Abstract

Abstract Five partially preserved mammaliaform petrosals recovered from Middle Jurassic sediments of the Berezovsk coal mine (Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia) show similarities to other early mammaliaforms like the morganucodontan Morganucodon and the docodontan Haldanodon in having an inflated promontorium and a curved and apically inflated cochlear canal, but they are distinct from dryolestoid and derived mammalian petrosals by the weak coiling of the cochlear duct and the presence of a perilymphatic foramen with an open perilymphatic sulcus. The two larger and robust specimens exhibit striking similarities to docodontan petrosals. Inside the bone an intricate circumpromontorial venous plexus was discovered, as recently described for the docodontan Borealestes, confirming that this structure is consistently present in basal non-mammalian mammaliaforms. The three smaller and slender petrosals probably belong to haramiyidans and are unique in showing a septum-like structure medially along the cochlear nerve entrance. The protruding perforated bony bar, which is preserved in two of the three, is interpreted here to be a remnant of a bony septum with multiple foramina for cochlear nerve fibres, representing an autapomorphic feature of Haramiyida. This newly described passageway for nerve fibres shows that the formation of the osteological structure surrounding the nervous pathways of the cochlea is more plastic among the non-mammalian mammaliaforms than previously thought.

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