Mammal teeth from the Cretaceous of Africa.

Autor: Jacobs LL; Shuler Museum of Paleontology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275., Congleton JD, Brunet M, Dejax J, Flynn LJ, Hell JV, Mouchelin G
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Nature [Nature] 1988 Nov 10; Vol. 336 (6195), pp. 158-60.
DOI: 10.1038/336158a0
Abstrakt: We report here the discovery of two mammal teeth from the early Cretaceous of Cameroon. These, and some jaw fragments, all from Cameroon, are the only fossil evidence of mammalian evolution from Africa between late Jurassic and Paleocene, a span of at least 85 million years. A triangular upper tooth lacks the principal internal cusp of marsupials and placentals and is therefore of a similar evolutionary grade to most Jurassic and early Cretaceous therian mammals, but more primitive than the metatherian-eutherian grade. Early Cretaceous, or older, therian mammals are now known from all southern continents except Antarctica. The new find from Cameroon is consistent with the hypothesis that marsupials, the dominant living mammals of South America and Australia, were not present on any Gondwana continents until after the early Cretaceous separation of Africa by the opening of the South Atlantic.
Databáze: MEDLINE