Abstract
This short review paper compares the lower jaw and lower dentition of the small Mesozoic mammal Vincelestes neuquenianus with some other Laurasian and Gondwanan taxa. On this basis a set of 90 characters recognised by recent authors was assembled and used to construct a cladogram. The topology suggests that the early Cretaceous mammal from Patagonia, Vincelestes, is nested within a clade comprising ‘other Gondwanan mammals’, separated from Laurasian taxa. In general, because there is a lack of Mesozoic mammal skulls from Gondwana, meaning that the skull of Vincelestes can only be compared with cranial material from Laurasia, an incomplete understanding of relationships has resulted in earlier studies. The prototribosphenic condition of Vincelestes is supported by the cladistic analysis presented here and permits a number of interesting speculations because it is of later age than Jurassic tribosphenic mammals from Gondwana. It is proposed that the tribosphenic condition may have developed first amongst taxa on Pangea, before the separation of Laurasia and Gondwana.
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