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Morganucodon

Morganucodon ("Glamorgan tooth") is an early mammaliaform genus that lived from the Late Triassic to the Middle Jurassic. It first appeared about 205 million years ago. Unlike many other early mammaliaforms, Morganucodon is well represented by abundant and well preserved (though in the vast majority of cases disarticulated) material. Most of this comes from Glamorgan in Wales (Morganucodon watsoni), but fossils have also been found in Yunnan Province in China (Morganucodon oehleri) and various parts of Europe and North America. Some closely related animals (Megazostrodon) are known from exquisite fossils from South Africa.[1]

Morganucodon
Temporal range: Late Triassic-Middle Jurassic Rhaetian–Bathonian
Scan and reconstruction of the M. oehleri holotype skull
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Clade: Therapsida
Clade: Cynodontia
Clade: Mammaliaformes
Order: Morganucodonta
Family: Morganucodontidae
Genus: Morganucodon
Kühne, 1949
Type species
Morganucodon watsoni
Kühne, 1949
Species
  • M. watsoni (Kühne, 1949)
  • M. oehleri (Rigney, 1963)
  • M. heikuopengensis (Young, 1978)
  • M. peyeri (Clemens, 1980)
  • M. tardus (Butler and Sigogneau-Russell, 2016)

The name comes from a Latinization of Morganuc, the name for South Glamorgan in the Domesday Book, the county of Wales where it was discovered by Walter Georg Kühne,[2] giving the meaning "Glamorgan tooth".

History of discovery edit

 
Lower jaw of M. watsoni, Natural History Museum, London

In the summer of 1947, fieldwork was done at Duchy Quarry in Glamorgan in southern Wales. Grey conglomerate that formed fissure fill deposits within karstic voids in Carboniferous limestone was extracted. In 1949, Walter Georg Kühne noted the lower cheek tooth of a primitive mammal while examining samples of the rock. He named it Morganucodon watsoni, with the genus name being derived from Morganuc, which Kühne stated was the name of South Glamorgan in the Domesday Book, with the species name being in honour of D. M. S. Watson.[2] Additional remains of M. watsoni were described by Kühne in 1958.[3] Also in 1958, Kenneth Kermack and Frances Mussett described additional remains from Pant Quarry, about a mile from Duchy Quarry, that had been collected in 1956.[4] In August 1948, an expedition to Lufeng in Yunnan, China yielded a 1 in (2.5 cm) long skull. It was shortly sent to Beijing (then Peking) and then eventually sent out of China, and deposited with Kenneth Kermack at University College London in 1960. The specimen was preliminarily described in 1963 by Harold W. Rigney, who noted the similarity to Morganucodon from Britain, and considered it cogeneric, naming the new species Morganucodon oehleri in honor of the reverend Edgar T. Oehler, who had originally collected the specimen.[5] In 1978 C. C. Young described Eozostrodon heikuopengensis from the Hei Koa Peng locality near Lufeng, based on an associated skull and dentary, as well as a right maxilla and associated dentary.[6] A revision by William A. Clemens in 1979 assigned this species to Morganucodon, based on its close similarity to the two previously named species.[4] In 1980 Clemens named the species Morganucodon peyeri, from isolated teeth found in Late Triassic (Rhaetian) deposits near Hallau, Switzerland, with the species being named after paleontologist Bernhard Peyer.[7] In 1981, Kermack, Mussett and Rigney published an extensive monograph on the skull of Morganucodon.[8] In 2016 Percy Butler and Denise Sigogneau-Russell named the species Morganucodon tardus from an upper right molar (M34984) collected from the Watton Cliff locality near Eype in Dorset, England, dating to the late Bathonian stage of the Middle Jurassic. The species being named after the Latin tardus, late, in reference to it being the youngest member of the genus.[9]

Biology edit

 
Life restoration of M. oehleri

Morganucodon was a small, plantigrade animal. The tail was moderately long. According to Kemp (2005), "the skull was 2–3 cm in length and a presacral body length of about 10 cm [4 inches]. In general appearance, it would have looked like a shrew or mouse".[10] There is evidence that it had specialized glands used for grooming, which may indicate that, like present day mammals, it had fur.[11]

