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Functional-adaptive anatomy of the axial skeleton of some extant marsupials and the paleobiology of the paleocene marsupials Mayulestes ferox and Pucadelphys andinus.

Christine Argot
- 01 Mar 2003 - 
- Vol. 255, Iss: 3, pp 279-300
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TLDR
It is proposed that Mayulestes and Pucadelphys represent an ancestral morphotype suggesting that the generalized type of locomotion of Paleocene marsupials was partly terrestrial with some climbing ability.
Abstract
In this study, the axial skeletons of two Early Paleocene marsupials, Mayulestes ferox and Pucadelphys andinus, were analyzed functionally and compared to that of six South American and three Australian species of extant marsupials. In the case of the South American opossums, myological data of the epaxial musculature were collected and analyzed and osteological-myological associations were related to locomotor behavior. Various features of the vertebral column that relate to diet or to locomotor or postural patterns were pointed out. These features include: the craniocaudal development of the neural process of the axis; the position of the anticlinal vertebra; the morphology of the neural processes of the thoracolumbar vertebrae (orientation, length, and craniocaudal width); the length, orientation, and curvature of the transverse processes of the lumbar vertebrae; and the length and robustness of the caudal vertebrae. In both fossil forms the vertebral column is mobile and allows a great range of flexion and extension of the spine, more so than in most of the living didelphids. It is emphasized here that the analysis of the axial skeleton complements and improves the conclusions provided by the forelimb and hindlimb analyses. It is proposed that Mayulestes and Pucadelphys represent an ancestral morphotype suggesting that the generalized type of locomotion of Paleocene marsupials was partly terrestrial with some climbing ability. J. Morphol. 255:279–300, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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References
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Evolutionary History of the Marsupials and an Analysis of Osteological Characters

TL;DR: This work has focused on the analysis of metatherian cruropedal evidence from fossils of ameridelphians unassociated with teeth from the Cenozoic to the Jurassic in order to derive a phylogeny of characters and groups and the classification of taxa.
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New views on primate origins

TL;DR: Most primates live in trees, and many of them have strikingly human‐like hands and faces, but the origins of these peculiarities have traced the origins to more specific ways of arboreal life, involving leaping locomotion, shrub‐layer foraging, visually guided predation on insects, or fruit‐eating.

How mammals run

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Primate origins: Lessons from a neotropical marsupial

TL;DR: Quantitative data on free‐ranging C. derbianus in Costa Rica demonstrate that it is highly arboreal, uses visually directed predation to capture arthropod prey, and makes extensive use of terminal branch foraging, where it feeds on small angiosperm products, thus suggesting that the hypotheses are not mutually exclusive but are interdependent.
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A Chinese triconodont mammal and mosaic evolution of the mammalian skeleton

TL;DR: The derived pectoral girdle of this new triconodont indicates that homoplasies are as common in the postcranial skeleton as they are in the skull and dentition in the evolution of Mesozoic mammals.
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