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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Taxonomy  



1.1  History  





1.2  Species  







2 Notes  





3 References  














Meniscoessus






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Meniscoessus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous

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Meniscoessus skull in the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center, Woodland Park, Colorado
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Multituberculata
Family: Cimolomyidae
Genus: Meniscoessus
Cope, 1882
Species
  • M. collomensis
  • M. conquistus
  • M. ferox
  • M. intermedius
  • M. major
  • M. robustus
  • M. seminoensis

Meniscoessus is a genusofextinct multituberculates from the Upper Cretaceous Period that lived in North America.

It is a member of the order Multituberculata, belonging to the suborder Cimolodonta and family Cimolomyidae. The multituberculates were primitive, rodent-like mammals occupying the modern rodent ecological niche. They were significant for having diverged early in mammalian evolution, co-existing with dinosaurs for ~100 million years, surviving through the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event and lasting until the end of the Paleogene, likely having been replaced by true rodents.[1][2][3][4]

Meniscoessus lived during the Santonian, Campanian and Maastrichtian ages of the Upper Cretaceous. This was a period of significant diversification of multiturbiculates, and evidence that contradicts the popular misconception that mammals were unable to thrive due to being outcompeted by the dinosaurs.[5][6][7] They are useful as index fossils for the Judithian, Edmontonian, and Lancian faunal stages.[8] Like most early mammals, Meniscoessus fossils mainly consist of teeth. Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska and Jørn Hurum considered them to be the "best known" members of the Cimolomyidae.[9]

Taxonomy[edit]

History[edit]

The genus Meniscoessus was named by Edward Drinker Cope in 1882.[10] Members of this genus have been previously classified under the following genus names: Cimolomys (partly); Dipriodon ; Halodon; Oracodon; Moeniscoessus; Selenacodon (partly); and Tripriodon. As Osborn pointed out in 1891, a number of erroneous discoveries had been made as a result of analyzing different teeth of the same animal, different individuals of the same species, and violating the principle of priority due to workers ignoring previously published discoveries.[11]

There may have been confusion with some teeth described as belonging to small carnivorous dinosaurs. [citation needed] These were further christened Dipriodon, Tripriodon, and others, including Triprotodon.[citation needed] Close similarities were then noticed with an already established dinosaur genus, Paronychodon (Cope 1876), also based on teeth from the Laramie Formation. [citation needed] Over time, an impressive school of names was synonymized under P. However, this is now considered a nomen dubium.

M. robustus tooth

Species[edit]

M. robustus skull

Several other names have been in circulation, such as Meniscoessus bustus, and Meniscoessus coelatus. The first is probably a variant of M. robustus, while the latter seems to have been connected with dinosaur teeth. [citation needed]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Weil
  • ^ Prothero, 2006, pp 55-61, 157
  • ^ Benton 2015, pp 330,337-338
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012
  • ^ Benton, 2015, pg 338
  • ^ Carroll, 1988, pg 419
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, pg 459
  • ^ Cifelli et al, 2004
  • ^ Kielan-Jaworowska and Hurum, 2001, pg 408
  • ^ Cope, 1882, pg 830
  • ^ Osborn, 1891, pg 597-598
  • ^ Lillegraven, 1987
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2010, pg 499
  • ^ Cifelli et al, 2004, pg 28 and Table 2.2
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, Supplemental Table 5
  • ^ Cope, 1882, pg 831
  • ^ Paleobiology Database, Meniscoessus
  • ^ Fox, 1971
  • ^ Fox, 1976
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, Supplemental Table 5
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, Supplemental Table 5
  • ^ Cifelli et al 2004, pp 35-36: discussion of dispute
  • ^ Marsh 1889, pp 85-89
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, Supplemental Table 5
  • ^ Osborn, 1891, pg 607
  • ^ Eberle and Lillegraven, 1998, pp. 33-35
  • ^ Carroll, 1988, 417-418: Carroll notes that the premolars and specialized dentition in multituberculates are particularly significant
  • ^ Wilson et al, 2012, Supplemental Table 5
  • References[edit]



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