Pappotherium

Extinct family of mammals From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pappotherium is an extinct genus of mammals from the Albian (early Cretaceous) of Texas, US, known from a fossilized maxilla fragment bearing two tribosphenic molars, discovered within the Glen Rose Formation near Decatur, Wise County, Texas.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Family:Pappotheriidae
Slaughter, 1965
Genus:Pappotherium
Slaughter, 1965
Quick facts Scientific classification, Species ...
Pappotherium
Temporal range: 112.6–109 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Family: Pappotheriidae
Slaughter, 1965
Genus: Pappotherium
Slaughter, 1965
Species[1]

P. pattersoni Slaughter, 1965

Synonyms

Slaughteria Butler, 1978

Close

The fossil was discovered by Bob H. Slaughter within some deposits dating back to 112.6 – 109 million years ago.[1] On the basis of the morphology of the molars' cusps, in 1965 Slaughter established the new genus Pappotherium and the new species P. pattersoni; he also created an apposite family, Pappotheriidae. Both this family and the genus are nowadays still monotypic.

Slaughter argued that Pappotherium should have been a basal form close to the metatherian-eutherian divergence point; this mammal likely was an arboreal insectivore.[1]

Etymologically speaking, the name Pappotherium is a compound of the Latin words pappus (from ancient Greek πάππος, páppos, "grandfather") and therium (from ancient Greek θηρίον, thēríon, "beast", a common suffix among extinct mammals), with the full meaning of "mammal-grandfather".

The second part of the unique species' name, pattersoni, was instead chosen in honor of the American paleontologist Bryan Patterson.

More recently, it has been recovered as a possible deltatheroidean.[2][3][4] The most recent phylogeny including Pappotherium is reproduced below.[4]

Metatheria

References

Bibliography

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