Like present day mammals of similar size and presumed habit, Morganucodon was likely nocturnal and spent the day in a burrow. There is no direct fossil evidence, but several lines of evidence point to a nocturnal bottleneck in the evolution of the mammal class, and almost all modern mammals of similar size to Morganucodon are still nocturnal.[12][13] Likewise, burrowing was widespread both in non-mammalian cynodonts and in primitive mammals.[14][15] The logics of phylogenetic bracketing would make Morganucodon nocturnal and burrowing too. Plant material from the conifer Hirmeriella was also found in the fissure fills, indicating Morganucudon lived in, or near, a forested area.

The diet appears to have been insects and other small animals, with a preference for hard prey such as beetles.[16] Like most modern mammal insectivores, it grew fairly quickly to adult size.[17] Its eggs were probably small and leathery, a condition still found in monotremes.[18]

The teeth grew in mammalian fashion, with deciduous teeth being replaced by permanent teeth that were retained throughout the rest of the animal's life.[19] The combination of rapid growth in juveniles and a toothless stage at infancy strongly suggests that Morganucodon raised its young by lactation; indeed, it may have been among the first animals to do so.[20] The molars in the adult had a series of raised humps and edges that fit into each other, allowing for efficient chewing. However, unlike the situation in most later mammals, the upper and lower molars did not occlude properly when they first met; as they wore against each other, however, their shapes were modified by wear to produce a precise fit.[21]

A 2020 study suggests that the metabolism of Morganucodon was significantly slower than that of comparably sized modern mammals, and that it had a life-span more similar to that of reptiles, with the oldest specimen having a lifespan of 14 years. Thus it likely did not possess the fully endothermic metabolism seen in current mammals.[22]

Species edit

 
Skull and jaws of M. oehleri
Species Author Year Status Temporal range Location Formations
Morganucodon watsoni Kuehne 1949 Early Jurassic (Hettangian-Sinemurian) England, Wales Various fissure fill deposits
Morganucodon heikuopengensis Young 1978 Early Jurassic (Sinemurian) Yunnan, China Lufeng
Morganucodon oehleri Rigney 1963 Early Jurassic (Hettangian)
Morganucodon peyeri Clemens 1980 Late Triassic (Rhaetian) Switzerland, France Klettgau, grès infraliasiques (Saint-Nicolas-de-Port)
Morganucodon tardus Butler and Sigogneau-Russel 2016 Middle Jurassic (Bathonian) England Forest Marble

Classification edit

 
Life restoration of M. watsoni

Morganucodon is the type genus for the order Morganucodonta, a group of generally similar mammaliaforms known from the Late Triassic to Late Jurassic epochs,[23][24] with one possible member (Purbeckodon) dating to the Early Cretaceous.[25] All were small and likely insectivorous. Morganucodon is the best preserved and best understood member of Morganucodonta.

There is currently controversy about whether or not to classify Morganucodon as a mammal or as a non-mammalian mammaliaform. Some researchers limit the term "mammal" to the crown group mammals, which would not include Morganucodon and its relatives. Others, however, define "mammals", as a group, by the possession of a special, secondarily evolved jaw joint between the dentary and the squamosal bones, which has replaced the primitive one between the articular and quadrate bones in all modern mammalian groups. Under this definition, Morganucodon would be a mammal. Nevertheless, its lower jaw retains some of the bones found in its non-mammalian ancestors in a very reduced form rather than being composed solely of the dentary. Furthermore, the primitive reptile-like jaw joint between the articular and quadrate bones, which in modern mammals has moved into the middle ear and become part of the ear ossicles as malleus and incus, is still to be found in Morganucodon.[26] Morganucodon also suckled (it may have been the earliest animal to do so), had only two sets of teeth and grew rapidly to adult size and stopped growing thereafter, all typical mammalian traits.[27]

