Miocene Stromboid Gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic Implications

Stromboid gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea) are one of the most diverse groups of gastropods present in the Neogene marine successions of western India. In the present endeavor, we report eight stromboid species, of which four are described as new, from the early-middle Miocene marine successions...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Geological Society of India 2023-11, Vol.99 (11), p.1491-1507
Hauptverfasser: Bose, Kanishka, Das, Shiladri S., Saha, Sandip
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stromboid gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea) are one of the most diverse groups of gastropods present in the Neogene marine successions of western India. In the present endeavor, we report eight stromboid species, of which four are described as new, from the early-middle Miocene marine successions of the Dwarka Basin, western India. The species are Conomurex indica n. sp., Persististrombus deperditus , Persististrombus sp., Dilatilabrum mahalonobisi n. sp., Tibia indica , Terebellum obtusum , Hemithersitea kanerus n. sp. and Hemithersitea nadharus n. sp. Paleobiogeographic distribution of most of the stromboid genera reported here reveals a unidirectional migration from the Tethys Region towards the Indo-Pacific Region during the Paleogene and Neogene. Conomurex originated in the western India and further radiated to the eastern Indian-Western Pacific localities with the onset of the Neogene. Persististrombus and Tibia show widespread distribution in the Mediterranean and gradually radiated towards the eastern Africa-western India localities during the Paleogene. However, from the middle Miocene onwards, these two genera further migrated towards the eastern Indian-Western Pacific localities and became more diverse. The remaining two genera, i.e., Dilatilabrum and Hemithersitea originated in the Mediterranean and later migrated to take refuge in western India during the late Paleogene, and ultimately succumbed to extinction during the middle Miocene.
ISSN:0016-7622
0974-6889
DOI:10.1007/s12594-023-2501-z