Discovery of a small mammal living in the time of dinosaurs

- Jackson Avery

Researchers discovered in Patagonia the fossil of a small mammal the size of a mouse that rubbed shoulders with dinosaurs and was previously unknown to the community of paleontologists.

The announcement of this find took place last week in an article published by the British scientific journal “Proceedings of the Royal Society B”.

THE Yeutherium Pressor Weighed between 30 and 40 grams and lived in the upper Cretaceous, about 74 million years ago. It is the smallest mammal ever identified in this South American region.

There was only one piece of jaw left

The fossil consists of “a small piece of jaw with a molar and the crown and the root of two other molars”, explains to AFP Hans Puschel, at the head of the team of scientists of the University of Chile and the Chilean Research Center Millennium Nucleus. The researchers identified it in the Rio de Las Chinas valley, a river in the Chilean region of Magallanes, some 3000 kilometers south of Santiago.

THE Yeutherium Pressor According to his discoverers, a mammal capable of laying eggs – like today’s ornithorynques – and carrying her young in a pocket like kangaroos or opossums. The shape of his teeth suggests that his diet consisted of relatively hard plant foods.

Like the dinosaurs who lived at the same time as him, this little mammal disappeared at the end of the Cretaceous, some 66 million years ago.

Jackson Avery

Jackson Avery

I’m a journalist focused on politics and everyday social issues, with a passion for clear, human-centered reporting. I began my career in local newsrooms across the Midwest, where I learned the value of listening before writing. I believe good journalism doesn’t just inform — it connects.