Squirrel-like
Jurassic critters shed light on mammal origins
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[September 11, 2014]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It may not have
been the friendliest place for furry little creatures, but three newly
identified squirrel-like mammals thrived in the trees of the Jurassic
Period, with dinosaurs walking below and flying reptiles soaring above.
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Scientists announced on Wednesday the discovery in China of
fossils belonging to three critters in a find that sheds light on a
poorly understood collection of ancient mammals, and indicates that
mammals as a group appeared earlier than some experts thought.
The three species come from a group called haramiyids that
previously had been known only from isolated teeth and fragmented
jaws. Scientists had not even been sure they were mammals at all.
The nicely preserved fossils from Liaoning Province in northeastern
China proved definitively they were mammals, in part because of the
presence of three bones of the middle ear characteristic of all
mammals from shrews to whales to people.
The three species - whose scientific names are Shenshou lui,
Xianshou linglong and Xianshou songae - date from about 160 million
years ago, a time when dinosaurs ruled the land. But a number of
recent fossil discoveries have shown that mammals were far more
diverse during that period than previously recognized.
The three species likely looked like small squirrels, with slim
bodies and elongated fingers in the hands and feet, indicating they
were dedicated tree dwellers. They had long and probably prehensile,
or grasping, tails, another feature that helped them stay in the
tree branches.
"I would predict that they spent even more time in the trees than
squirrels," said Jin Meng, a vertebrate paleontologist at the
American Museum of Natural History in New York, who led the study
published in the journal Nature.
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Based on the shape of their teeth, they probably were omnivorous,
eating insects, nuts and fruit, Meng said. The remains were so well
preserved that they showed more than just the hard parts such as
teeth and bones that commonly fossilize, but also soft parts such as
fur and the animal's guts, he added.
The three species had an estimated weight ranging from about that of
a mouse, one ounce, to that of a small squirrel, about 10 ounces.
While they may have looked and acted like today's squirrels, they
were only very distantly related to them.
The researchers said these fossils, along with other evidence,
suggests that the first true mammals that evolved from mammal-like
ancestors appeared perhaps 208 million years ago during the Triassic
Period. Some scientists have contended that mammals entered the
picture millions of years later than that.
(Reporting by Will Dunham. Editing by Andre Grenon)
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