Abstract

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) is correlated with the first occurrences of earliest modern mammals in the Northern Hemisphere. The latest Paleocene Clarkforkian North American Land Mammal Age, that has yielded rodents and carnivorans, is the only exception to this rule. However, until now no pre-PETM localities have yielded modern mammals in Europe or Asia. We report the first Clarkforkian equivalent Land Mammal Age in the latest Paleocene deposits of the basal Sparnacian facies at Rivecourt, in the north-central part of the Paris Basin. The new terrestrial vertebrate and macroflora assemblages are analyzed through a multidisciplinary study including sedimentologic, stratigraphic, isotopic, and palynological aspects in order to reconstruct the paleoenvironment and to evaluate biochronologic and paleogeographic implications. The mammals are moderately diverse and not abundant, contrary to turtles and champsosaurs. The macroflora is exceptional in preservation and diversity with numerous angiosperms represented by flowers, fruits, seeds and wood preserved as lignite material, revealing an abundance of Arecaceae, Betulaceae, Icacinaceae, Menispermaceae, Vitaceae and probably Cornaceae. Results indicate a Late Paleocene age based on carbon isotope data, palynology and vertebrate occurrences such as the choristoderan Champsosaurus, the arctocyonid Arctocyon, and the plesiadapid Plesiadapis tricuspidens. However, several mammal species compare better with the earliest Eocene. Among these, the particular louisinid Teilhardimys musculus, also recorded from the latest Paleocene of the Spanish Pyrenees, suggests a younger age than the typical MP6 reference level. Nevertheless, the most important aspect of the Rivecourt fauna is the presence of dental remains of a rodent and a “miacid” carnivoran, attesting to the presence of two modern mammalian orders in the latest Paleocene of Europe. Interestingly, these two groups are also the only modern groups recorded from the latest Paleocene of North America, making Rivecourt the first direct equivalent to the Clarkforkian Land Mammal Age outside of North America.

Highlights

  • The eastern part of the Paris Basin in northern France is one of the most representative areas for Late Paleocene mammals in Europe

  • Belgian Basin has yielded the earliest Eocene mammals of Europe in the Dormaal Member of the Tienen Formation, which is correlated with the beginning of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) and associated with a negative Carbon Isotope Excursion (CIE) [2]

  • The Rivecourt terrestrial vertebrate faunal assemblage in the Paris Basin corresponds to an intermediate age between the reference level MP6 of Cernay and MP7 of Dormaal, indicating a correlation with the MP6b of the Upper part of the Tremp Formation in Spain and probably the Jibou Formation in Romania

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Summary

Introduction

The eastern part of the Paris Basin in northern France is one of the most representative areas for Late Paleocene mammals in Europe. Belgian Basin has yielded the earliest Eocene mammals of Europe in the Dormaal Member of the Tienen Formation, which is correlated with the beginning of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) and associated with a negative Carbon Isotope Excursion (CIE) [2]. Cernay-Berru is reference-level MP6 of the mammalian biochronological scale for the European Paleogene [6]–[7] and is commonly viewed as equivalent to the Late Tiffanian North American Land Mammal Age (NALMA), whereas Dormaal is reference-level MP7 and is correlated with the beginning of the Wasatchian NALMA [2], [8]–[9]. Up to now, no terrestrial vertebrate assemblage from Europe has been considered coeval with the Clarkforkian NALMA, which is nested between Tiffanian and Wasatchian ages and represents the latest Paleocene in North America

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