The Mahajanga Basin of northwestern Madagascar has produced a rich
late Cretaceous fauna, including various
dinosaurs and
crocodyliforms as well as mammals, found by the team of
David W. Krause since 1993. Many of these taxa show affinities with similarly aged South American and Indian animals, also parts of Gondwana. The mammalian fauna consists of several taxa known only by isolated teeth and a single reasonably complete skeleton, none of which can be plausibly related to the Recent Madagascar fauna (see
list of mammals of Madagascar). The fossils come from the
Maastrichtian (latest Cretaceous) of the Anembalembo
Member of the
Maevarano Formation. Two teeth, one complete and one damaged, form the known material of the
gondwanathere Lavanify, first described in 1997. The teeth are high-crowned and curved; one contains a deep
cementum-filled furrow and the other at least one deep pit (infundibulum).
Lavanify appears to be most closely related to the Indian gondwanathere
Bharattherium and more distantly to the other gondwanatheres, which are known from Argentina. Two other teeth, not yet fully described, may represent different tooth positions of another gondwanathere. One, a fragmentary
molariform (molar or molar-like premolar—the identities of gondwanathere tooth are poorly understood) is larger and lower-crowned than the
Lavanify teeth and the other, which is complete and unworn, is yet lower-crowned and has the surface obliquely oriented. Its crown consists of a W-shaped ridge with the parts separated by deep infundibula. This second tooth may also represent a completely different, yet unknown mammalian group. A fragmentary molar, preserving two cusps, is identified as from a
multituberculate. Although multituberculates are common in nearly contemporaneous deposits in Laurasia, this tooth is one of the few records from Gondwana; a few fragmentary remains, the multituberculate affinities of some of which are disputed, are also known from South America (
Argentodites), Africa (
Hahnodon), and Australia (
Corriebaatar). Another fragmentary tooth,
UA 8699, is recognizable as a tribosphenic lower molar. Krause identified it in 2001 as a marsupial, but in 2003 a group led by Alexander Averianov instead argued that the tooth was placental and related to
zhelestids (a primitive group possibly related to
ungulates). Both placentals and marsupials are mostly known from Laurasia during the Cretaceous. In addition to these fragmentary teeth, the Maevarano Formation has also yielded a nearly complete, articulated skeleton of an immature, cat-sized mammal that has not yet been fully described. It is the most complete mammal known from the Mesozoic of Gondwana. Its skull is damaged, but its unusual dentition is preserved. The
incisors (two on each side of the upper and one on each side of the lower jaw) project forwards and are separated from the three or four cheektooth in each side of the lower and upper jaws by a large
diastema (gap). It shows primitive features, such as the presence of
epipubic bones (in the
pelvis), a
septomaxilla (a small bone placed between the
premaxilla and the
maxilla in the upper jaw), and a deep
zygomatic arch (cheekbone). On the other hand, it has
derived traits like the presence of a well-developed
trochlea on the distal (far) end of the
humerus (upper arm bone), the absence of a rim at the dorsal (upper) margin of the
acetabulum (the opening in the pelvis which receives the
head of the femur), a small
lesser trochanter of the
femur (upper leg bone), reduced contact between the
fibula (the smaller of the two lower leg bones) and the
calcaneum (heel bone), and the dentition. In a 2000 abstract, Krause identified it as a
therian (a member of the group that includes marsupials, placentals, and their closest extinct relatives) more derived than the early Cretaceous
Vincelestes of Argentina, but in 2006 he and colleagues instead refused to place it in any existing higher-order mammalian group and claimed that "it represents a major new nontherian clade". ==Footnotes==