Phylogeny [28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pages 21–33, 174 in Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska, Richard L. Cifelli, and Zhe-Xi Luo, Mammals from the Age of Dinosaurs: Origins, Evolution, and Structure, Columbia University Press, New York, 2004 ISBN 0-231-11918-6
  2. ^ a b Walter G. Kühne, "On a Triconodont tooth of a new pattern from a Fissure-filling in South Glamorgan", Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, volume 119 (1949–1950) pages 345–350
  3. ^ Kühne, Walter Georg (1958-08-01). "Rhaetische Triconodonten aus Glamorgan, ihre Stellung zwischen den Klassen Reptilia und Mammalia und ihre Bedeutung für die REICHART'sche Theorie" [Rhaetian triconodonts from Glamorgan, their position between the classes Reptilia and Mammalia and their significance for REICHART's theory.]. Paläontologische Zeitschrift (in German). 32 (3): 197–235. doi:10.1007/BF02989032. ISSN 0031-0220. S2CID 128828761.
  4. ^ a b Clemens, William A. (May 1979). "A problem in morganucodontid taxonomy (Mammalia)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 66 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1979.tb01898.x.
  5. ^ Rigney, Harold W. (March 1963). "A Specimen of Morganucodon from Yunnan". Nature. 197 (4872): 1122–1123. Bibcode:1963Natur.197.1122R. doi:10.1038/1971122a0. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4204736.
  6. ^ C.-C. Young. 1978. New materials of Eozostrodon. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 16:1-3
  7. ^ W. A. Clemens. 1980. Rhaeto-Liassic mammals from Switzerland and West Germany. Zitteliana 5:51-92
  8. ^ Kermack, K. A.; Mussett, Frances; Rigney, H. W. (January 1981). "The skull of Morganucodon". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 71 (1): 1–158. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1981.tb01127.x.
  9. ^ Butler, P.M. and Sigogneau-Russell, D. 2016. Diversity of triconodonts in the Middle Jurassic of Great Britain. Palaeontologia Polonica 67, 35–65. LSID urn:lsid:zoobank.org: pub: C4D90BB6-A001-4DDB-890E-2061B4793992
  10. ^ Kemp T.S. 2005. The origin and evolution of mammals, Oxford University Press, page 143. ISBN 0-19-850760-7.
  11. ^ Ruben, J.A.; Jones, T.D. (2000). "Selective Factors Associated with the Origin of Fur and Feathers". American Zoologist. 40 (4): 585–596. doi:10.1093/icb/40.4.585.
  12. ^ Hall, M. I.; Kamilar, J. M.; Kirk, E. C. (24 October 2012). "Eye shape and the nocturnal bottleneck of mammals". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 279 (1749): 4962–4968. doi:10.1098/rspb.2012.2258. PMC 3497252. PMID 23097513.
  13. ^ Muchlinski, Magdalena N. (June 2010). "A comparative analysis of vibrissa count and infraorbital foramen area in primates and other mammals". Journal of Human Evolution. 58 (6): 447–473. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2010.01.012. PMID 20434193.
  14. ^ Damiani, R.; Modesto, S.; Yates, A.; Neveling, J. (22 August 2003). "Earliest evidence of cynodont burrowing". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 270 (1525): 1747–1751. doi:10.1098/rspb.2003.2427. PMC 1691433. PMID 12965004.
