Results from the #paleostream!
Pneumatostega, Shaochilong, Tombaatar (fighting off Gobiosuchus) and Mesoleptos.
The weirdness of prehistory in all it's glory :3
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Results from the #paleostream!
Pneumatostega, Shaochilong, Tombaatar (fighting off Gobiosuchus) and Mesoleptos.
The weirdness of prehistory in all it's glory :3
Tupanbaatar brasilensis
Tupanbaatar brasilensis, a Miocene species from Brazil. A notoptilodontoidean, it showcases the transformation of the second premolar into a caniform saber tooth. Like in other cimolodonts these fangs are grown throught the animal's life much like the main plaugiaulacoid premolar. For Multituberculate Earth, by hellagator
Speculative island fauna of the mesozoic
I Pseudosauropod paraxenos, mid triassic - Native to an unnamed island off the south-western coast of Pangea, Pseudosauropod might be the first large dinosaur in history. Descended from small insectivores that dispersed there through drifting it inhabits an island never reached by pseudosuchians or synapsids, which allowed those small creatures to quickly fill the megafaunal niche and become large herbivores. Despite it's close resemblance to sauropodomorphs it is actually a basal theropod hovewer at this point in time it hasn't been long since those two groups split. Ultimately an evolutionary dead end, it is nevertheless a forecast of things to come.
II Melisodon nakamuri, late jurassic - While almost all non-mammalian synapsids vanished at the end of triassic, few non-mammal cynodonts managed to make it through into the jurassic. Among them was a lineage of the very last cynognathids, still clinging on in Antarctica. As time passed, some of them found themselves on an isolated island chain off the southernmost continent. On the islands they flourished and diversified into many different niches, thriving long after the extinction of their brethren on the mainland. They survived up until the jurassic-cretaceous boundary, when environmental changes ultimately led to their demise, making them the last non-Probainognathian synapsids to have ever lived. Melisodon, a relatively large omnivore of the end jurassic is one of the last species in the lineage.
III Adamatherium kynodontis, mid cretaceous - Animal hailing from a sizeable island in eastern Tethis Ocean. This land has no non-avian dinosaurs, however it was reached by several mammals from few different clades, that dispersed there by drifting. With the limitations posed by archosaurs largely gone, small furry creatures quickly evolved to fill almost all available niches on the island. From weird specialised omnivores, through megafaunal grazers to apex predators. This small kingdom became a "cenozoic before cenozoic", showing how quickly animals can evolve and flourish if given a chance. Adamatherium is a herbivorous multituberculate, and the largest animal on the island. Reaching the size of a cow, it is the largest mammal to have yet existed, and it will only be matched after several tens of millions of years.
IV Balearosaurus parvus, late cretaceous - This small iguanodont is a fascinating case of convergent evolution to Balearic Island cave "goat" (a real, bizarre animal killed off by humans just few millenia ago). It's story began when their small island separated from the landmass of future Spain, isolating few animals there from the outside world. Balearosaur's ancestors found themselves in a very small place, with no predators and almost no competition, but extremely limited resources, which demanded extreme adaptations. Over time their legs became shorter and weaker, with the animal losing it's ability to run, as it would be an unneeded waste of energy in this predator free environment. Lack of predator also caused another adaptation - forward facing eyes, an unnerving sight in a herbivore. Due to very limited access to calories they became much smaller from their ancestors, and developed an extreme adaptation - ectothermy. With slower metabolism and body heat controlled by external temperatures the animal can conserve more energy, making it perhaps the only cold blooded dinosaur in history. Yet eventually the island moved closer to larger landmasses again, meaning it became available for frequent visits by large azhdharids. With a sudden reappearance of predators Balearosaurus vanished in just a few generations.
V Contritodactylus maxima, late cretaceous - It is much rarer for flightlesness to evolve in pterosaurs that it is in birds, but with the right conditions it can still happen. Contritodactylus is a giant flightless tapejarid, native to a large but really isolated island in the Pacific. It's ancestors were lightweight frugivores, caught in a tropical storm and carried off course into the fated land. Here they found themselves in a place with an abundance of food but basically no land predators big enough to pose a serious threat, maybe with an exception of some large lizards. The island was also the only food source within a flying range. Those conditions caused many descending species to lose their ability to fly, and fill land dwelling niches. Contritodactylus is a specialised browser, with it's massive beak used to strip branches of fresh leaves, pick and crush fruit and crack open nuts and seed pods. It is also the heaviest pterosaur on the planet at that particular time period.
