125-Million-Year-Old Fossil Is Oldest Record of Preserved Mammalian Hair Structures, Inner Organs

The specimen was fossilized with remarkably intact guard hairs, underfur, tiny hedgehog-like spines, and even evidence of a fungal hair infection

Written byUniversity of Chicago
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The discovery of a new 125-million-year-old fossil mammal in Spain has pushed back the earliest record of preserved mammalian hair structures and inner organs by more than 60 million years.

The specimen, named Spinolestes xenarthrosus, was fossilized with remarkably intact guard hairs, underfur, tiny hedgehog-like spines and even evidence of a fungal hair infection. The unusually well-preserved fossil also contains an external ear lobe, soft tissues of the liver, lung and diaphragm, and plate-like structures made of keratin known as dermal scutes. The microscopic structures of hair and spines in Spinolestes are the earliest-known examples in mammalian evolutionary history.

The findings are described by scientists from the Autonomous University of Madrid, University of Bonn and the University of Chicago in a study published in Nature on Oct. 15.

Related article: Pigment from Fossils Reveals Color of Extinct Mammals for the First Time, Researchers Say

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