Baluchitherium: The largest land mammal
 
 
  
  
 Although the humans were emerged after a long time of Baluchitherium, but this  artist's imagination compares human with Baluchitherium.
 
 After the dramatic extinction of dinosaurs, the bones of the largest land mammal  were discovered in 1910 by the English paleontologist Sir Clive Forster Cooper.
 
 In Balochistan, Cooper discovered bones of extra ordinary size. He suggested  that the mammal was the of a size of dinosaur and named it as Baluchitherium or  �the beast of Balochistan�. But for almost a century, the creature remained an  enigma because no further investigation was carried out.
 
 In early 1990s, eminent French paleontologist Jean-Loup Welcomme set out on a  journey towards Balochistan in order to find the fossils of the mysterious  creature. He followed the footsteps of Cooper and finally discovered that Dera  Bugti was the place where Cooper had first unearthed the bones of Baluchitherium.  Welcomme came to Pakistan under a project named, �Mission Paleontologique  Fran�aise au Balochistan�. Pakistan Museum of Natural History was another  stakeholder in that project.
 
 Welcomme contacted Nawab Akber Khan Bugti and told him the story of that  spectacular discovery. Bugti not only gave him the permission for further  excavations but helped him with every day needs and workers. In 1997, Welcomme  discovered the first finger of the Baluchitherium in a stony valley near Dera  Bugti.
 jean loup welcomme01 Baluchitherium: The largest land mammal
 
 After a long busy day of excavation, Welcomme with the Bugti tribesmen. � Photo  courtesy Jean-Loup Welcomme
 
 The giant of the hidden valley
 
 After the first clue, Welcomme and other mammalian experts unearthed an array of  amazing fossils. The team discovered uncountable fossils in merely 200 square  meters area, which could be consider the best exposed bone-beds on Earth. They  found many remains of male and female Baluchitherium simply lying on the ground,  which was a quite rear event in paleontological findings. Perhaps the massive  creatures were swept away by a river and had accumulated on the banks.  Scientists also found traces of crocodile�s teeth on bones which suggested that  the Baluchitherium was also a common pray of crocodiles.
 
 In 2003, the French team carefully examined every major and minor bone and  finally put them in proper place, building a composite skeleton of the  Baluchitherium. The skeleton suggested that the giant creature was five-meters  tall and weighed 20 tonnes, almost as massive as the size of three very big  elephants!
 
 Scientists got the rough idea of the Baluchitherium�s height by looking its  bones. But defining the mass of any extinct mammal is a tricky job. Teeth and  specially bones are very helpful to identify mass of any mammal. Over decades of  investigations, scientists have devised many techniques to find the mass of a  mammal by looking at the length and diameter of its bones. These methods can be  successfully applied to assess the bone-mass relation of the mammals.
 
 In the geological time scale, Baluchitherium roamed Asia in Oligocene epoch or  30 millions years ago. According to plate tectonics, some 200 million years ago,  the sub-continent was locked � it was a part of the great Gondwanaland which  comprised South-America, Africa, Sub-Continent and Australia.
 
 This block had been dismantled into parts and slowly moved towards Asia. 55  million years ago, one part of the Indian plate hit the Asian plate and 43  million years ago the contact between the two was complete. This collision  brought about the Great Himalayan Mountains. The Indian-Asian plate collision  changed the whole climate of the region.
 
 Heavy rains and erosion turned Balochistan into a lush green rainforest like  today�s Amazon. The conditions were suitable for a hornless rhinoceros or  Baluchitherium to flourish. The lush forest provided enough vegetation for the  bulk-eater mammal to survive. Baluchitherium � the mesmerizing largest land  mammal � lived for 11 million years, 35 to 24 million years ago.
 
 After working on the Baluchitherium, Welcomme tried to find out about the whole  environment it shared. The team discovered the diversified fossils of fish,  turtles, crocodiles, rodents and other small mammals. He studied 40 sites that  described 12 distinct levels of different geological ages. He also discovered  prehistoric trees, flowers and leaves.
 
 Amazingly, the team found shark teeth, fish and shells which suggested that  around 32 million years ago an epicontinental sea had appeared in the heart of  Balochistan, which was a rare phenomenon.
 
 Is Balochistan a cradle for humanity?
 
 Prehistoric Balochistan can also be considered an exact place of migration of  mammals coming from South East Asia on the road to Africa or Europe. Simply put,  it could be called a cross road for African mammals. Amazing fossils of  ancestors of elephants and lemurs also discovered in Balochistan, strengthened  the hypothesis that many animal groups have Asian origins. We can assume that  this place was an evolutionary highway for the kin of today�s many advanced  animals. Surprisingly the French team discovered some 20,000 fossils of mammals  only from and around the areas of Dera Bugti.
 
