4.8 Article

An Early Cretaceous eutherian and the placental-marsupial dichotomy

Journal

NATURE
Volume 558, Issue 7710, Pages 390-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0210-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41688103, 41728003, 41372014, 41472023]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDPB0503]
  3. MEC International Joint Laboratory for Palaeobiology and Palaeoenvironment, Yunnan University
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB 1654949]
  5. Carnegie Museum of Natural History

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Molecular estimates of the divergence of placental and marsupial mammals and their broader clades (Eutheria and Metatheria, respectively) fall primarily in the Jurassic period. Supporting these estimates, Juramaiathe oldest purported eutherianis from the early Late Jurassic (160 million years ago) of northeastern China. Sinodelphysthe oldest purported metatherianis from the same geographic area but is 35 million years younger, from the Jehol biota. Here we report a new Jehol eutherian, Ambolestes zhoui, with a nearly complete skeleton that preserves anatomical details that are unknown from contemporaneous mammals, including the ectotympanic and hyoid apparatus. This new fossil demonstrates that Sinodelphys is a eutherian, and that postcranial differences between Sinodelphys and the Jehol eutherian Eomaiapreviously thought to indicate separate invasions of a scansorial niche by eutherians and metatheriansare instead variations among the early members of the placental lineage. The oldest known metatherians are now not from eastern Asia but are 110 million years old from western North America, which produces a 50-million-year ghost lineage for Metatheria.

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