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Conventional paleontology, solely based on the body fossil record,
had claimed - if not imposed - that the entire contemporary Mammal
Class, from mice to whales, including primates from whom we stem,
had evolved from a small group of shrew-like early mammals known as
Morganucodonts, following the demise of the dinosaurs 65 million
years ago. This theory had surmised that predatory dinosaurs, known
as Theropods, had fed upon early mammals from the beginning of the
Jurassic to the end of the Cretaceous, hereby keeping their size
and numbers small, rare, nocturnal, and insectivores. And that the
only ones that managed to survive this intense predation up until
the demise of the dinosaurs were these very small and fossorial
Morganucodonts.
This book describes the discovery made in the late 1990's in
southeastern Utah that challenges, if not confirms, that early
mammals had not only diversified by the very beginning of the
Jurassic from very small prey animals to fairly large carnivorous
species, but were, numerically speaking, the dominant terrestrial
species from the Jurassic onward to modern times. This book further
heralds the use of inter-disciplinary determinations to solve
complex issues as the one posed by the dinosaurs-mammals
relationship.
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