VI Oculiavis tetraplis, late jurassic - Close relative of the famous Archeopteryx, this flying dinosaur lives on a smaller tropical island. Their round, large faces might help them in locating their prey by hearing, since a large portion of Oculiavises diet consists of insect larvae hiding beneath the tree barks. However it is believed by some that the actual main function of this dinosaur's face is recognizing different individuals and intraspecific interaction. Indeed the most unique aspect of this animal is it's intelligence, with Oculiavis regurarly using tools to access their food and displaying suprisingly complex social interactions.
Lemuria phase 1.5 submissions
Number one
I had lots of fun with creatures and their names, starting with this guy, the shmobler. This guy was my introduction to mammals and don’t worry they get worse.
A new multituberculate (Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Lulworth Formation (Cretaceous, Berriasian) of Dorset, England
Weston, Sweetman, Kean, et al.
Abstract
A new genus and species of plagiaulacid multituberculate (Mammalia, Allotheria, Multituberculata) is described from the Cherty Freshwater Beds, Warbarrow Tout Member of the Lower Cretaceous Lulworth Formation of the Purbeck Group, Dorset, United Kingdom. The new taxon is represented by a complete, well preserved left dentary containing the incisor, p2–4, with alveoli for m1–2. This new specimen is the most complete multituberculate material yet recovered from the Purbeck Group. It is also the first mammal to be recovered from the so-called ‘Flint Bed’ (DB97).
Read the paper here:
A new multituberculate (Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Lulworth Formation (Cretaceous, Berriasian) of Dorset, England - ScienceDirect
Harenadraco with other denizens of Barun goyot formation; the monstersaurian lizard Gobiderma and multituberculate mammal Catopsbaatar.
It Came From The Wastebasket #16: Catopsalis Catastrophe
The rodent-like multituberculates were a major lineage of mammals that were only distantly related to modern marsupials and placentals. They originated around the time of the mid-Jurassic (~168 million years ago), survived through the end-Cretaceous mass extinction, and went on to become one of the most diverse and successful types of mammal in the Paleocene. After that point they began to decline, and after anw over-130-million-year-long run they went extinct* in the early Oligocene (~33 million years ago).
(* Except, possibly, in South America, where an enigmatic fossil known as Patagonia peregrina may represent a multi surviving as recently as about 18 million years ago in the early Miocene.)
First discovered in North America in the 1880s, Catopsalis foliatus was part of a group of multituberculates called taeniolabidoids. These multis got significantly larger than the rest of their kind – averaging beaver-sized but with some species getting up to at least capybara-sized – and were some of the first mammals to evolve into relatively big herbivores after the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs.
Catopsalis foliatus
Catopsalis was named based on a partial jawbone and a few teeth, and over the next century or so various other similar-looking fossils from both North America and Asia were added into the genus as additional species. Eventually Catopsalis contained eight different species, ranging over about 10 million years from the late Cretaceous to the early Eocene – not especially big compared to some other wastebaskets we've looked at this month, but it was still a problem, muddying up attempts to understand the actual evolutionary relationships and biogeography of the taeniolabidoids.
Cladistic studies in the 1980s showed that Catopsalis was paraphyletic, made up of at least five separate lineages, and a few of them were subsequently renamed and reclassified. The Cretaceous Asian forms became Djadochtatherium and Catopsbaatar, and are now considered to be part of a different lineage of multis known as djadochtatherioids, while one of the remaining North American species then became Valenopsalis.
…But a couple of other new Catopsalis species have also been named in the meantime (one as recently as 2018), so there are still seven different species that need sorting out in this particular wastebasket.
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Meniscoessus is a multituberculate mammal about the size of a groundhog from late cretaceous north america. It most likely fed on plant matter, and was probably rather cute.