Scientists Reconstruct Scampering Common Ancestor Of All Us Placental Mammals
Emily Elert
at 06:00 AM Feb 8 2013
The Placental Mammal's Common Ancestor Click here to see a larger version.
Carl Buell
Science // 

After six years of collaboration between over twenty scientists from research institutions across the country, researchers have completed the most comprehensive picture of mammalian ancestry to date. Using a combination of physical and genetic data, the researchers reconstructed the family tree of placental mammals - a group that now comprises over 5,100 species - and traced its many branches back to a common ancestor.

The tree's huge wealth of anatomical data allowed the researchers to reconstruct what that common ancestor probably looked like:

It was mouse-size and grey-brown, with a furry tail. It ate insects. It gave live birth to naked, squirmy babies, and its descendants diversified to fill all the ecological vacancies left by the recently-departed dinosaurs. There were a lot of vacancies, and within just a few hundred thousand years - a blink of the evolutionary eye - the mammalian lineage branched into a wide array of creatures that, in time, would become the ancestors to every placental mammal - from whales to horses to bats to humans - living today.

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