  15. ^ KIELAN, ZOFIA; GAMBARYAN, PETR P. (December 1994). "Postcranial anatomy and habits of Asian multituberculate mammals". Lethaia. 27 (4): 300. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1994.tb01578.x. S2CID 85021289.
  16. ^ Gill, Pamela G.; Purnell, Mark A.; Crumpton, Nick; Robson-Brown, Kate; Gostling, Neil J.; Stampanoni, M.; Rayfield, Emily J. (21 August 2014). "Dietary specializations and diversity in feeding ecology of the earliest stem mammals". Nature. 512 (7514): 303–305. Bibcode:2014Natur.512..303G. doi:10.1038/nature13622. hdl:2381/29192. PMID 25143112. S2CID 4469841.
  17. ^ Chinsamy, A.; Hurum, J.H. (2006). "Bone microstructure and growth patterns of early mammals" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 51 (2): 325–338. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  18. ^ Parente, Raphael Câmara Medeiros; Bergqvist, Lílian Paglarelli; Soares, Marina Bento; Filho, Olimpio Barbosa Moraes (2011). "The history of vaginal birth". Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 284 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1007/s00404-011-1918-6. PMID 21547459. S2CID 22997887.
  19. ^ Alexander F. H. van Nievelt and Kathleen K. Smith, "To replace or not to replace: the significance of reduced functional tooth replacement in marsupial and placental mammals", Paleobiology, Volume 31, Issue 2 (June 2005) pages 324–346
  20. ^ Kielan-Jaworowska, Zofia; Cifelli, Richard L.; Luo, Zhe-Xi (2004). Mammals from the age of dinosaurs : origins, evolution, and structure. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 148–153. ISBN 978-0231119184.
  21. ^ Crompton, A. W.; Jenkins, F. Jr. (1968). "Molar occlusion in late Triassic mammals". Biological Reviews. 43 (4): 427–458. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185x.1968.tb00966.x. PMID 4886687. S2CID 1044399.
  22. ^ Newham, Elis; et al. (2020). "Reptile-like physiology in Early Jurassic stem-mammals". Nature Communications. 11 (1): 5121. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11.5121N. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-18898-4. PMC 7550344. PMID 33046697.
  23. ^ Martin, T.; Averianov, A. O.; Jäger, K. R. K.; Schwermann, A. H.; Wings, O. (2019). "A large morganucodontan mammaliaform from the Late Jurassic of Germany" (PDF). Fossil Imprint. 75 (3–4): 504–509. doi:10.2478/if-2019-0030.
  24. ^ pages 511–512, Malcolm C. McKenna and Susan K. Bell, Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level, Columbia University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-231-11012-X
  25. ^ P. M. Butler, D. Sigogneau-Russell and P. C. Ensom (2011). "Possible persistence of the morganucodontans in the Lower Cretaceous Purbeck Limestone Group (Dorset, England)". Cretaceous Research. 33: 135–145. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2011.09.007.
  26. ^ Kermack, K. A.; Mussett, Frances; Rigney, H. W. (1981). "The skull of Morganucodon". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 71: 1–158. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1981.tb01127.x.
  27. ^
  28. ^ Close, Roger A.; Friedman, Matt; Lloyd, Graeme T.; Benson, Roger BJ (2015). "Evidence for a mid-Jurassic adaptive radiation in mammals". Current Biology. 25 (16): 2137–2142. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2015.06.047. PMID 26190074.

