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This book documents analyses of the Late Cretaceous dinosaur
nesting sites of the Lameta Formation at Jabalpur, Districts Dhar
and Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh; Districts Kheda and Panchmahal
(Gujarat); and the Pisdura, Dongargaon and Pavna sectors in the
Chandrapur Districts of Maharashtra, which are exposed in India
along an east-west and central axis. In this work, special emphasis
has been given to the dinosaur nesting sites of the east-central
Narbada River region, including its regional geology. The work was
undertaken to provide detailed information concerning dinosaur
eggs, eggshell fragments, nests and clutches found in the Lameta
Formation of peninsular India. Prior to the present work there had
been no detailed review of systematic work on the taxonomy, and of
micro- and ultrastructural studies of dinosaur eggs and eggshells
from the Lameta Formation. The study documents the field and
laboratory investigations that facilitated the reconstruction of
the morphotaxonomy, models for the burial pattern of eggs and
eggshells, taphonomic implications,and the palaeoenvironmental
context and palaeoecological conditions during the Late Cretaceous
at the time of the extrusion of the Deccan traps, which may have
been partly responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs. The
need to follow a parataxonomic classification for Indian dinosaur
eggs and eggshell types is very apparent, and this book addresses
this aspect in some detail. The emphasis on the application of
parataxonomic schemes is based on the description of new oospecies
and their comparison with previously known forms. The present work
has led to the recovery of numerous nests, many collapsed eggs and
hundreds of dinosaur eggshell fragments from the localities
situated near the east, west and central Narbada River regions. It
will be of interest to academics and professional palaeontologists,
and all students of dinosaurs.
This book describes the microbiota of the intertrappean beds in the
Chhindwara District, Madhya Pradesh, India. In this work, special
emphasis is placed on the microbiota from the Late Cretaceous-Early
Palaeocene transition of the central Narmada River region.
Recently, the intertrappean beds of the Eastern Deccan Volcanic
Province (one of the subprovinces of the Deccan Volcanic Province)
have received considerable attention, which resulted in the
addition of some significant biotic assemblages to the existing
record from the Dindori-Chhindwara area of the province. The biotic
assemblages include charophytes, ostracods, foraminiferans, fishes,
frogs, lizards, turtles, crocodiles, and mammals. In spite of the
recent discoveries, the known fossil record of the Late
Cretaceous-Early Palaeocene biota of India is not sufficient and
thus does not permit us to speculate on the possible impact of
environmental changes triggered by the Deccan volcanic lava flows
on the contemporary biota and to precisely document their
palaeoecologic, palaeoenvironmental and palaeobiogeographic
implications. The recent biotic reports from the intertrappean beds
exposed in the Chhindwara region of the Eastern Deccan Volcanic
Province clearly indicate that these beds have a vast potential in
terms of fossil content, which could reveal new and dissimilar
biotic remains when compared to the Western Deccan Volcanic
Province. The record of diverse accumulations of freshwater
charophytes, brackish to freshwater ostracods, and planktic
foraminiferal and fish assemblages from the intertrappean beds of
Jhilmili and adjacent areas of Early Danian (P1a) age and lying
just north of Chhindwara town and in the heart of peninsular India
has intriguing implications for defining the age limits of the
basaltic flows. The occurrence of non-marine taxa, for example,
algae, molluscs, and vertebrates, associated with brackish water
ostracods in the nearby Singpur and Mohgaon Kalan localities of the
Chhindwara region, has also raised concerns about the sedimentary
environments of these intertrappean beds. The new finds (presented
in this book) prove useful for the better understanding of the
palaeoecology and palaeoenvironment of the biota and also throw
light on various paleobiogeographic models proposed for the
northward drifting Indian plate. The microbiotic assemblages of the
intertrappean beds of the eastern Deccan volcanic province at
District Chhindwara, Madhya Pradesh are documented in this book.
The microbiota of the central Narmada River region, the
charophytes, ostracods, planktic foraminifera, and fishes, receive
special attention in this study.
This book documents analyses of the Late Cretaceous dinosaur
nesting sites of the Lameta Formation at Jabalpur, Districts Dhar
and Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh; Districts Kheda and Panchmahal
(Gujarat); and the Pisdura, Dongargaon and Pavna sectors in the
Chandrapur Districts of Maharashtra, which are exposed in India
along an east-west and central axis. In this work, special emphasis
has been given to the dinosaur nesting sites of the east-central
Narbada River region, including its regional geology. The work was
undertaken to provide detailed information concerning dinosaur
eggs, eggshell fragments, nests and clutches found in the Lameta
Formation of peninsular India. Prior to the present work there had
been no detailed review of systematic work on the taxonomy, and of
micro- and ultrastructural studies of dinosaur eggs and eggshells
from the Lameta Formation. The study documents the field and
laboratory investigations that facilitated the reconstruction of
the morphotaxonomy, models for the burial pattern of eggs and
eggshells, taphonomic implications,and the palaeoenvironmental
context and palaeoecological conditions during the Late Cretaceous
at the time of the extrusion of the Deccan traps, which may have
been partly responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs. The
need to follow a parataxonomic classification for Indian dinosaur
eggs and eggshell types is very apparent, and this book addresses
this aspect in some detail. The emphasis on the application of
parataxonomic schemes is based on the description of new oospecies
and their comparison with previously known forms. The present work
has led to the recovery of numerous nests, many collapsed eggs and
hundreds of dinosaur eggshell fragments from the localities
situated near the east, west and central Narbada River regions. It
will be of interest to academics and professional palaeontologists,
and all students of dinosaurs.
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