Synchronous turnover of flora, fauna, and climate at the Eocene-Oligocene Boundary in Asia

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Abstract

The Eocene-Oligocene Boundary (~34 million years ago) marks one of the largest extinctions of marine invertebrates in the world oceans and of mammalian fauna in Europe and Asia in the Cenozoic era.Ashift to a cooler climate across this boundary has been suggested as the cause of this extinction in the marine environment, but there is no manifold evidence for a synchronous turnover of flora, fauna and climate at the Eocene-Oligocene Boundary in a single terrestrial site in Asia to support this hypothesis. Here we report new data of magnetostratigraphy, pollen and climatic proxies in the Asian interior across the Eocene- Oligocene Boundary; our results show that climate change forced a turnover of flora and fauna, suggesting there was a change from large-size perissodactyl-dominant fauna in forests under a warm-temperate climate to small rodent/lagomorph-dominant fauna in forest-steppe in a dry-temperate climate across the Eocene- Oligocene Boundary. These data provide a new terrestrial record for this significant Cenozoic environmental event.

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Sun, J., Ni, X., Bi, S., Wu, W., Ye, J., Meng, J., & Windley, B. F. (2014). Synchronous turnover of flora, fauna, and climate at the Eocene-Oligocene Boundary in Asia. Scientific Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep07463

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