morganucodon, glamorgan, tooth, early, mammaliaform, genus, that, lived, from, late, triassic, middle, jurassic, first, appeared, about, million, years, unlike, many, other, early, mammaliaforms, well, represented, abundant, well, preserved, though, vast, majo. Morganucodon Glamorgan tooth is an early mammaliaform genus that lived from the Late Triassic to the Middle Jurassic It first appeared about 205 million years ago Unlike many other early mammaliaforms Morganucodon is well represented by abundant and well preserved though in the vast majority of cases disarticulated material Most of this comes from Glamorgan in Wales Morganucodon watsoni but fossils have also been found in Yunnan Province in China Morganucodon oehleri and various parts of Europe and North America Some closely related animals Megazostrodon are known from exquisite fossils from South Africa 1 MorganucodonTemporal range Late Triassic Middle Jurassic Rhaetian Bathonian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NScan and reconstruction of the M oehleri holotype skullScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade SynapsidaClade TherapsidaClade CynodontiaClade MammaliaformesOrder MorganucodontaFamily MorganucodontidaeGenus MorganucodonKuhne 1949Type species Morganucodon watsoniKuhne 1949Species M watsoni Kuhne 1949 M oehleri Rigney 1963 M heikuopengensis Young 1978 M peyeri Clemens 1980 M tardus Butler and Sigogneau Russell 2016 The name comes from a Latinization of Morganuc the name for South Glamorgan in the Domesday Book the county of Wales where it was discovered by Walter Georg Kuhne 2 giving the meaning Glamorgan tooth Contents 1 History of discovery 2 Biology 3 Species 4 Classification 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory of discovery edit nbsp Lower jaw of M watsoni Natural History Museum LondonIn the summer of 1947 fieldwork was done at Duchy Quarry in Glamorgan in southern Wales Grey conglomerate that formed fissure fill deposits within karstic voids in Carboniferous limestone was extracted In 1949 Walter Georg Kuhne noted the lower cheek tooth of a primitive mammal while examining samples of the rock He named it Morganucodon watsoni with the genus name being derived from Morganuc which Kuhne stated was the name of South Glamorgan in the Domesday Book with the species name being in honour of D M S Watson 2 Additional remains of M watsoni were described by Kuhne in 1958 3 Also in 1958 Kenneth Kermack and Frances Mussett described additional remains from Pant Quarry about a mile from Duchy Quarry that had been collected in 1956 4 In August 1948 an expedition to Lufeng in Yunnan China yielded a 1 in 2 5 cm long skull It was shortly sent to Beijing then Peking and then eventually sent out of China and deposited with Kenneth Kermack at University College London in 1960 The specimen was preliminarily described in 1963 by Harold W Rigney who noted the similarity to Morganucodon from Britain and considered it cogeneric naming the new species Morganucodon oehleri in honor of the reverend Edgar T Oehler who had originally collected the specimen 5 In 1978 C C Young described Eozostrodon heikuopengensis from the Hei Koa Peng locality near Lufeng based on an associated skull and dentary as well as a right maxilla and associated dentary 6 A revision by William A Clemens in 1979 assigned this species to Morganucodon based on its close similarity to the two previously named species 4 In 1980 Clemens named the species Morganucodon peyeri from isolated teeth found in Late Triassic Rhaetian deposits near Hallau Switzerland with the species being named after paleontologist Bernhard Peyer 7 In 1981 Kermack Mussett and Rigney published an extensive monograph on the skull of Morganucodon 8 In 2016 Percy Butler and Denise Sigogneau Russell named the species Morganucodon tardus from an upper right molar M34984 collected from the Watton Cliff locality near Eype in Dorset England dating to the late Bathonian stage of the Middle Jurassic The species being named after the Latin tardus late in reference to it being the youngest member of the genus 9 Biology edit nbsp Life restoration of M oehleriMorganucodon was a small plantigrade animal The tail was moderately long According to Kemp 2005 the skull was 2 3 cm in length and a presacral body length of about 10 cm 4 inches In general appearance it would have looked like a shrew or mouse 10 There is evidence that it had specialized glands used for grooming which may indicate that like present day mammals it had fur 11 Like present day mammals of similar size and presumed habit Morganucodon was likely nocturnal and spent the day in a burrow There is no direct fossil evidence but several lines of evidence point to a nocturnal bottleneck in the evolution of the mammal class and almost all modern mammals of similar size to Morganucodon are still nocturnal 12 13 Likewise burrowing