New fossil rewrites history of mammals

160-million-year-old specimen earliest known animal that fed placenta to young

by macleans.ca on Thursday, August 25, 2011 11:47am - 3 Comments

Paleontologists have discovered the fossil of a mouse-like animal that is the earliest example of a mammal that fed its unborn young with its placenta. According to Nature magazine, the discovery of the 160-million-year-old specimen indicates that marsupial mammals and placental mammals took up separate lines earlier than scientists originally thought. Scientists say the discovery is important as 90 per cent of mammals today are placental, and knowing when the two types of mammals split is necessary to understanding the evolution of mammals. Paleontologists discovered the new specimen, called Juramaia sinensis, in China’s northeast Liaoning Province, the source of many recent important fossil discoveries.

BBC News

 

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  • Anonymous

    I’m no biologist, but I strongly suspect the subhead (160-million-year-old specimen earliest known animal that fed placenta to young) should read “earliest known animal that fed unborn young through placenta”.

    • Anonymous

      Summer student doing the headline editing I assume. Things will improve in September when the unpaid interns go back to school.

  • Anonymous

    I’m no biologist, but I strongly suspect the subhead (160-million-year-old specimen earliest known animal that fed placenta to young) should read “earliest known animal that fed unborn young through placenta”.

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