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Steropodon

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iSteropodon
Conservation status
Extinct (fossil)

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Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Monotremata
Family: Steropodontidae
Genus: Steropodon
Species: S. galmani
Binomial name
Steropodon galmani
Archer, Flannery, Ritchie, & Molnar, 1985

Steropodon galmani was a prehistoric species of monotreme, or egg-laying mammal, that lived during the middle Albian stage, in the Lower Cretaceous period. It is the earliest known relative of the Platypus.

Steropodon is known only from a single opalised jaw with three molars, discovered at the Griman Creek Formation, Lightning Ridge, New South Wales, Australia, by Brothers David and Alan Galman. It was a large mammal for the Mesozoic, being 40 - 50 cm long. The lower molars are 5 - 7 mm in length, with a width of 3 - 4 mm. A length of 1 - 2 mm is more typical for Mesozoic mammals. Also from Lightning Ridge is Kollikodon ritchiei.

The molars "bear striking resemblance to the tribosphenic pattern characteristic of living therians..." (Pascual). However, there are also differences: there is no entoconid, and an absence of wear seems to suggest that the upper molars (as yet unknown) did not have a protocone.

Woodburne (2003, p.212) reports that the holotype is a right mandible named AM F66763, which seems to work at the Australian Museum, Sydney. The preserved molars are m1 - m3. Page 237 includes: "In Steropodon, the mandibular canal suggests the presence of a bill, with a bill also known in Obdurodon dicksoni and Ornithorhynchus anatinus."

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Archer, M., Flannery, T.F., Ritchie, A., Molnar, R.E. (1985). "First Mesozoic mammal from Australia — an early Cretaceous monotreme". Nature 318: 363-366.de:Steropodon

fr:Steropodon galmani id:Steropodon it:Steropodon galmani nl:Steropodon galmani

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