Abstract

The fluvial Neogene Siwalik formations of northern Pakistan contain a long and richly fossiliferous sequence of terrestrial vertebrate faunas in which patterns of faunal turnover and changes in diversity can be documented and analyzed for intervals having durations of 0.5 m.y. The complete sequence extends from circa 18.5 to 1 Ma, but the part between 18.5 and 5.5 Ma is best sampled, and most intervals within it are well represented. Thirteen orders of Siwalik mammals have been identified, with well-sampled intervals having 50 or more species. Most Siwalik mammals, however, are either rodents or artiodactyls. Bovids are the most common and most speciose of the larger mammals, while murid and “cricetid” rodents dominate the small mammal assemblages. Between 18.5 and 5.5 Ma species diversity varied considerably. Among artiodactyls and rodents the number of species first increased between 15 and 13 Ma and then fell. Data on stratigraphic ranges of rodents and artiodactyls show that faunal change in the Siwaliks was episodic, occurring during short intervals with high turnover followed by longer periods with considerably less change. Maxima of first appearances occurred at approximately 13.5 and 8.5 Ma, while maxima of last occurrences were at 12.5 and 8.0 Ma. Some of the observed faunal events can be correlated to climatic and environmental changes. The Middle Miocene diversification occurred during a period of global cooling, while the latest Miocene decline in diversity and increased turnover accompanied oxygen and carbon isotopic changes that correlate to globally increasing seasonality and aridity. Other correlations are ambiguous. The marked decrease in diversity and the major turnover events between 13 and 8 Ma do not correspond to known local or global events. The Neogene Siwaliks and Paleogene Bighorn-Crazy Mountains sequence in Wyoming and Montana share many similarities. They have equivalent levels of temporal resolution and similar levels of completeness of their fossil records. Siwalik ordinal abundance and diversity patterns differ markedly from those of the Paleogene, but generic, and probably species, diversity was approximately the same, although the Siwalik faunas may have been slightly less diverse. Over time, changes in diversity were of comparable magnitude, with monotonic trends persisting for more than 5 million years. The magnitude of faunal turnover was also similar, ranging from less than half to 3.5 times that expected. In both sequences faunal change appears to have been episodic, with strong pulses between intervals of low turnover. The Siwaliks, in contrast to the Paleogene sequence, may have had more distinct pulses and longer intervals between pulses. Neither sequence has peaks of first occurrences coinciding with peaks of last occurrences.

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