Anagaloidea
| Anagaloidea Temporal range: Late Cretaceous–Early Oligocene |
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| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Superorder: | Euarchontoglires |
| Order: | Anagaloidea |
| Families | |
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Anagaloidea is an extinct order of mammals, first appearing during the Cretaceous.
[edit] Taxonomy
According to the traditional (morphological) view, the Anagaloidea are part of the superorder Anagalida. The elephant shrews and the rodents and lagomorphs are considered to be part of this superorder as well.
However, the Anagalida are currently considered to be polyphyletic. Genetic studies have shown that the elephant shrews are actually part of a different macro-group of mammals called the Afrotheria, while the position of several extinct families of Anagalida is uncertain. The Zalambdalestidae are almost certainly unrelated to any of these groups; they probably represent more basal Eutherians and may even not be true Eutherians at all.
The Anagalidae and the Pseudictopidae probably represent a genuine clade. This clade is known as the Anagaloidea, which seems to be related to the rodents and lagomorphs after all. Together they form the clade Glires, often grouped with the Euarchonta to form the superorder Euarchontoglires.
[edit] Classification
- Family Anagalidae
- Genus Anagale
- Family Pseudictopidae
- Family Astigalidae?
- Family Zalambdalestidae?
- Genus Zalambdalestes
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