Exceptionally preserved North American Paleogene metatherians: adaptations and discovery of a major gap in the opossum fossil record
- 10 April 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Biology Letters
- Vol. 3 (3) , 318-322
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2007.0090
Abstract
A major gap in our knowledge of the evolution of marsupial mammals concerns the Paleogene of the northern continents, a critical time and place to link the early history of metatherians in Asia and North America with the more recent diversification in South America and Australia. We studied new exceptionally well-preserved partial skeletons of the Early Oligocene fossilHerpetotheriumfrom the White River Formation in Wyoming, which allowed us to test the relationships of this taxon and examine its adaptations. Herpetotheriidae, with a fossil record extending from the Cretaceous to the Miocene, has traditionally been allied with opossums (Didelphidae) based on fragmentary material, mainly dentitions. Analysis of the new material reveals that several aspects of the cranial and postcranial anatomy, some of which suggests a terrestrial lifestyle, distinguishHerpetotheriumfrom opossums. We found thatHerpetotheriumis the sister group to the crown group Marsupialia and is not a stem didelphid. Combination of the new palaeontological data with molecular divergence estimates, suggests the presence of a long undocumented gap in the fossil record of opossums extending some 45 Myr from the Early Miocene to the Cretaceous.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Out of the Tropics: Evolutionary Dynamics of the Latitudinal Diversity GradientScience, 2006
- A New European Marsupial Indicates a Late Cretaceous High-Latitude Transatlantic Dispersal RouteJournal of Mammalian Evolution, 2005
- Mammals from the Age of DinosaursPublished by Columbia University Press ,2004
- Marsupial relationships and a timeline for marsupial radiation in South GondwanaGene, 2004
- An Early Cretaceous Tribosphenic Mammal and Metatherian EvolutionScience, 2003
- The tarsus ofUkhaatherium nessovi(Eutheria, Mammalia) from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia: an appraisal of the evolution of the ankle in basal theriansJournal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 2000
- The origin of the dog-like borhyaenoid marsupials of South AmericaNature, 1997
- DNA-hybridisation Studies of Marsupials and their Implications for Metatherian ClassificationAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1997
- Osseous inner ear structures and hearing in early marsupials and placentalsZoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1995
- 6. Eocene-Oligocene Climatic Change in North America: The White River Formation near Douglas, East-Central WyomingPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1992