MAMMALIAN EVOLUTION ACROSS THE CRETACEOUS/TERTIARY BOUNDARY: THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF SURVIVAL, DISPERSAL, AND EXTINCTION
Abstract
Currently the most detailed fossil record of mammalian evolution across the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary is derived from the Western Interior of North America. Recent discoveries in other areas, particularly South America, Africa, and Eurasia, are beginning to provide records of the changes in composition of contemporaneous terrestrial faunas. From a global perspective, Late Cretaceous and Paleocene terrestrial biotas are characterized by biogeographic provincialism, which appears to have had its origins in the differentiation of Gondwanan and Laurasian biotas earlier in the Mesozoic. During the transition from the Late Cretaceous into the Paleocene survival, dispersal, and extinction interacted to produce new patterns of biogeographic diversity.
KEY WORDS. Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary. Survival. Dispersal. Extinction. Mammals.
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