was widespread both in non mammalian cynodonts and in primitive mammals 14 15 The logics of phylogenetic bracketing would make Morganucodon nocturnal and burrowing too Plant material from the conifer Hirmeriella was also found in the fissure fills indicating Morganucudon lived in or near a forested area The diet appears to have been insects and other small animals with a preference for hard prey such as beetles 16 Like most modern mammal insectivores it grew fairly quickly to adult size 17 Its eggs were probably small and leathery a condition still found in monotremes 18 The teeth grew in mammalian fashion with deciduous teeth being replaced by permanent teeth that were retained throughout the rest of the animal s life 19 The combination of rapid growth in juveniles and a toothless stage at infancy strongly suggests that Morganucodon raised its young by lactation indeed it may have been among the first animals to do so 20 The molars in the adult had a series of raised humps and edges that fit into each other allowing for efficient chewing However unlike the situation in most later mammals the upper and lower molars did not occlude properly when they first met as they wore against each other however their shapes were modified by wear to produce a precise fit 21 A 2020 study suggests that the metabolism of Morganucodon was significantly slower than that of comparably sized modern mammals and that it had a life span more similar to that of reptiles with the oldest specimen having a lifespan of 14 years Thus it likely did not possess the fully endothermic metabolism seen in current mammals 22 Species edit nbsp Skull and jaws of M oehleriSpecies Author Year Status Temporal range Location FormationsMorganucodon watsoni Kuehne 1949 Early Jurassic Hettangian Sinemurian England Wales Various fissure fill depositsMorganucodon heikuopengensis Young 1978 Early Jurassic Sinemurian Yunnan China LufengMorganucodon oehleri Rigney 1963 Early Jurassic Hettangian Morganucodon peyeri Clemens 1980 Late Triassic Rhaetian Switzerland France Klettgau gres infraliasiques Saint Nicolas de Port Morganucodon tardus Butler and Sigogneau Russel 2016 Middle Jurassic Bathonian England Forest MarbleClassification edit nbsp Life restoration of M watsoniMorganucodon is the type genus for the order Morganucodonta a group of generally similar mammaliaforms known from the Late Triassic to Late Jurassic epochs 23 24 with one possible member Purbeckodon dating to the Early Cretaceous 25 All were small and likely insectivorous Morganucodon is the best preserved and best understood member of Morganucodonta There is currently controversy about whether or not to classify Morganucodon as a mammal or as a non mammalian mammaliaform Some researchers limit the term mammal to the crown group mammals which would not include Morganucodon and its relatives Others however define mammals as a group by the possession of a special secondarily evolved jaw joint between the dentary and the squamosal bones which has replaced the primitive one between the articular and quadrate bones in all modern mammalian groups Under this definition Morganucodon would be a mammal Nevertheless its lower jaw retains some of the bones found in its non mammalian ancestors in a very reduced form rather than being composed solely of the dentary Furthermore the primitive reptile like jaw joint between the articular and quadrate bones which in modern mammals has moved into the middle ear and become part of the ear ossicles as malleus and incus is still to be found in Morganucodon 26 Morganucodon also suckled it may have been the earliest animal to do so had only two sets of teeth and grew rapidly to adult size and stopped growing thereafter all typical mammalian traits 27 Phylogeny 28 Mammaliaformes Adelobasileus Sinoconodon Morganucodon Megazostrodon Haramiyida Haldanodon Castorocauda Hadrocodium MammaliaSee also edit nbsp Paleontology portalEvolution of mammalsReferences edit Pages 21 33 174 in Zofia Kielan Jaworowska Richard L Cifelli and Zhe Xi Luo Mammals from the Age of Dinosaurs Origins Evolution and Structure Columbia University Press New York 2004 ISBN 0 231 11918 6 a b Walter G Kuhne On a Triconodont tooth of a new pattern from a Fissure filling in South Glamorgan Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London volume 119 1949 1950 pages 345 350 Kuhne Walter Georg 1958 08 01 Rhaetische Triconodonten aus Glamorgan ihre Stellung zwischen den Klassen Reptilia und Mammalia und ihre Bedeutung fur die REICHART sche Theorie Rhaetian triconodonts from Glamorgan their position between the classes Reptilia and Mammalia and their significance for REICHART s theory Palaontologische Zeitschrift in German 32 3 197 235 doi 10 1007 BF02989032 ISSN 0031 0220 S2CID 128828761 a b Clemens William A May 1979 A problem in morganucodontid taxonomy Mammalia Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 