A unique, Late Oligocene shrew-like marsupial from western Argentina and the evolution of dental morphology
Authors:
Forasiepi et al
Abstract:
We describe a new metatherian mammal, Fieratherium sorex gen. et sp. nov., found in western Argentina (Quebrada Fiera locality, southern Mendoza Province), in Late Oligocene deposits (Agua de la Piedra Formation, Deseadan age). The only known specimen is a juvenile with fragments of both dentaries, the right maxilla and a fragment of the left premaxilla with dentition. The loci and the number teeth preserved suggest a dental formula of I?3/i3, C1/c1, P3/p3, M?3/m?3. Fieratherium sorex has a convergent shrew-like appearance and a unique combination of features among metatherians and other South American mammals of Palaeogene age, including the well-known faunas of Patagonia. An analysis of its phylogenetic affinities suggests that Fieratherium is the sister-group of the Paucituberculata. As already described by other authors for several mammalian taxa, the mainly Patagonian South American Palaeogene fossil record offers little information to understanding the evolution of northern lineages. Fieratherium may represent a taxon belonging to a lineage that had its origin in Neotropical regions, so far unrecorded in the southern region of South America.
Friday, June 20, 2014
Fieratherium sorex: a new, Unique Oligocene Paleogene Shrew-like Metatherian Mammal From Argentina
Labels:
argentina,
Cenozoic,
fossils,
mammals,
marsupials,
metatherians,
oligocene,
paleogene,
paleontology,
south america
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