Maotherium
Maotherium | |
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Maotherium skeleton | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | †Symmetrodonta |
Family: | †Zhangheotheriidae |
Genus: | †Maotherium Rougier et al., 2003 |
Type species | |
Maotherium sinensis Rougier et al., 2003
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Species | |
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Maotherium is a genus extinct
symmetrodonts. Though little is known about this group, the symmetrodonts have several similarities - specifically their teeth. They have tall pointed, but simple molars in a triangular arrangement. Originally symmetrodonts were known since the 1920s. Now a vast majority have been restored, such as Zhangheotherium and Akidolestes, during the early 21st century. One of the fossils of Maotherium preserved the imprints of fur, like the mammals Eomaia and Sinodelphys
.
A species described in 2009, Maotherium asiaticus, sheds light on the evolution of the mammalian middle ear. In modern mammals, the Meckel's cartilage appears during development but disappears before adulthood. In Maotherium asiaticus, that cartilage not only remained, but turned into bone.[2] This event in evolution may be an example of heterochrony, a change in the timing of development.[3]
References
- ^ S2CID 129655279.
- ^
Ji Qiang; Luo Zhe-Xi; Zhang Xingliao; Yuan Chong-Xi; Xu Li (2009). "Evolutionary development of the middle ear in Mesozoic therian mammals". Science. 326 (5950): 278–281. S2CID 206522236.
- ^
Martin, Thomas & Ruf, Irina (2009). "On the mammalian ear". Science. 326 (5950): 243–244. S2CID 26545052.