The opening match of the four-Test series was originally scheduled in Brisbane but was delayed and switched to Adelaide to give players time to mourn batsman Phillip Hughes, who died almost two weeks ago after being hit on the back of the head during a domestic match.
Clarke, included in the side after racing to be fit from a hamstring strain, was on 60 late in the session when he twisted away from a short ball from Ishant Sharma.
Though he tried to stretch out the injury with medical staff, he trudged off the field after a delay of a few minutes with Australia on 206 for two wickets.
Steven Smith joined Warner to negotiate the final few overs to the tea-break, as the hosts reached 238 for two.
Smith was on 17, and Warner unbeaten on 131 having marked his fifth ton of the year with a poignant glance at the sky in tribute to fallen team mate Hughes.
The swashbuckling Warner tore into India's hapless paceman from his first ball faced, crunching 14 boundaries on the way to his 100, including seven in the first four overs.
The 28-year-old, who was present when Hughes was fatally injured by a short ball in Sydney, looked to the heavens on reaching 50 with a pull to the fence, and again when he reached 63, the score Hughes had compiled before being struck down in the Sheffield Shield match.
Opener Chris Rogers was reduced to a bystander as Warner ran amok early in the innings, and ultimately a spectator when he drove recklessly at an Ishant delivery, edging the paceman to Shikhar Dhawan at second slip to be out for nine.
Shane Watson, batting at three and recalled to the side after missing Australia's 2-0 series defeat to Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates, was out for 14 after edging Varun Aaron to the same fielder.
Clarke came to the crease and the 33-year-old, who played a leading role in supporting Hughes's family and his team mates, was given a standing ovation as he strode out.
Aaron welcomed him with a bouncer first ball and Clarke responded with a few words at the paceman before teaming up with Warner to dominate the middle session before his injury.
'13TH MAN'
Batsman Virat Kohli was leading India for the first time in a Test match with regular skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni sidelined with a thumb injury.
Leg spinner Karn Sharma made his Test debut but struggled to trouble Australia's batsmen on a flat pitch tailor-made for a big score.
On a day of tributes to Hughes, the number 408 was painted on the turf in front of the Sir Donald Bradman Pavilion, recognising the batsman as the 408th player to represent Australia in a Test match.
Both teams wore black armbands and Hughes was named an honorary "13th man" in Australia's squad.
Following a video tribute narrated by iconic Australian commentator Richie Benaud, the crowd stood and applauded for 63 seconds in recognition of Hughes's final innings.
Hughes's death prompted a debate about the use of the bouncer, but paceman Aaron bowled the first in the fourth over, a sizzling 145 kph delivery that drew applause from the crowd and that Warner did well to avoid.
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