3.9 Article

Early Miocene reef- and mudflat-associated gastropods from Makran (SE-Iran)

Journal

PALZ
Volume 91, Issue 4, Pages 519-539

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12542-017-0354-8

Keywords

Mollusca; Indian Ocean; Biogeography; Neogene; Makran

Categories

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 29158-N29]
  2. Austrian Academy of Sciences (OAW)
  3. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P29158] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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A new gastropod fauna of Burdigalian (early Miocene) age is described from the Iranian part of Makran. The fauna comprises 19 species and represents three distinct assemblages from turbid water coral reef, shallow subtidal soft-bottom and mangrove-fringed mudflat environments in the northern Indian Ocean. Especially the reef-associated assemblage comprises largely new species. This is explained by the rare occurrence of reefs along the northern margin of the Miocene Indian Ocean and the low number of scientific studies dealing with the region. In terms of paleobiogeography, the fauna corresponds well to coeval faunas from the Pakistani Balochistan and Sindh provinces and the Indian Kathiawar, Kutch and Kerala provinces. During the early Miocene, these constituted a discrete biogeographic unit, the Western Indian Province, which documents the near complete biogeographic isolation from the Proto-Mediterranean Sea. Some mudflat taxa might represent examples of vicariance following the Tethys closure. The fauna also displays little connection with coeval faunas from Indonesia, documenting a strong provincialism within the Indo-West Pacific Region during early Miocene times. Neritopsis gedrosiana sp. nov., Calliostoma irerense sp. nov., Calliostoma mohtatae sp. nov. and Trivellona makranica sp. nov. are described as new species.

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