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      NEW DATA ON THE SKULL AND DENTITION IN THE MONGOLIAN LATE CRETACEOUS EUTHERIAN MAMMAL ZALAMBDALESTES

      , ,
      Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
      American Museum of Natural History (BioOne sponsored)

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          The earliest known eutherian mammal.

          The skeleton of a eutherian (placental) mammal has been discovered from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of northeastern China. We estimate its age to be about 125 million years (Myr), extending the date of the oldest eutherian records with skull and skeleton by about 40 50 Myr. Our analyses place the new fossil at the root of the eutherian tree and among the four other known Early Cretaceous eutherians, and suggest an earlier and greater diversification of stem eutherians that occurred well before the molecular estimate for the diversification of extant placental superorders (104 64 Myr). The new eutherian has limb and foot features that are known only from scansorial (climbing) and arboreal (tree-living) extant mammals, in contrast to the terrestrial or cursorial (running) features of other Cretaceous eutherians. This suggests that the earliest eutherian lineages developed different locomotory adaptations, facilitating their spread to diverse niches in the Cretaceous.
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            The skull of Morganucodon

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              Petrosals of Late Cretaceous marsupials from North America, and a cladistic analysis of the petrosal in therian mammals

              John Wible (1990)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
                Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
                American Museum of Natural History (BioOne sponsored)
                0003-0090
                January 2004
                January 2004
                : 281
                :
                : 1-144
                Article
                10.1206/0003-0090(2004)281<0001:NDOTSA>2.0.CO;2
                24678a9c-7501-49cc-ad19-a489dec2b3e6
                © 2004
                History

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