustatic sea level lowering event, and with the earliest records in South Asia of certain other African mammal groups. The first appearances in Eurasia of later, more advanced catarrhine lineages also appear to correlate with episodes of global sea level lowering.
2

Şerefköy-2, a New Late Miocene Mammal Locality From the Yataĝan Formation, Muĝla, SW Turkey

Kaya, Tanju T., Mayda, Serdar, Kostopoulos, Dimitris S., Alcicek, Mehmet Cihat, Merceron, Gildas, Tan, Aytekin, Karakutuk, Seval, Giesler, Amanda K., Scott, Robert S. 01 January 2012 (has links)
Here we report on a new fossil locality, şerefköy-2, from the Yataĝan Basin of southwestern Turkey that preserves a well-sampled, abundant, and diverse mammal fauna. Indeed, after three field seasons, more than 1200 catalogued specimens representing 26 mammal species belonging to 14 genera make the şerefköy-2 mammalian assemblage one of the richest Late Miocene fauna from Anatolia. Five hipparionines, six bovids, including the rare and enigmatic Urmiatherium rugosifrons and the presence of Pliohyrax graecus, strongly support affinities with Late Miocene faunas from Samos Island, Greece. Through a consideration of the identified material and the subsequent comparison with material from well-known Balkan and Anatolian faunas, a Middle Turolian (MN12) age for şerefköy-2 is indicated.
3

Palaeoecological and biochronological studies of Riversleigh, world heritage property, Oligo-Miocene fossil localities, north-western Queensland, Australia

Travouillon, Kenny James, Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, UNSW January 2008 (has links)
Riversleigh, World Heritage Property, located in North-western Queensland, Australia, contains over 200 fossil bearing localities from the Oligo-Miocene. The study presented here aims at finding new methods to improve the accuracy of palaeoecological and biochronological studies and describe the palaeoenvironmental and chronological settings of the Riversleigh fossil deposits. One of the methods developed in this thesis, Minimum Sample Richness (MSR), determines the minimum number of species that must be present in a fauna to allow meaningful comparisons using multivariate analyses. Using MSR, several Riversleigh localities were selected for a palaeoecological study using the cenogram method to determine the palaeoenvironment during the Oligo-Miocene. Finally, the Numerical ages method was used to refine the relative ages of the Riversleigh localities and a re-diagnosis of the Riversleigh Systems is proposed.
4

Palaeoecological and biochronological studies of Riversleigh, world heritage property, Oligo-Miocene fossil localities, north-western Queensland, Australia

Travouillon, Kenny James, Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, UNSW January 2008 (has links)
Riversleigh, World Heritage Property, located in North-western Queensland, Australia, contains over 200 fossil bearing localities from the Oligo-Miocene. The study presented here aims at finding new methods to improve the accuracy of palaeoecological and biochronological studies and describe the palaeoenvironmental and chronological settings of the Riversleigh fossil deposits. One of the methods developed in this thesis, Minimum Sample Richness (MSR), determines the minimum number of species that must be present in a fauna to allow meaningful comparisons using multivariate analyses. Using MSR, several Riversleigh localities were selected for a palaeoecological study using the cenogram method to determine the palaeoenvironment during the Oligo-Miocene. Finally, the Numerical ages method was used to refine the relative ages of the Riversleigh localities and a re-diagnosis of the Riversleigh Systems is proposed.
5

Les canis pléistocènes du sud de la France : approche biosystématique, évolutive et biochronologique / Pleistocene canids from southern France : biosystematic, evolution and biochronology

