New cladotherian mammal from southern Chile and the evolution of mesungulatid meridiolestidans at the dusk of the Mesozoic era
Author
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Martinelli, Agustín G.
Author
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Soto Acuña, Sergio Gonzalo
Author
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Goin, Francisco J.
Author
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Kaluza, Jonatan
Author
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Bostelmann Torrealba, Juan Enrique
Author
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Fonseca, Pedro H. M.
Author
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Reguero, Marcelo A.
Author
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Leppe, Marcelo
Author
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Vargas Milne, Alexander Omar
Admission date
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2022-01-10T21:32:11Z
Available date
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2022-01-10T21:32:11Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Scientific Reports (2021) 11:7594
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Identifier
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10.1038/s41598-021-87245-4
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/183647
Abstract
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In the last decades, several discoveries have uncovered the complexity of mammalian evolution
during the Mesozoic Era, including important Gondwanan lineages: the australosphenidans,
gondwanatherians, and meridiolestidans (Dryolestoidea). Most often, their presence and diversity
is documented by isolated teeth and jaws. Here, we describe a new meridiolestidan mammal,
Orretherium tzen gen. et sp. nov., from the Late Cretaceous of southern Chile, based on a partial
jaw with five cheek teeth in locis and an isolated upper premolar. Phylogenetic analysis places
Orretherium as the earliest divergence within Mesungulatidae, before other forms such as the Late
Cretaceous Mesungulatum and Coloniatherium, and the early Paleocene Peligrotherium. The in loco
tooth sequence (last two premolars and three molars) is the first recovered for a Cretaceous taxon
in this family and suggests that reconstructed tooth sequences for other Mesozoic mesungulatids
may include more than one species. Tooth eruption and replacement show that molar eruption
in mesungulatids is heterochronically delayed with regard to basal dryolestoids, with therianlike
simultaneous eruption of the last premolar and last molar. Meridiolestidans seem endemic to
Patagonia, but given their diversity and abundance, and the similarity of vertebrate faunas in other
regions of Gondwana, they may yet be discovered in other continents.
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Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
Anillo Grant (PIA-ANID Chile) ACT-172099
Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT)
CONICYT FONDECYT 1151389
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Nature Research
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Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States