Meniscoessus

Meniscoessus is a genus of extinct multituberculates from the Upper Cretaceous Period that lived in North America.

Meniscoessus
Temporal range:
Meniscoessus skull in the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center, Woodland Park, Colorado
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Multituberculata
Family: Cimolomyidae
Genus: Meniscoessus
Cope, 1882
Species
  • M. collomensis
  • M. conquistus
  • M. ferox
  • M. intermedius
  • M. major
  • M. robustus
  • M. seminoensis

It is a member of the order Multituberculata, belonging to the suborder Cimolodonta and family Cimolomyidae. The multituberculates were primitive, rodent-like mammals occupying the modern rodent ecological niche. They were significant for having diverged early in mammalian evolution, co-existing with dinosaurs for ~100 million years, surviving through the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event and lasting until the end of the Paleogene, likely having been replaced by true rodents.

Meniscoessus lived during the Santonian, Campanian and Maastrichtian ages of the Upper Cretaceous. This was a period of significant diversification of multiturbiculates, and evidence that contradicts the popular misconception that mammals were unable to thrive due to being outcompeted by the dinosaurs. They are useful as index fossils for the Judithian, Edmontonian, and Lancian faunal stages. Like most early mammals, Meniscoessus fossils mainly consist of teeth. Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska and Jørn Hurum considered them to be the "best known" members of the Cimolomyidae.

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