Boudadi-Maligne, Myriam 06 December 2010 (has links)
L’étude des faunes du Quaternaire s’inscrit dans une dynamique de connaissance des paléoenvironnements et est de ce fait nécessaire pour mieux cerner les contraintes environnementales qui ont rythmé la dispersion des hominidés sur l’ensemble des continents. Le genre Canis, autour duquel nous avons axé ce travail de recherche, présente la particularité d’être resté constamment présent en Europe occidentale depuis son apparition, il y a plus de trois millions d’années, jusqu’à aujourd’hui. Cette constance fait de lui, malgré son caractère ubiquiste, un excellent témoin de l’évolution des paléoenvironnements.A travers l’analyse de la variabilité des populations actuelles et l’étude de dix séries fossiles du Sud de la France couvrant le Pléistocène, de nouveaux éléments de discussion sont avancés sur l’évolution des représentants du genre. Nos résultats, couplés à l’analyse critique des données bibliographiques nous ont dès lors permis de proposer une nouvelle phylogénie. Cette dernière permet non seulement de mieux cerner les phases d’apparition et de dispersion des différentes espèces du genre Canis, mais également de démontrer son potentiel biochronologique. Ainsi, trois grandes phases dans l’évolution du genre ont pu être mises en évidence. La transition de ces espèces est corrélée à de grands événements de l’histoire des faunes quaternaires (bioevent) et autorise de ce fait l’utilisation de cette phylogénie à des fins biochronologiques ainsi qu’une discussion autour des relations entre ces espèces et les paléocommunautés animales et humaines. / Quaternary mammals form an important part of the material available for researchers focusing on paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Their study is thus often used to infer the environmental constraints that set the pace of human dispersal through the world. The genus Canis, main subject of this thesis, is present in Western Europe since its origin three million years ago. This continuous presence makes it a good candidate as a paleoenvironmental proxy, even when considering its ecological plasticity.The study of ten fossil sequences from Southern France spanning the Pleistocene, coupled with the analysis of the variability of modern populations, bring new insights on the evolution of the members of this lineage. Our results, once confronted to previous studies, allowed us to propose a new phylogeny. This new framework permits a better understanding of the apparition and disappearance of the different species, but also demonstrates the biochronological potential of the Canis genus. Three major phases have been identified in its evolutionary history. The transition between the different Canids is correlated with major events in the history of quaternary mammals (bioevent). Thus, its phylogeny can be used for biochronological purposes and has to be considered in the bigger debates that focus on the interactions between animal communities and human groups.
6

Les rongeurs du miocène supérieur et terminal d'Afrique nord-occidentale : biochronologie, magnétostratigraphie, biogéographie et paléoenvironnements / Rodent fauna from the late and terminal miocene of the north-western Africa : biochronology, magnetostratigraphy, biogeography and paleonvironnement

Mahboubi, Salamet 12 December 2014 (has links)
L'Afrique nord-occidentale, ou le Maghreb, occupe une position géographique toute particulière car bien que partie intégrante du continent africain, elle possède une façade septentrionale intégrée au domaine méditerranéen et un domaine méridional semi-désertique ou désertique. Dans un premier lieu, des études paléomagnétiques et biostratigraphiques basées sur la faune de rongeurs ont été effectuées sur des dépôts continentaux de deux bassins algériens (Tafna et El Eulma). L'étude magnétostratigraphique réalisée dans ce travail a permis de dater avec précision les différents gisements fossilifères et de les corréler avec les autres bassins néogènes d'Afrique du Nord.Dans la seconde partie, les nouvelles prospections paléontologiques dans le bassin d'Aït Kandoula au Maroc méridional ont amené à découvrir trois gisements fossilifères datés du Miocène terminal. Ces gisements ont livré une riche faune de micromammifères associés à des restes de grands mammifères. L'étude systématique des micromammifères et plus particulièrement des rongeurs des deux gisements AF12-1 et AF12-2 a permis d'identifier des taxons qui ont des affinités avec ceux d'Europe sud-occidentale. Ces deux nouveaux sites ont fourni de nouvelles indications quant aux échanges de faunes entre l'Afrique et l'Europe. Le genre Stephanomys est notamment signalé pour la première fois au Maroc. L'étude biochronologique couplée avec l'étude magnétostratigraphique a permis de bien dater ces gisements, apportant ainsi des indications fiables quant à la chronologie de différentes phases d'échanges fauniques entre l'Afrique nord-occidentale et l'Europe sud-occidentale. Les premiers échanges fauniques ont eu lieu 0,25 Ma avant la crise de salinité messinienne. En outre, certains taxons identifiés dans AF12-2 (Myocricetodon, Protatera, Atlantoxerus) se révèlent utiles comme indicateurs paléoenvironnementaux, attestant des conditions climatiques chaudes et sèches. / North-western Africa, or the Maghreb, occupies a special geographic position, being an integral part of the African continent, but also consisting of an integrated northern Mediterranean area and of a semi-desert or desertic southern area. In the first part, paleomagnetic and biostratigraphic studies based on rodent faunas were carried on continental deposits of two Algerian basins (Tafna and El Eulma). The magnetostratigraphic study realized in this work allowed to estimate the age of various fossiliferous deposits, and to correlate them with various other Neogene basins of North Africa.In the second part, new paleontological prospections in the Aït Kandoula basin (Morocco) led to the discovery of three fossiliferous deposits dated back to late Miocene. These deposits delivered a rich micromammalian fauna associated with large mammal remains. The systematic study of small mammals and especially rodents of deposits from both AF12-1 and AF12-2 allowed identifying taxa which have affinities with those of south-western Europe. These two new localities provide new information on the exchanges of faunas between Africa and Europe. The genus Stephanomys is reported here for the first time in Morocco. The biochronologic and magnetostratigraphic studies provide reliable information for the chronology of various phases of faunal exchanges between north-western Africa and south-western Europe. Faunal exchanges took place 0.25 Ma before the Messinian Salinity Crisis. In addition, some of the taxa identified in AF12-2 (Myocricetodon, Protatera, Atlantoxerus), are useful as paleoenvironmental indicators, attesting warm and dry climatic conditions.
7