 Two important discoveries are worth mention here, one is the mystery of lemur.  Bug-eyed and slow moving lemurs now only live on the island of Madagascar.  Before 2001, scientists had believed that only Africa was the birthplace of  lemurs. But a lemur fossil discovered in Pakistan changed the paleontology text  books.
 
 Laurent Marivaux, another French expert discovered a 30 million-year-old fossil  of a lemur from Balochistan. Dubbed as Bugtilemur Mathesoni, it is now the  oldest fossils of lemur anywhere on the planet. Bugtilemur triggered a new  debate among scientists that lemurs may have Asian rather than African roots.
 
 The details of that discovery were published in the prestigious research  journal, �Science�, in which Marivaux said, �The discovery was totally  unexpected and the time has come for the Asian scenario to receive more serious  attention.�
 
 Gifted writer, Nigel Calder, wrote in his book;
 �By the boldest interpretations of genetic geography, modern humans may have  emerged in South-central Asia- perhaps somewhere east or southeast of the  Caspian Sea on the Kazakhstan-Balochistan axis-because that is where the  indigenous populations are most �intermediate� between genetic extremes of  Africa, Australia, and the Americas.� Time Scale: page 58
 
 The evidence of the above statement came from other finding of Jean Loup  Welcomme. He discovered another fossil valley called �Paali� in Balochistan.
 baluchitherium paali Baluchitherium: The largest land mammal
 
 French team sifting the hot sand in search of fossil gems at Paali site in  Balochistan. 
 � Photo courtesy Jean-Loup Welcomme
 
 On a very hot day in Paali, he filled his clear plastic bags with sand. Back to  the small lab in a Dera Bugti guest house, he washed and screened the sand and  was surprised that the grains were so little that the screen was empty except  for some dark grains. But, later, under the microscope, he realised that those  grains were in fact the teeth of small-sized mammals which had remained well  preserved. Among them was a tooth of a primate!
 
 Thus Paali became a window to our own group � Anthropoid Primates. Afterward,  more teeth of primates discovered from the same site suggested that Balochistan  could be the motherland of all animal groups including humans. But further  excavation are needed to find more astonishing results because scientists have  been screening other areas for decades but only five per cent of Dera Bugti has  been searched so far. It is important to unearth Balochistan�s paleontology  scenario, because its open fossil beds are ready to reveal the treasure to the  whole world. For instance, only Paali area holds the secret of more than 10  million years of ancient life on the planet.
 
 Why did the Baluchitherium become extinct?
 
 The answer lies in the same conditions which developed a stage for  Baluchitherium to flourish. Some 22 million years ago, the movements of Asia and  Africa destroyed the most important prehistoric sea, the �Tethys�. The  disappearance of the sea gradually changed the climate of Asia. Balochistan  turned into stony desert from a green valley.
 The vegetation disappeared and Baluchitherium became extinct in the battle of  survival.
 
 Fortunately, Nawab Akber Khan Bugti kept the Baluchitherium bones in 10 metallic  containers. After he was killed, the fossils were recovered and sent to the  museum of the Geological Survey of Pakistan and still remain there.
 
 Pakistan is an �el dorado� for fossil hunters. However, serious attention is  also required to highlight the discoveries from Pakistan. It has been a decade  since the complete skeleton of the largest land mammal was discovered from  Pakistan. Beautiful series of postal tickets could be issued or the  Baluchitherium could be declared the symbol of Balochistan.
 baluchitherium model1 Baluchitherium: The largest land mammal
 
 One-tenth scale fiber glass model of Baluchitherium. � Photo courtesy Asim Mirza
 
 A veteran artist, Asim Mirza, beautifully carved a one-tenth scale model of the  Baluchitherium. He also invited Jean Loup Welcomme to see how it looked.
 
 When Welcomme first saw the fiber glass model, he was amazed to see the  authenticity of the prehistoric giant. By his own resources, Mirza has also been  working on a life model of Baluchitherium since the past five years and is now  on the verge of completing it.
 
 Fortunately, Jean Loup Welcomme will again visit Pakistan in Spring 2011, to  work on a joint project with the Sindh University.
  
   
 The almost complete skeleton of Baluchitherium, the largest land  mammal discovered from Dera Bugti, Balochistan. Prominent French Paleontologist  Jean-Loup Welcomme discovered the fossils of the mysterious giant. The skeleton  suggested that the giant creature was five-meters tall and weighed 20 tonnes,  almost as massive as the size of three very big elephants!
 A veteran artist, Asim Mirza, beautifully carved a one-tenth scale model of  the Baluchitherium. By his own resources, Mirza has also been working on a life  model of Baluchitherium since the past five years and is now on the verge of  completing it.
   
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 A crocodile jaw from Dera Bugti. Scientists also found traces of  crocodile teeth on bones which suggested that the Baluchitherium was also a  common pray of crocodiles 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 Jean-Loup Welcomme sitting on the back of a live replica of  Baluchitherium.
  
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