Holoclemensia

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Holoclemensia
Temporal range:
Ma
Teeth of Holoclemensia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Clade: Metatheria
Slaughter, 1968
Genus: Holoclemensia
Slaughter, 1968
Type species
Holoclemensia texana
Slaughter, 1968
Synonyms
  • Clemensia Slaughter, 1968
  • Comanchea Jacobs et al 1989

Holoclemensia is an

extinct genus of mammal of uncertain phylogenetic placement. It lived during the Early Cretaceous and its fossil remains were discovered in Texas
.

Description

This genus is only known from a few isolated teeth. The upper molars had a paracone larger than the metacone, and a stylar platform with stylar cusps. The lower molars had a high protoconid, a small paraconid, and the hypoconulid and entoconid were close.[1]

Classification

First described in 1968 by Slaughter, Holoclemensia texana is only known from a few teeth found in the

Eutherians
diverged from each other.

References and Bibliography

  1. ^ Slaughter, B. H. 1971. Mid-Cretaceous (Albian) therians of the Butler Farm local fauna, Texas. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 50:131–143.
  2. ^ Butler, P. M. 1978. A new interpretation of the mammalian teeth of tribosphenic pattern from the Albian of Texas. Breviora 446:1–27.
  3. ^ Cifelli, R. L. 1993. Theria of metatherian-eutherian grade and the origin of marsupials; pp. 205–215 in F. S. Szalay, M. J. Novacek, and M. C. McKenna (eds.), Mammal Phylogeny: Mesozoic Differentiation, Multituberculates, Monotremes, Early Therians, and Marsupials. Springer-Verlag, New York.
  4. ^ *Luo, Z.-X., Q. Ji, J. R. Wible, and C.-X. Yuan. 2003. An Early Cretaceous tribosphenic mammal and metatherian evolution. Science 302:1934–1940.
  • Slaughter, B. H. 1968. Earliest known marsupials. Science 162:254-255
  • Slaughter, B. H. 1968. Holoclemensia instead of Clemensia. Science 162:1306
  • Davis, B.M. and Cifelli, R.L. 2011. Reappraisal of the tribosphenidan mammals from the Trinity Group (Aptian–Albian) of Texas and Oklahoma. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 56 (3): 441–462.