Placentals

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(144 total)

Leptauchenia nitia
Leptauchenia nitia
© 1998 Dr. Richard Paselk, Humboldt State University Natural History Museum

Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus
Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus
© 1996 public domain

Diceratherium annectens
Diceratherium annectens
© 1996 public domain

What are Placentals? Placental mammals are the most diverse group of mammals. Some can fly (bats, colugos, and flying squirrels), and others swim (whales, dolphins, and manatees), but the majority live on land, like elephants, sloths, horses, dogs, sheep, rodents, primates, and many more. Despite this diversity, many groups of placentals have gone extinct, such as the Creodonta, Condylarthra, Desmostylia, and Embrythopoda. In placental mammals, the embryo develops internally in an organ called the placenta that provides gas exchange, nourishment, and waste removal for the embryo.

First known fossil occurrence: Cretaceous.

Last known fossil occurrence: Quaternary. This group has living relatives.

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See Placentals from the:

Quaternary
Tertiary
Cretaceous
Jurassic
Triassic
Permian
Carboniferous
Devonian
Silurian
Ordovician
Cambrian
Precambrian
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