The genus
Gypsonictops contains six species:
Gypsonictops clemensi Described by J. K. Rigby and D. L. Wolberg in 1987. It inhabited the planet during the
Campanian and
Maastrichtian periods. Its description was made from a
molar M3 found in
New Mexico. The name of the species is dedicated to the American
paleontologist William A. Clemens.
Gypsonictops dormaalensis Described by G. E. Quinet in 1964. The name of the species refers to the
Belgian population of
Dormaal, a city in which there is an important fossil deposit in which fossils of
G. dormaalensis.
Gypsonictops hypoconus Described by G. G. Simpson in 1927. It lived during the
Campanian and
Maastrichtian periods, and fossils have been found in the
Hell Creek Formation and other sites in the
United States. When
Simpson created the genus
Gypsonictops to define this species, placed it within the family
Leptictidae, which was then part of the
Insectivara order, now obsolete. The name of the species refers to its hypocone, the lower cusp of the molar teeth.
Gypsonictops illuminatus Described by J. A. Lillegraven in 1969. It lived during the
Maastrichtian, and fossils have been found in the
Hell Creek Formation, in the
United States, as well as in various paleontological sites in
Canada.
Gypsonictops lewisi Described by A. Sahni in 1972. It lived during the
Campanian. Fossils of the species have been found in the
Judith River Formation,
Montana.
G. lewisi is one of the species with more typical characteristics of the
placental s of the genus, such as the fusion of a small metaconid with a long protoconid, or a small talonid with two cusps. On the other hand, the
premolar es are not as molarized as in other species of the genus. They usually used to weigh over fifty
gram s. The species name is dedicated to the
Captain Meriwether Lewis, a celebrated
American explorer.
Gypsonictops petersoni Described in 1929 by G. G. Simpson, who named the species "Euangelistes petersoni" and wrongly classified it within the
infraclass Marsupialia. It is known with certainty that they inhabited the planet during the
Maastrichtian, but it is possible that they could have survived the
Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction and lived until the
Danian. The
holotype of this species is in the
Carnegie Museum of Natural History and it is a
lower jaw that had been badly damaged. Another specimen, preserved at
Yale University, has been described by up to five different names. In case there was not enough controversy on the subject, in 1973,
Clemens stated that
G. petersoni was the same species as
G. hypoconus. == Bibliography ==