The genus Hainina ("from Hainin") was named by Vianey-Liaud M. in 1979. This genus was originally referred to as Cimolomyidae. "We assign Hainina to the Kogaionidae (superfamily incertae sedis); it differs from Kogaionon in having ornamented enamel, while the enamel is smooth in Kogaionon".[1] Material has also been reported from the Upper Cretaceous of Romania.
hainina, extinct, mammal, genus, from, latest, cretaceous, paleocene, europe, temporal, range, maastrichtian, thanetian, preꞒ, hypothetical, reconstruction, based, relatives, scientific, classification, domain, eukaryota, kingdom, animalia, phylum, chordata, c. Hainina is an extinct mammal genus from the latest Cretaceous to the Paleocene of Europe HaininaTemporal range Maastrichtian Thanetian 66 043 55 8 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N A hypothetical reconstruction of Hainina based on its relatives Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Multituberculata Family Kogaionidae Genus HaininaVianey Liaud 1979 Type species Hainina belgica Species H belgica H godfriauxi H pyrenaica H vianeyae Contents 1 Genus 2 Species 3 References 3 1 Bibliography 4 Further readingGenus editThe genus Hainina from Hainin was named by Vianey Liaud M in 1979 This genus was originally referred to as Cimolomyidae We assign Hainina to the Kogaionidae superfamily incertae sedis it differs from Kogaionon in having ornamented enamel while the enamel is smooth in Kogaionon 1 Material has also been reported from the Upper Cretaceous of Romania Species editFossils have been described as and found in 2 Species Hainina belgica Vianey Liaud M 1979 Place Paleocene Hainin Formation of Hainin Belgium Species Hainina godfriauxi Vianey Liaud M 1979 Place Paleocene of Hainin Belgium Species Hainina pyrenaica Pelaez Campomanes P Damms R Lopez Martinen N amp Alvarez Sierra M A 2000 Place Early Paleocene Tremp Formation in the southern Pyrenees of Spain Species Hainina vianeyae Pelaez Campomanes P Damms R Lopez Martinen N amp Alvarez Sierra M A 2000 Place Late Paleocene Cernay Formation of Cernay France Hainina sp Densus Ciula Formation Maastrichtian and Jibou Formation Thanetian RomaniaReferences edit Kielan Jaworowska amp Hurum 2001 p 409 Hainina at Fossilworks org Bibliography edit Vianey Liaud 1979 Les Mammiferes montiens de Hainin Paleocene moyen de Belgique Part I Multitubercules Paleovertebrata 9 pp 117 131 Further reading editPelaez Campomanes et al 2000 The earliest mammal of the European Paleocene the multituberculate Hainina J of Paleont 74 4 pp 701 711 Kielan Jaworowska Z amp Hurum J H 2001 Phylogeny and Systematics of multituberculate mammals Paleontology 44 pp 389 429 Much of this information has been derived from Dead link MESOZOIC MAMMALS basal Cimolodonta Cimolomyidae Boffiidae and Kogaionidae an Internet directory dead link nbsp This article about a Cretaceous mammal is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hainina amp oldid 1218800757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,