Late Eocene through Oligocene calcareous nannofossils from the paleo-equatorial Pacific Ocean – taxonomy, preservation history, biochronology and evolution

Blaj, Teodora January 2009 (has links)
This study aims to unravel the ecological and evolutionary dynamics within the calcareous nannofossil communities at the Eocene/Oligocene (E/O) transition and during the Oligocene time when Cenozoic 'icehouse' conditions were established. The main question this study aims to answer is whether the changes in the nannofossil assemblages were controlled by intrinsic evolutionary trends or if the changes were controlled by environmental factors such as changes in temperature and nutrient availability in the surface water. These questions are addressed with detailed analyses of the taxonomy, biostratigraphy and fluctuations in abundance and diversity of calcareous nannofossil assemblages from a continuous latest Eocene through Oligocene sediment section from the ODP Site 1218 (8°53.38´N, 135°22.00´W), paleo-equatorial Pacific Ocean. An improved nannofossil taxonomy and biostratigraphy has been established. At the E/O transition, changes in the nannofossil preservation mimics changes in calcium carbonate content. A detailed investigation of late Eocene and Oligocene sediments yields age estimates for ten nannofossil bioevents. Morphometric studies of the Reticulofenestra umbilicus-R. hillae show that these cannot be subdivided into two different morphospecies. Based on different morphometry and stratigraphic ranges, the Oligocene Sphenolithus lineage appears to be the result of a combined anagenetic and cladogenetic evolution. A new nannolith species is described: Triquetrorhabdulus longus. High-resolution nannofossil data indicate changes in the composition, abundance and diversity of the mid-Oligocene assemblages. Intervals of high diversity index coincide with Oi-glaciation events. However, visual examination of the variations in abundance of nannofossil taxa do not appear to correlate with changes in either oxygen or carbon isotopes. This presumably indicates that a dynamic equilibrium did not exist between these Oligocene nannoplankton assemblages and changes in surface water temperature or productivity conditions. / Doctoral Thesis in Marine Geoscience at Stockholm University, Sweden 2009
8

Paléoenvironnements et reconstitutions paléoclimatiques du Pléistocène moyen de Thaïlande et leur impact sur la biodiversité et la distribution des espèces : la contribution de la faune de vertébrés du gisement de Khok Sung (Province du Khorat) / Paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic reconstructions of the Thai Middle Pleistocene and their impacts on the biodiversity and the species composition and distribution : the contribution of Khok Sung (Khorat province, Thailand) vertebrate community

