Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Paleontología, Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Cd Universitaria, Delegación Coyoacán, México D.F. 04510, México.
2. Laboratory for Vertebrate Paleontology, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E9, Canada.
Abstract
A new tribotherian mammal, Tirotherium aptum gen. et sp. nov., is described from the late Santonian to early Campanian upper Milk River Formation of Verdigris Coulee, southern Alberta, Canada. The new mammal is known only from isolated teeth, five upper and three lower molars. The upper molars represent two or possibly three pre-ultimate loci and are marked by reduction and loss of the stylar shelf anteriorly, loss of the stylocone, a paracone that is larger than the metacone, weakly developed conules, a low, small protocone, and specialized postvallum single-rank shear. The lower molars probably represent two pre-ultimate loci and are characterized by an anteriorly positioned paraconid, trenchant paracristid, small, posterolingual metaconid, a distal metacristid, broadly open trigonid angle, and a short, basined talonid in which the hypoconulid is closer to the entoconid than to the hypoconid. The molars of Tirotherium most closely resemble those of Picopsis Fox, 1980, a tribotherian that also occurs in the upper Milk River Formation, but the molars of Tirotherium are significantly larger than those of Picopsis. Nonetheless, Tirotherium aptum is best classified in the Picopsidae, a boreosphenidan family of tiny mammalian faunivores of uncertain relationships to other tribotherians, and displaying a unique mosaic of primitive and derived characters.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference39 articles.
1. The effects of trapping and blade angle of notched dentitions on fracture of biological tissues
2. Archibald, J.D. 1982. A study of mammalia and geology across the Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary in Garfield County, Montana. In Geological Sciences. Vol. 122. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA. 286 p.
3. A Primitive Higher Mammal from the Late Cretaceous of Southern Utah