PERSONAL DE APOYO
REGUERO Marcelo Alfredo
artículos
Título:
FIRST MESOZOIC MAMMAL FROM CHILE: THE SOUTHERNMOST RECORD OF A LATE CRETACEOUS GONDWANATHERIAN
Autor/es:
GOIN, F.J.; MARTINELLI, A.G.; SOTO-ACUÑA, SERGIO; VIEYTES, C.; MANRIQUEZ, LESLIE E.M-; FERNÁNDEZ, ROY A.; PINO, JUAN PABLO; TREVISAN, CRISTINE; KALUZA, JONATAN; REGUERO, MARCELO A.; LEPPE, MARCELO; ORTIZ, HÉCTOR; RUBILAR-ROGERS, DAVID; VARGAS, ALEXANDER O.
Revista:
Boletin del Museo de Historia Natural
Editorial:
Museo Nacional de Historia Natural
Referencias:
Lugar: Santiago; Año: 2020 vol. 69 p. 5 - 31
ISSN:
0027-3910
Resumen:
We describe Magallanodon baikashkenke gen. et. sp. nov., a new gondwanatherian mammal fromthe Late Cretaceous of the Magallanes Region in southern Chile (Río de Las Chinas Valley, EstanciaCerro Guido, north of Puerto Natales city, Última Esperanza Province). The mammal-bearing layer isplaced within the Late Campanian-Early Maastrichtian levels of the Dorotea Formation (Magallanes/Austral Basin). The new remains constitute the southernmost record of a Mesozoic gondwanatherian mammal, as well as the first Mesozoic mammal from Chile. This taxon is comparable in size to the hypsodont-toothed Gondwanatherium (Late Cretaceous) and Sudamerica (Early Paleocene) but with noticeably brachyodont molariforms supported by four to five roots. As in other gondwanatherians, it has at least one hypertrophied, rodent-like incisor in the upper jaw. The new taxon is here diagnosed and described, and is regarded as a possible ferugliotheriid (?Ferugliotheriidae). If confirmed, it would represent the largest known taxon for this family. Its molariform occlusal crown pattern, after wear, resembles that of other gondwanatherians, particularly ferugliotheriids and that of the sudamericid Gondwanatherium. This adds new evidence on the phylogenetic proximity of ferugliotheriid and sudamericid gondwanatherians. An analysis of the enamel microstructure of the upper incisor of Magallanodon was performed demonstrating several crucial similarities with the pattern shown by Gondwanatherium (Sudamericidae). We discuss the significance of Magallanodon for understanding the acquisition, within gondwanatherians, of a lophed molariform pattern. Finally, we discuss the significance of the new finding in the context of southern biotas, including those of Patagonia and Antarctica.