Meniscolophus

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Infraclass:Marsupialia
Meniscolophus
Temporal range: Late Pliocene
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Diprotodontidae
Genus: Meniscolophus
Stirton, 1955
Species:
M. mawsoni
Binomial name
Meniscolophus mawsoni
Stirton, 1955

Meniscolophus is an extinct genus of marsupial of the family Diprotodontidae. Only one species has been described, Meniscolophus mawsoni, from the Late Pliocene of the Tirari Desert, South Australia.

The first remains of Meniscolophus were collected by a joint expedition between the South Australian Museum, Department of Geology of the University of Adelaide, and the University of California Museum of Paleontology in 1953. They were found in the Pliocene-aged Tirari Formation of Lake Palankarinna, South Australia. The fossils were subsequently described by Ruben A. Stirton in 1955, alongside other fossils collected during the expedition. The holotype is a mandible and left maxillary fragment belonging to the same individual.[1] Isolated teeth from the same locality have also been referred to this taxon.[2]

The genus name means "crescent crest" in Ancient Greek. The species name was chosen to honour Sir. Douglas Mawson, a former professor at the University of Adelaide.[1]

Description

The upper molar teeth of Meniscolophus have narrow V-shaped valleys that separate the protoloph from the metaloph. Both the second and third molars have expansions on the protoloph, with no expansions or ridges on the metaloph. Stylar cusps are entirely absent on the first lower and second upper molars. The labial surface on the first lower incisor is flat, while the anterior surface is convex. The lower third premolar lacks a hypoconid or talonid. A cingulum (shelf) runs from the labial (outwards, towards the cheek) side of the tooth's central cuspid down to its posterolingual base. The lower molars have crests that join cusps together (known as lophids) running across them. Descending from the anterolingual corner of the hypoconid is a metalophid, which blocks a valley near the midline of each tooth. In contrast to Zygomaturus, the labial cingulum is more extensive.[2]

Classification

Paleobiology

References

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