Suraprasit, Kantapon 16 November 2015 (has links)
La sablière de Khok Sung, dans la province de Nakhon Ratchasima, qui a livré plus d'un millier de fossiles de mammifères et de reptiles (cranes, dents isolées et restes post-craniens), abrite la faune de vertébrés du Pléistocène la plus riche de Thaïlande. La faune mammalienne qui est décrite ici en détail, se compose d'au moins 18 espèces identifiées (12 genres), y compris un primate et des proboscidiens, rhinocéros, suidés, bovidés, cervidés et carnivores. Elle compte principalement des taxons encore représentés de nos jours, ainsi que quelques taxons globalement ou localement éteints. A partir des données paléomagnétiques et des comparaisons fauniques, l'âge de la faune de Khok Sung est estimé au Pléistocène Moyen tardif, vers 188000 ou 213000 ans. Par rapport aux autres faunes diversifiées du Pléistocène d'Asie du Sud Est, l'assemblage de Khok Sung est caractérisé par une association des taxons Stegodon-Ailuropoda, comparable en cela au site de Thum Wiman Nakin, ce qui supporte l'hypothèse selon laquelle le Nord Est de la Thaïlande était un corridor biogéographique appartenant à la route migratoire Sino-Malaise, entre la Chine du Sud et l'île de Java. L'analyse des isotopes stables du carbone à partir de l'émail des ongulés fossiles révèle la présence d'une partition de niches entre les méga-herbivores et au sein des cervidés. Les valeurs du d13C de l'émail suggèrent également que les ruminants ont consommé une grande quantité de plantes en C4, ce qui indique que les prairies à graminées étaient particulièrement répandues en Thaïlande à cette époque où les écosystèmes n'étaient pas encore soumis à l'influence anthropique. La mesure des isotopes stables de l'oxygène, obtenue par échantillonnage sérié de l'émail des dents de grands mammifères, et l'analyse du cénogramme de la localité de Khok Sung reflètent une importante variation saisonnière des précipitations et de la température, associée à des conditions climatiques relativement humides. / The Khok Sung sand pit, Nakhon Ratchasima province, has yielded the richest Pleistocene vertebrate fauna of Thailand, where more than a thousand fossil mammals and reptiles (skulls, isolated teeth, and postcranial remains) were recovered. The mammalian fauna, which is described in details hereby, consists of at least 18 identified species (12 genera), including a primate, proboscideans, rhinoceroses, suids, bovids, cervids, and carnivores, which are characterized by mostly extant elements associated to some completely and locally extinct taxa. The age of the Khok Sung fauna is tentatively attributed to the late Middle Pleistocene as either 188 or 213 ka, based on the paleomagnetic data and on the faunal comparisons. The Khok Sung mammal assemblage yields the Stegodon-Ailuropoda faunal association, most similar in composition to that of Thum Wiman Nakin, supporting the hypothesis that northeastern Thailand was a biogeographic gateway of the Sino-Malayan migration route from South China to Java. An analysis of stable carbon isotopes extracted from the tooth enamel of fossil ungulates reveals evidence of niche partitioning among megaherbivores and within cervids. The enamel carbonate d13C values also suggest a considerable amount of C4 plants in the dietary use of ruminants, indicating that grasslands had significantly expanded in Thailand at that time during which anthropic impacts on the ecosystems were absent. The stable oxygen isotope results, obtained from the serial sampling of large mammal enamel, combined with the cenogram analysis reflect significant seasonal variation in precipitations and temperature for Khok Sung, associated to a relatively humid climate.
9

Evolution morphométrique et biogéographie des léporidés dans les environnements méditerranéens au Pléistocène : implications socio-économiques pour les sociétés humaines / Morphometric evolution and biogeography of leporids in Mediterranean environments during the Pleistocene : socio-economic implications for human societies

