Say hello to your greatest grandparent. Cute, furry, long-tailed and with a penchant for insects – it sounds like something we would keep as a pet rather than be related to. But it seems that such a creature was the last shared ancestor of placental mammals – a group including all living mammals apart from marsupials and those that lay eggs. An exhaustive analysis, combining genomic information and fossil evidence, suggests that our ancestor lived soon after the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. Its descendants rapidly spread around the globe and evolved into all the major placental groups seen today, from bats to whales and from mice to men.
Molecular biologists and palaeontologists have long argued over the origin of placental mammals. For a long time, the accepted theory, based on fossil evidence, was that mammals had diversified after the dinosaurs were wiped out, exploding into myriad different species once the world was no longer dominated by these giants. However, recent genetic analyses have suggested that our earliest ancestor would have walked with the dinosaurs – living about 100 million years ago, and diversifying into more than 20 different lineages in the succeeding 35 million years. But palaeontologists have found no fossils from any modern placental group that date from before the impact, suggesting that the ancestor of living mammals evolved after the dinosaurs were gone. Family get-together In an attempt to resolve the conflict, Maureen O'Leary of Stony Brook University in New York state and colleagues built a family tree combining genetic information with data on more than 4500 anatomical traits – the most ever used in this way – from 46 living species and 40 fossil species.


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