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The first gnathic remains of<i>Sudamerica</i>: implications for gondwanathere relationships
59
Citations
33
References
1999
Year
BiologyMorphological EvidenceDental MorphologyPhylogeneticsLiving FossilDerived CladeNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPaleoanthropologyCretaceous PeriodSingle ToothAnthropologyCretaceous-paleogene BoundaryPrimate FossilFirst Gnathic RemainsComplete Dentary
ABSTRACT The Gondwanatheria is an enigmatic group of mammals known from the Late Cretaceous and Paleocene of Argentina and the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar and India. Although originally believed to be edentates, it has been argued recently that gondwanatheres comprise a derived clade of multituberculates. Aside from two tentatively referred, fragmentary dentaries (one edentulous and the other bearing a single tooth), each of the four named species of gondwanatheres is based only on isolated teeth. The discovery of a nearly complete dentary of the sudamericid gondwanathere Sudamerica ameghinoi provides important new anatomical information concerning the morphology of the lower jaw, the association and orientation of lower cheek-teeth, the direction of jaw movement, and the lower dental formula and thereby necessitates another reevaluation of the relationships of Gondwanatheria. Analysis of this specimen, which contains two molariform cheek-teeth and alveoli for two more, casts doubt on the hypothesis that gondwanatheres are multituberculates and raises questions concerning the allocation of specimens previously referred to gondwanathere taxa. Until additional, more informative material is recovered, it is best to regard Gondwanatheria as Mammalia incertae sedis.
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