Pelletier, Maxime 07 September 2018 (has links)
En Europe de l’Ouest, de nombreuses espèces de léporidés sont endémiques, ce qui en fait de bons témoins de l’évolution des écosystèmes terrestres dans lesquelles ont évolué les sociétés humaines préhistoriques. Paradoxalement, leur variabilité morphologique est mal connue et la phylogénie établie aujourd’hui, discutable. Ce travail propose de renseigner la diversité morphométrique des lapins et des lièvres sur près de deux millions d’années d’évolution, à travers l’application d’études ostéométriques et en morphométrie géométrique. L’analyse de restes osseux et dentaires – de populations actuelles et de 73 séries fossiles provenant de régions périméditerranéennes couvrant le Pléistocène – permet de caractériser les adaptations des léporidés face aux changements environnementaux et leurs tendances évolutives. Cette étude propose une nouvelle phylogénie pour le lapin et présente les différentes phases de dispersion des taxons à l’échelle de l’Europe occidentale. Ainsi, plusieurs événements de type expansion des populations, recolonisation des territoires depuis des zones refuges et extinctions locales, sont mis en évidence en réponse aux changements climatiques globaux. Ces résultats permettent de discuter la présence de ces petits gibiers dans l’environnement et alimente le débat sur les relations entre ces espèces et les communautés humaines. Leur augmentation significative dans la diète des groupes humains à la fin du Paléolithique supérieur, ne semble pas seulement s’expliquer par des changements cognitifs, culturels ou économiques, mais coïncide davantage avec les variations biogéographiques de ces espèces. / Fossil remains of small mammals of the Leporidae family are abundant in numerous paleontological and archaeological deposits from the Quaternary. Many species are endemic to Western Europe, which makes them reliable markers of change in the ecosystems in which prehistoric human societies evolved. Paradoxically, morphological variability of leporids is still poorly understood and current phylogeny remains a subject of debate. This work focuses on the morphometric diversity of rabbits (Oryctolagus) and hares (Lepus) over nearly two million years of evolution. We applied osteometry and geometric morphometric analyzes to bone and dental remains of current populations and 73 fossil samples from perimediterranean regions (Spain, France, Italy, Portugal) during different moments of the Pleistocene. These data provide insights concerning Leporidae adaptations to environmental change as well as more general evolutionary trends. Here we propose a new phylogeny for the genus Oryctolagus and present different dispersion phases for Western Europe. Several population expansion events coupled with the recolonization of refuge areas and local extinctions are highlighted in response to global climate change. These results allow us to discuss the presence of these small game species in the environment and contribute to the debate concerning relations between leporids and human communities. Humans have regularly consumed leporids since at least the Middle Paleolithic. Their significant increase in the diet at the end of the Upper Paleolithic, however, cannot be explained solely by cognitive, cultural or economic changes but rather coincides with biogeographic variations of these species.
10

Effects of taxonomic and locality inaccuracies on biostratigraphy and biochronology of the Hueso and Tapiado formations in the Vallecito Creek-Fish Creek section, Anza-Borrego Desert, California

Murray, Lyndon Keith 09 April 2012 (has links)
The fossiliferous sediments of the Hueso and Tapiado formations exposed in the Vallecito Creek-Fish Creek section (VCFC) of the Anza-Borrego Desert (ABD) span the boundary between Blancan and Irvingtonian North American Land Mammal 'Ages.' Historically, the determination of the Blancan-Irvingtonian (B-I) boundary in the VCFC proved problematic. A new study to determine the B-I boundary in the VCFC revealed data inaccuracies in both published works and curatorial records of the mammal and other vertebrate fossils from the ABD. Most individual inaccuracies were minor, but an accumulation of over 50 years of multiple inaccuracies had significant effects on local and regional biostratigraphic and biochronologic correlations. A detailed investigation of the inaccurate data resulted in recognition of 17 types of error, with at least five sources. The two most prominent sources of error are those derived from publication and curation protocols. Examination of over 150 publications and in-house faunal lists produced over 830 taxonomic names and format variants, for 110 mammalian taxa identified from the ABD and VCFC. Approximately 50% of the taxonomic identifications were previously published without voucher catalogue numbers or fossil descriptions. A critical review of the taxonomic assignments resulted in an updated faunal list of ABD terrestrial Mammalia, including 110 taxonomic names, 66 unqualified genera, and 46 unqualified species. A supplemental list of 'retired' taxa includes 178 previously published or listed taxonomic names and format variants. The 4.5 km sequence of originally superposed sediments within VCFC is now tilted at 23 degrees and exposed in plan view. This exposure was captured in both aerial photos and satellite imagery. GIS layers of the Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale and individual collecting localities are readily superposed onto the stratigraphic images. When united with the faunal database, GIS maps of biostratigraphic data facilitate detection and correction of data errors. Resulting corrected maps show highest and lowest stratigraphic occurrences of taxa, as well as geographic clustering of taxonomic groups, outlining possible paleohabitats. As a result of data improvement and GIS display, the local B-I boundary currently is best estimated by the presence of Ovibovini at >1.42 Ma. / text

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