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   Location:Home > Research > Research Progress
Newly discovered fossils prove “Shangri-La”-like ecosystem in central Tibet
Author: Su Tao
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Update time: 2020-12-08
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Despite decades of investigation, Tibet’s ancient topography and its role in climatic and biotic evolution remain speculative due to a paucity of quantitative surface height measurements through time and space, and sparse fossil records. 

During the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition in Tibet, an international research team led by Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) and Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology both belonging to Chinese Academy of Sciences, Bristol and The Open University discovered a highly diverse fossil assemblage from the current elevation of 4,850 m in the Bangor Basin in central Tibet. The study was published in PNAS. 

The 70 plant fossil taxa so far recovered include the first occurrences of several modern Asian lineages and represent a middle Eocene (about 47 million years ago) humid subtropical ecosystem. 

Many taxa in the Jianglang flora, e.g., Apocynaceae, Ceratophyllum, Illigera, Lagokarpos, and Vitaceae, represent first discoveries for the plateau, and some are the oldest fossil records for these taxa in Asia, e.g., Apocynaceae, Cedrelospermum, Lagokarpos, and Limnobiophyllum. 

These fossils not only record the diverse composition of the ancient Tibetan biota, but also allow us to constrain the middle Eocene land surface height in central Tibet to 1,500 ± 900 m, and quantify the prevailing thermal and hydrological regime,” said Prof. ZHOU Zhekun of XTBG. 

By reconstructing ancient climate parameters encoded in leaf morphological traits, the researchers quantified both the climate and elevation of central Tibet in the middle Eocene. They calculated that the forest grew at an elevation of about 1500 meters within an east-west trending valley under a monsoonal climate. 

In the future, the complex topography of Tibet in the geological past needs to be considered when studying the paleoenvironmental and biodiversity histories on the plateau,” said Dr. SU Tao. 

 

Selected fossil plant taxa (Image by SU Tao) 

 

Field work. (Image by SU Tao) 

  

Contact: 

Profs. ZHOU Zhekun and SU Tao Ph.D  

Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences 

E-mail: zhouzk@xtbg.ac.cnsutao@xtbg.org.cn 

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Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Menglun, Mengla, Yunnan 666303, China
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