2013
DOI: 10.1130/g34164.1
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Evidence for an African-Iberian mammal dispersal during the pre-evaporitic Messinian

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Cited by 92 publications
(86 citation statements)
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“…This suggests, given the lack of macaques in slightly older late Miocene sites such as Venta del Moro in Spain, that macaques did not disperse from Africa into Eurasia until the latest Miocene, coinciding with the sea level drop associated with the MSC (Alba et al, 2014(Alba et al, , 2015. However, it is uncertain whether macaques dispersed through the Gibraltar area (Gibert et al, 2013) or otherwise using the Middle East route that was already available from pre-Messinian times and was most likely followed in the case of Mesopithecus (Gilbert et al, 2014;Alba et al, 2015).…”
Section: Vertebratesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This suggests, given the lack of macaques in slightly older late Miocene sites such as Venta del Moro in Spain, that macaques did not disperse from Africa into Eurasia until the latest Miocene, coinciding with the sea level drop associated with the MSC (Alba et al, 2014(Alba et al, , 2015. However, it is uncertain whether macaques dispersed through the Gibraltar area (Gibert et al, 2013) or otherwise using the Middle East route that was already available from pre-Messinian times and was most likely followed in the case of Mesopithecus (Gilbert et al, 2014;Alba et al, 2015).…”
Section: Vertebratesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…1). Fossil Macaca specimens from the terminal Miocene of Spain and Italy have been suggested to provide evidence for the use of a route across the Mediterranean Basin or the Straits of Gibraltar via an ephemeral land bridge either immediately before-or perhaps associated with-the drop in Mediterranean sea levels during the Messinian (∼6.0-5.3 Ma) (8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19). Paleontological evidence for an Arabian route has been lacking, but paleogeographic and paleoenvironmental work on circum-Arabia suggests that the region did not present a persistent ecological barrier to some amount of intercontinental exchange during the late Miocene (20).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the last members of the genus Indarctos (local biozone M2, Van Dam et al, 2001) are replaced by the Hemicyonidae genus Agriotherium that arrived at the Iberian Peninsula during the biozone M3 of the MN13 (recently dated at 6.23 Ma. ; Gibert et al, 2013), the last ailuropod bears begin a relatively quick decay in Western and Central Europe. During the last part of the MN13 there is a small vacuum in the Iberian Peninsula without Ursoidea (between the localities of Venta del Moro and Alcoy, both to the East of Spain).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%