Abstract

Discovery of an Alcidedorbignya-like isolated upper molar in an early Paleocene (latest Puercan, Puercan 3, North American Land Mammal Age) local fauna found in the Tullock Member of the Fort Union Formation in northeastern Montana has been cited in the paleontological literature. This fossil is described, and a new genus and species, Crustulus fontanus, are established. They add to the taxonomic diversity of Puercan 3 local faunas in the North America Western Interior. The tooth’s morphology including a deep ectoflexus, nearly parallel preparacrista and postmetacrista, and expansion of the postcingulum, suggests evolution to accommodate increased herbivory. The appearance of C. fontanus with no clearly related taxa in older Puercan or Lancian (latest Cretaceous) local faunas of the currently sampled areas of the Western Interior indicates it probably was yet another post-Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary immigrant into this region. The few characters preserved in the single upper molar strongly suggest but do not conclusively indicate phylogenetic affinities with pantodonts. Perhaps C. fontanus was a member of yet another lineage stemming from the common ancestry of pantodonts and tillodonts. It is the oldest record of this complex group in North America.http://www.zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3643EA78-9A1A-4A2A-BFAF-4C2B6355B834

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