The first member of the family Ferugliotheriidae to be discovered,
Ferugliotherium windhauseni, was named in 1986 by Argentinean paleontologist
José F. Bonaparte on the basis of a tooth from the
Late Cretaceous Los Alamitos Formation of Argentina. Bonaparte placed
Ferugliotherium as the only member of the new family Ferugliotheriidae, which he tentatively assigned to the order
Multituberculata, a large group of extinct mammals (distinct from both
monotremes and
therians, the two major groups of living mammals) that was particularly widespread in the northern continents (
Laurasia), but had never previously been found in the south (
Gondwana). In 1990, Bonaparte named another species,
Vucetichia gracilis, from Los Alamitos. He placed it in the family Gondwanatheriidae, together with
Gondwanatherium, another Los Alamitos mammal, within the order
Gondwanatheria, which also contained the family
Sudamericidae, then with the single genus
Sudamerica. Bonaparte considered the gondwanatheres to be probably most closely related to the
xenarthrans (sloths, armadillos, and anteaters) within a group called
Paratheria. Also in 1990, Bonaparte merged the family Gondwanatheriidae into Sudamericidae and, together with
David Krause, redefined Gondwanatheria as a multituberculate suborder that included both Ferugliotheriidae and Sudamericidae, thus rejecting a relationship between gondwanatheres and xenarthrans. Krause, Bonaparte, and
Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska redescribed
Ferugliotherium in 1992 and suggested that the teeth that
Vucetichia was based on may have been worn specimens of
Ferugliotherium. They placed
Ferugliotherium among multituberculates and suggested that it may be part of the suborder
Plagiaulacoidea. The following year, Krause confirmed that
Vucetichia gracilis is a
synonym of
Ferugliotherium windhauseni. Together with Bonaparte, he also proposed to classify gondwanatheres as a superfamily (Gondwanatherioidea) within Plagiaulacoidea, including the families Ferugliotheriidae and Sudamericidae. In 1996, Kielan-Jaworowska and Bonaparte tentatively identified a lower jaw fragment with a multituberculate-like fourth lower
premolar (p4) from Los Alamitos as
Ferugliotherium. On the basis of the morphological features of the jaw fragment, they argued that gondwanatheres are not closely related to any other multituberculate group, and consequently placed them in a suborder of their own, Gondwanatheria. In 1999, Rosendo Pascual and colleagues described a lower jaw of
Sudamerica, which had previously only been known from isolated teeth. This jaw fragment showed that
Sudamerica had four molariform teeth on each side of the lower jaws, more than any multituberculate, and consequently they removed gondwanatheres from Multituberculata and regarded their affinities as uncertain. As a consequence, Kielan-Jaworowska and colleagues excluded Gondwanatheria from multituberculates, but identified the jaw fragment and a few upper premolars of
Ferugliotherium as indeterminate multituberculates in a 2001 paper and a 2004 book. However, in 2009 Yamila Gurovich and Robin Beck identified these
fossils as
Ferugliotherium and argued in favor of a close relationship between gondwanatheres (including Ferugliotheriidae) and multituberculates. In the 2000s, additional members of Ferugliotheriidae were described. In 2004, Francisco Goin and colleagues described a single enigmatic tooth from the
Paleogene of Peru,
LACM 149371; their best estimate was that it represented a member of Ferugliotheriidae. On the basis of a single p4, Kielan-Jaworowska and colleagues named
Argentodites coloniensis, from the Late Cretaceous
La Colonia Formation of Argentina, in 2007 as a multituberculate, possibly referable to the suborder
Cimolodonta. Gurovich and Beck argued, however, that the p4 of
Argentodites did not differ materially from that in the jaw they allocated to
Ferugliotherium, and that
Argentodites was based on a specimen of either
Ferugliotherium or a closely related animal. Guillermo Rougier and colleagues described mammals from the
Allen Formation, a third Argentinean formation of similar age, in 2009, including a new ferugliotheriid,
Trapalcotherium matuastensis. They also regarded
Argentodites as a likely relative of
Ferugliotherium and suggested that Ferugliotheriidae are either multituberculates or closely related to them. Some studies have recovered Ferugliotheriidae as unrelated to the rest of Gondwanatheria, but instead nested within the Multituberculates. ==Description==