A large carnivorous mammal from the Late Cretaceous and the North American origin of marsupials

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Gregory P. Wilson
Eric G. Ekdale
John W. Hoganson
Jonathan J. Calede
Abby Vander Linden
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[1] University of Washington,Department of Biology and Burke Museum
[2] San Diego State University,Department of Biology
[3] San Diego Natural History Museum,Department of Paleontology
[4] North Dakota Geological Survey,undefined
[5] Graduate Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology,undefined
[6] University of Massachusetts,undefined
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Marsupial mammal relatives (stem metatherians) from the Mesozoic Era (252–66 million years ago) are mostly known from isolated teeth and fragmentary jaws. Here we report on the first near-complete skull remains of a North American Late Cretaceous metatherian, the stagodontid Didelphodon vorax. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates that marsupials or their closest relatives evolved in North America, as part of a Late Cretaceous diversification of metatherians, and later dispersed to South America. In addition to being the largest known Mesozoic therian mammal (node-based clade of eutherians and metatherians), Didelphodon vorax has a high estimated bite force and other craniomandibular and dental features that suggest it is the earliest known therian to invade a durophagous predator–scavenger niche. Our results broaden the scope of the ecomorphological diversification of Mesozoic mammals to include therian lineages that, in this case, were linked to the origin and evolution of marsupials.
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