Abstract
AbstractThe Langenberg Quarry near Bad Harzburg has yielded the first Jurassic stem therian mammal of Germany, recovered from Kimmeridgian (Late Jurassic) near shore deposits of a palaeo-island within the Lower Saxony Basin of the European archipelago. The new stem therian is represented by one lower and three upper molars. Hercynodon germanicus gen. et sp. nov. is attributed to the Dryolestidae, a group of pretribosphenic crown mammals that was common in western Laurasia from the Middle Jurassic to the Early Cretaceous. The new taxon is characterised by small size, a reduced cusp pattern in the upper molars lacking a metacone, and enhancement of the shearing crests paracrista and metacrista. Phylogenetic analysis identified Hercynodon gen. nov. as sister taxon of Crusafontia from the Lower Cretaceous (Barremian) of Spain. Both taxa belong to an endemic European clade of dryolestids, including also Achyrodon and Phascolestes from the earliest Cretaceous (Berriasian) of England. Despite its greater geological age, Hercynodon gen. nov. is the most derived representative of that clade, indicated by the complete reduction of the metacone. The discrepancy between derived morphology and geological age may be explained by an increased rate of character evolution in insular isolation. Other insular phenomena have earlier been observed in vertebrates from the Langenberg Quarry, such as dwarfism in the small sauropod Europasaurus, and possible gigantism in the morganucodontan mammaliaform Storchodon and the pinheirodontid multituberculate mammal Teutonodon which grew unusually large.
Funder
Volkswagen Foundation
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Medicine,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
9 articles.
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1. Lower molars of the large morganucodontan Storchodon cingulatus from the Late Jurassic (Kimmeridgian) of Germany;PalZ;2024-06-12
2. Docodontans (Mammaliaformes) from the Late Jurassic of Germany;Historical Biology;2024-01-12
3. A new dryolestid fossil from the Late Jurassic illuminates molar root structure of dryolestidsCitation for this article: Magallanes, I., Beard, K. C., Martin, T., & Luo, Z-X. (2024) A new dryolestid fossil from the Late Jurassic illuminates molar root structure of dryolestids.
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2024.2322740;Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology;2023-09-03
4. Paleontology-themed comics and graphic novels, their potential for scientific outreach, and the bilingual graphic novel EUROPASAURUS – Life on Jurassic Islands;Geoscience Communication;2023-05-11
5. Mandibular and dental characteristics of the Late Jurassic mammal Henkelotherium guimarotae (Paurodontidae, Dryolestida);PalZ;2023-04-06