Fossil skull from Utah sheds light on
primitive mammal group
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[May 25, 2018]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A fossilized skull
of a small critter found in Utah underneath a dinosaur foot bone is
providing insight into one of the most primitive mammalian groups and
has scientists rethinking the timing of the break-up of Earth's bygone
supercontinent Pangaea.
Scientists on Wednesday described the cranium of a small primitive
Cretaceous Period mammal called Cifelliodon wahkarmoosuch, about the
size of a small hare, that lived 130 million years ago, boasting traits
suggesting it possessed a keen sense of smell and may have been
nocturnal.
"It's a plant eater, as we can tell from its herbivorous teeth,"
University of Chicago paleontologist Zhe-Xi Luo said. "From the
sediments in which it was preserved, likely it lived on the banks or
flood plain of a small river."
The three-inch (7.5-cm) skull was well preserved and nearly complete,
unlike the usual scrappy fossils of the group to which Cifelliodon
belonged, called haramiyidans.
The earliest primitive mammals evolved during the Triassic Period, when
dinosaurs also first appeared, from creatures that combined reptilian
and mammalian characteristics.
Haramiyidans appeared close to the dawn of the mammalian lineage, with
the earliest-known representative living about 208 million years ago and
the last-known member perhaps about 70 million years ago.
The skull was unwittingly excavated at a site north of Arches National
Park in eastern Utah. The paleontologists from Utah Geological Survey
did not know it was entombed in rock brought back to a lab for study
until they looked under a foot bone of a two-legged plant-eating
dinosaur called Hippodraco.
It may be the best-preserved skull of any haramiyidan, offering a new
understanding of the group.
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The newly identified Cretaceous Period species Cifelliodon
wahkarmoosuch, which is estimated to have weighed 2.5 pounds and
probably grew to be about the size of a small hare, is seen in this
artist rendering released by the Keck School of Medicine of the
University of Southern California in Los Angeles, CA, U.S., May 23,
2018. Cifelliodon lived about 130 million years ago. Courtesy Jorge
A. Gonzalez/Keck School of Medicine of USC/Handout via REUTERS
"Compared to modern mammals, Cifelliodon had a simple, tube-like
brain, lacked complex bony structures usually associated with the
front part of the brain case and nasal region, and had simple tooth
roots, among other primitive features," University of Southern
California paleontologist Adam Huttenlocker said.
Before a geological process called plate tectonics rendered them
separate land masses, the Americas, Eurasia, Africa, Antarctica,
Australia and India all were part of a huge, single continent called
Pangaea. The timing for Pangaea's breakup, initially into two major
land masses, has been a matter of scientific debate.
The researchers said the discovery of Cifelliodon, which had a close
contemporaneous relative in Africa, suggests there were still
connections between the northern hemisphere continents and those in
the southern hemisphere 15 million years later than previously
believed.
The research was published in the journal Nature.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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