2017
DOI: 10.1206/3874.1
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Two New Tritylodontids (Synapsida, Cynodontia, Mammaliamorpha) from the Upper Jurassic, Southwestern Mongolia

Abstract: Two new genera and species of Tritylodontidae, Shartegodon altai and Nuurtherium baruunensis, are described and compared with other known tritylodontids. The new taxa are represented by two partial skulls and, in the case of Nuurtherium, postcranial elements. They were collected from the lower part of the Ulan Malgait Sequence (Upper Jurassic) in the Shar Teg locality, Gobi-Altai Aimag, southwestern Mongolia. The upper postcanine teeth of these two genera have unique cusp formulae that differentiate them from … Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Phylogenetic Analysis-Trees were analyzed using TNT version 1.5 (Goloboff et al, 2008), and the character matrix of 35 characters and 17 taxa is based on that of Velazco et al (2017), with Stereognathus rescored to reflect our findings (Appendices 1, 2). We used the New Technology search, selecting ratchet, sectorial search, tree drift, and tree fusing.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Phylogenetic Analysis-Trees were analyzed using TNT version 1.5 (Goloboff et al, 2008), and the character matrix of 35 characters and 17 taxa is based on that of Velazco et al (2017), with Stereognathus rescored to reflect our findings (Appendices 1, 2). We used the New Technology search, selecting ratchet, sectorial search, tree drift, and tree fusing.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yuanotherium (Hu et al, 2009), Shartegodon (Velazco et al, 2017), and Nuurtherium (Velazco et al, 2017), which all have a higher number of cusps in one or more rows.…”
Section: Comparisonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To date, tritylodontids are known from Europe, Africa, Asia, North America, and Antarctica [9] but have never been reported from Australia, and likely have yet to be discovered in South America ([10] contra [11]). Body size in Tritylodontidae ranges from small, vole- to rat-sized taxa (the smallest are Lufengia delicata and then Yunnanodon brevirostris ) to large, wolf- or capybara-sized taxa ( Kayentatherium wellesi and Bienotherium magnum ) [10, 12]. Given the considerable range of body sizes in Tritylodontidae, we expect the food choice of at least the small- and large-bodied taxa to be different with respect to dietary composition and biomechanical properties of the ingested food items.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%