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Miocene or "less recent" is so called because it contains fewer
modern animals than the following, Pliocene, epoch. The Miocene lasted
from 18 million years, making it the longest epoch of the Cenozoic era.
This was a huge time of transition, the end of the old prehistoric world
and the birth of the more recent sort of world. It was also the high point
of the age of mammals
Plate Tectonics and Geography
During the late Miocene the island continent of India slammed into Asia,
pushing up the Himalayas and triggering a global cooling that was to
culminate in the Pleistocene ice ages. Elsewhere the Rockies, and Andes
rose as well.
Climate
The Miocene was a time of warmer global climates than those in the preceding
Oligocene, or the following Pliocene. During this time modern patterns
of atmospheric and ocean circulation formed. The isolation of Antarctica
from Australia and South America meant the establishment of the circum-polar
ocean circulation, which significantly reduced the mixing or warmer
tropical water and cold polar water, and further led to the buildup
of the Antarctic ice cap.
Stratigraphy
Miocene stratigraphy is complex because a great many different measures
are in common use. These include ICS stages, absolute dates, magnetic
polarity reversals ("chrons"), land mammal stages (which differ
between continents), and local geological zonation schemes (which differ
even more). Below is a table from Böhme (2003), which correlates
the systems for Europe. The land mammal stages (MN1 through MN 14) are
also used in Africa, and are frequently found in the literature on human
evolution. This system is continued through the end of the Pliocene
(MN17). For details and definitions, see Agustí et al. (2001).
The land mammal schemes for
South America and North America are shown, in somewhat less detail,
on the Cenozoic Timescale page.
Plant Life
Two major ecosystems first appeared during the Miocene: kelp forests
and grasslands. The expansion of grasslands is correlated to a drying
of continental interiors and a global cooling. Later in the Miocene
a distinct cooling of the climate resulted in the further reduction
of both tropical and conifer forests, and the flourishing of grasslands
and savanna in their stead.
Animal Life
In Eurasia and North America, the spread of grasslands forced an
evolutionary change in herbivorous mammals, with the forest browsers
giving way to the prairie grazers. Grass is a very tough and abrasive
material, and herbivores like horses evolved very high-crowned teeth
to cope with the wear. Both the perissodactyls and artiodactyls
underwent a period of rapid evolution during the Miocene. During
the Oligocene artiodactyls had developed an advanced digestive systems
(the rumen), which was now helping them deal with this new food
source.
illustration of Short
Faced Cave Bear - public domain images
Mammal diversity reached
its peak during the Miocene. Many were hoofed grazers or browsers.
The epoch was marked by further evolution of horses, which became
plains type animals as large as ponies, the chalcitheres, camels,
rhinoceroses and anthropoid apes, including the Dryopithecus which
inhabited Southern Europe, Asia, and Africa. Also this period saw
the appearance of the mastodons, raccoons, and weasels. The first
deer and giraffes also appear, along with the first hyenas. The
slow clumsy creodonts, well adapted to the jungle thickets, were
replaced by the swift intelligent cat and dog type carnivora as
the dominant predators. There were many eccentric browsing types
as well - the chalcitheres - think of a horse crossed with a gorilla
- were able to rear up on their hind legs and pull down the branches
of trees. The Asian indricatheres and the American entelodonts both
flourished then died out during this epoch.
In the seas whales, dugongs
and extinct elephant-like desmostylida flourished. Giant sharks such
as Carcharodon megalodon reached 13 to 15 metres in length and preyed
on the early whales.
Bioregionalism and Migration
The Miocene saw the continuation of bioregional provinces in some instances,
and great mammal migrations in other cases, as animals that had evolved
on different continents during the Eocene and Oligocene spread via land-bridges.
North America was home to three-toed horses, sheep-like oreodonts,
several types of rhinoceroses, pronghoms, camels, protoceratids,
and horse-like chalicothere herbivores, with bear-dogs and saber-toothed
cats among the carnivores, and the pig-like entelodonts as successful
omnivores. In Eurasia the fauna included early deer and giraffes,
the giant indricatheres and chalicotheres that were quite different
from the American types. African mammals included elephants and
mastodons, apes, and Old World monkeys. Australia was a lush tropical
rainforested land with an amazing abundance of marsupials, while
South America was home to glyptodonts, armadillos, anteaters, New
World monkeys, and horse-like litopterns, and a range of marsupial
carnivores, giant carnivorous birds (Phorusrhacids), and strange
crocodiles (sebecosuchids).
Great migrations saw
mastodontids spread out from Africa to Eurasia and North America.
Cats, giraffes, pigs, and cattle went the opposite direction, from
Eurasia to Africa. Horses and camels spread out from North America
into Eurasia.

Four tusked Mastodon (Trilophodon).
The information
of this page came from http://palaeos.com/
For more
on the Cenozoic periods go to http://palaeos.com/Cenozoic/Cenozoic.htm
Page uploaded on WebDyer Site on 10 June 2004 ,
last modified 10 June 2004
text content by M. Alan Kazlev 1998-2002
Unless otherwise attributed, text on this page is
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