Gondwana to Asia: Plate tectonics, paleogeography and the biological connectivity of the Indian sub-continent from the Middle Jurassic through latest Eocene (166-35 Ma)

被引:447
作者
Ali, Jason R. [1 ]
Aitchison, Jonathan C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Earth Sci, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
biogeography; India; Madagascar; Tethys; Gondwana; Africa; Asia;
D O I
10.1016/j.earscirev.2008.01.007
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Using the most up-to-the-date information available, we present a considerably revised plate tectonic and paleogeographic model for the Indian Ocean bordering continents, from Gondwana's Middle Jurassic break-up through to India's collision with Asia in the middle Cenozoic. The landmass framework is then used to explore the sometimes complex and occasionally counter-intuitive pattern that have been observed in the fossil and extant biological records of India, Madagascar, Africa and eastern Eurasia, as well those of the more distal continents. Although the paleogeographic model confirms the traditional view that India became progressively more isolated from the major landmasses during the Cretaceous and Paleocene, it is likely that at various times minor physiographic features (principally ocean islands) provided causeways and/or stepping-stone trails along which land animals could have migrated to/from the sub-continent. Aside from a likely link (albeit broken by several marine gaps) to Africa for much of this time (it is notable, that the present-day/recent biota of Madagascar indicates that the ancestors of five land-mammal orders, plus bats, crossed the > 400-km-wide Mozambique Channel at different times in the Cenozoic), it is possible that the Kerguelen Plateau connected India and Australia-Antarctica in the mid-Cretaceous (approximately 115-90 Ma). Later, the Seychelles-Mascarene Plateau and nearby elevated sea-floor areas could have allowed faunas to pass between southern India and Madagascar in the Late Cretaceous, from around 85-65 Ma, with an early Cenozoic extension to this path forming as a result of the Reunion hot-spot trace islands growing on the ocean floor to the SSW of India. The modelling also suggests that India's northward passage towards Asia, with eventual collision at 35 Ma, involved the NE corner of the sub-continent making a glancing contact with Sumatra, followed by Burma from similar to 57 Ma (late Paleocene) onwards, a scenario which is compatible with the fossil record indicating that India-Asia faunal exchanges began occurring at about this time. Finally, we contend that a number of biologically-based direct terrestrial migration routes that have been proposed for last 15 m.y. of the Cretaceous (Asia to India; Antarctica to Madagascar and/or India) can probably be dismissed because the marine barriers, likely varying from > 1000 up to 2500 km, were simply too wide. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:145 / 166
页数:22
相关论文
共 186 条
  • [1] Neotethys and the India-Asia collision: Insights from a palaeomagnetic study of the Dazhuqu ophiolite, southern Tibet
    Abrajevitch, AV
    Ali, JR
    Aitchison, JC
    Badengzhu
    Davis, AM
    Liu, JB
    Ziabrev, SV
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2005, 233 (1-2) : 87 - 102
  • [2] Acton G.D., 1999, INDIAN SUBCONTINENT, P129
  • [3] Shoshonites in southern Tibet record Late Jurassic rifting of a tethyan intraoceanic island arc
    Aitchison, J. C.
    McDermid, I. R. C.
    Ali, J. R.
    Davis, A. M.
    Zyabrev, S. V.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 2007, 115 (02) : 197 - 213
  • [4] Remnants of a Cretaceous intra-oceanic subduction system within the Yarlung-Zangbo suture (southern Tibet)
    Aitchison, JC
    Badengzhu
    Davis, AM
    Liu, JB
    Luo, H
    Malpas, JG
    McDermid, IRC
    Wu, HY
    Ziabrev, SV
    Zhou, MF
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2000, 183 (1-2) : 231 - 244
  • [5] Evidence for the multiphase nature of the India-Asia collision from the Yarlung Tsangpo suture zone, Tibet
    Aitchison, JC
    Davis, AM
    [J]. ASPECTS OF THE TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF CHINA, 2004, 226 : 217 - 233
  • [6] New constraints on the India-Asia collision: the Lower Miocene Gangrinboche conglomerates, Yarlung Tsangpo suture zone, SE Tibet
    Aitchison, JC
    Davis, AM
    Badengzhu, B
    Luo, H
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2002, 21 (03) : 251 - 263
  • [7] AITCHISON JC, 2003, SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS, V218, P147
  • [8] When and where did India and Asia collide?
    Aitchison, Jonathan C.
    Ali, Jason R.
    Davis, Aileen M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 2007, 112 (B5)
  • [9] Ali JR, 2007, CURR SCI INDIA, V92, P739
  • [10] Positioning Paleogene Eurasia problem: Solution for 60-50 Ma and broader tectonic implications
    Ali, Jason R.
    Aitchison, Jonathan C.
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2006, 251 (1-2) : 148 - 155