| Literature DB >> 33288692 |
Tao Su1,2,3, Robert A Spicer4,5, Fei-Xiang Wu6,7, Alexander Farnsworth8, Jian Huang4,2, Cédric Del Rio4, Tao Deng3,6,7, Lin Ding9,10, Wei-Yu-Dong Deng4,3, Yong-Jiang Huang11, Alice Hughes12, Lin-Bo Jia11, Jian-Hua Jin13, Shu-Feng Li4,2, Shui-Qing Liang14, Jia Liu4,2, Xiao-Yan Liu15, Sarah Sherlock5, Teresa Spicer4, Gaurav Srivastava16, He Tang4,3, Paul Valdes8, Teng-Xiang Wang4,3, Mike Widdowson17, Meng-Xiao Wu4,3, Yao-Wu Xing4,2, Cong-Li Xu4, Jian Yang18, Cong Zhang19, Shi-Tao Zhang20, Xin-Wen Zhang4,3, Fan Zhao4, Zhe-Kun Zhou1,2,11.
Abstract
Tibet's ancient topography and its role in climatic and biotic evolution remain speculative due to a paucity of quantitative surface-height measurements through time and space, and sparse fossil records. However, newly discovered fossils from a present elevation of ∼4,850 m in central Tibet improve substantially our knowledge of the ancient Tibetan environment. The 70 plant fossil taxa so far recovered include the first occurrences of several modern Asian lineages and represent a Middle Eocene (∼47 Mya) humid subtropical ecosystem. The fossils not only record the diverse composition of the ancient Tibetan biota, but also allow us to constrain the Middle Eocene land surface height in central Tibet to ∼1,500 ± 900 m, and quantify the prevailing thermal and hydrological regime. This "Shangri-La"-like ecosystem experienced monsoon seasonality with a mean annual temperature of ∼19 °C, and frosts were rare. It contained few Gondwanan taxa, yet was compositionally similar to contemporaneous floras in both North America and Europe. Our discovery quantifies a key part of Tibetan Paleogene topography and climate, and highlights the importance of Tibet in regard to the origin of modern Asian plant species and the evolution of global biodiversity.Entities:
Keywords: Tibetan Plateau; biodiversity; fossil; monsoon; topography
Year: 2020 PMID: 33288692 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2012647117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205