66 1 1 14 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1979 tb01898 x Rigney Harold W March 1963 A Specimen of Morganucodon from Yunnan Nature 197 4872 1122 1123 Bibcode 1963Natur 197 1122R doi 10 1038 1971122a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4204736 C C Young 1978 New materials of Eozostrodon Vertebrata PalAsiatica 16 1 3 W A Clemens 1980 Rhaeto Liassic mammals from Switzerland and West Germany Zitteliana 5 51 92 Kermack K A Mussett Frances Rigney H W January 1981 The skull of Morganucodon Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 71 1 1 158 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1981 tb01127 x Butler P M and Sigogneau Russell D 2016 Diversity of triconodonts in the Middle Jurassic of Great Britain Palaeontologia Polonica 67 35 65 LSID urn lsid zoobank org pub C4D90BB6 A001 4DDB 890E 2061B4793992 Kemp T S 2005 The origin and evolution of mammals Oxford University Press page 143 ISBN 0 19 850760 7 Ruben J A Jones T D 2000 Selective Factors Associated with the Origin of Fur and Feathers American Zoologist 40 4 585 596 doi 10 1093 icb 40 4 585 Hall M I Kamilar J M Kirk E C 24 October 2012 Eye shape and the nocturnal bottleneck of mammals Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 279 1749 4962 4968 doi 10 1098 rspb 2012 2258 PMC 3497252 PMID 23097513 Muchlinski Magdalena N June 2010 A comparative analysis of vibrissa count and infraorbital foramen area in primates and other mammals Journal of Human Evolution 58 6 447 473 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2010 01 012 PMID 20434193 Damiani R Modesto S Yates A Neveling J 22 August 2003 Earliest evidence of cynodont burrowing Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 270 1525 1747 1751 doi 10 1098 rspb 2003 2427 PMC 1691433 PMID 12965004 KIELAN ZOFIA GAMBARYAN PETR P December 1994 Postcranial anatomy and habits of Asian multituberculate mammals Lethaia 27 4 300 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1994 tb01578 x S2CID 85021289 Gill Pamela G Purnell Mark A Crumpton Nick Robson Brown Kate Gostling Neil J Stampanoni M Rayfield Emily J 21 August 2014 Dietary specializations and diversity in feeding ecology of the earliest stem mammals Nature 512 7514 303 305 Bibcode 2014Natur 512 303G doi 10 1038 nature13622 hdl 2381 29192 PMID 25143112 S2CID 4469841 Chinsamy A Hurum J H 2006 Bone microstructure and growth patterns of early mammals PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 51 2 325 338 Retrieved 30 August 2013 Parente Raphael Camara Medeiros Bergqvist Lilian Paglarelli Soares Marina Bento Filho Olimpio Barbosa Moraes 2011 The history of vaginal birth Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics 284 1 1 11 doi 10 1007 s00404 011 1918 6 PMID 21547459 S2CID 22997887 Alexander F H van Nievelt and Kathleen K Smith To replace or not to replace the significance of reduced functional tooth replacement in marsupial and placental mammals Paleobiology Volume 31 Issue 2 June 2005 pages 324 346 Kielan Jaworowska Zofia Cifelli Richard L Luo Zhe Xi 2004 Mammals from the age of dinosaurs origins evolution and structure New York Columbia University Press pp 148 153 ISBN 978 0231119184 Crompton A W Jenkins F Jr 1968 Molar occlusion in late Triassic mammals Biological Reviews 43 4 427 458 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185x 1968 tb00966 x PMID 4886687 S2CID 1044399 Newham Elis et al 2020 Reptile like physiology in Early Jurassic stem mammals Nature Communications 11 1 5121 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 5121N doi 10 1038 s41467 020 18898 4 PMC 7550344 PMID 33046697 Martin T Averianov A O Jager K R K Schwermann A H Wings O 2019 A large morganucodontan mammaliaform from the Late Jurassic of Germany PDF Fossil Imprint 75 3 4 504 509 doi 10 2478 if 2019 0030 pages 511 512 Malcolm C McKenna and Susan K Bell Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level Columbia University Press 1997 ISBN 0 231 11012 X P M Butler D Sigogneau Russell and P C Ensom 2011 Possible persistence of the morganucodontans in the Lower Cretaceous Purbeck Limestone Group Dorset England Cretaceous Research 33 135 145 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2011 09 007 Kermack K A Mussett Frances Rigney H W 1981 The skull of Morganucodon Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 71 1 158 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1981 tb01127 x Mammals of the Mesozoic The least mammal like mammals Close Roger A Friedman Matt Lloyd Graeme T Benson Roger BJ 2015 Evidence for a mid Jurassic adaptive radiation in mammals Current Biology 25 16 2137 2142 doi 10 1016 j cub 2015 06 047 PMID 26190074 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morganucodon amp oldid 1172795790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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