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Hadrocodium wui (hadro from Greek ἁδρός/hadros, "fullness"; Latin: codium, from Greek κώδεια/kodeia, "head [of a plant]"; and wui, the Latinized version of discoverer Xiao-Chun Wu's name) is an extinct mammaliaform that lived during the Sinemurian stage of the Early Jurassic approximately 195 million years ago in the Lufeng basin in what is now the Yunnan province in south-western China.

The fossil of this mouse-like, paper-clip sized animal was discovered in 1985 but was then interpreted as a juvenile morganucodontid. Hadrocodium remained undescribed until 2001; since then its large brain and advanced ear structure have greatly influenced the interpretation of the earliest stages of mammalian evolution, as these mammalian characters could previously be traced only to some 150 million years ago. Hadrocodium is known only from a skull, but the body is estimated to have been a mere 3.2 cm (1.3 in) in length and about 2 g (0.071 oz) in mass, making it one of the smallest mammals ever.

Hadrocodium may have been the first animal to have a nearly fully mammalian middle ear. It is the earliest known example of several features possessed only by mammals, including the middle-ear structure characteristic of modern mammals and a relatively large brain cavity. These features had been considered limited to the crown group mammals, who emerged in the Middle Jurassic; the discovery of Hadrocodium suggests that these attributes appeared earlier (45 million years earlier) than previously thought.

Whether Hadrocodium was warm-blooded or cold-blooded has not been settled, although its apparent nocturnal features would seem to place it in the endotherm group.

Art reconstruction of Hadrocodium wui eating a bug

Family tree[]

Cynodontia


Dvinia



Procynosuchidae



Epicynodontia

Thrinaxodon


Eucynodontia


Cynognathus




Tritylodontidae



Traversodontidae




Probainognathia


Tritheledontidae



Chiniquodontidae





Prozostrodon


Mammaliaformes

Morganucodontidae




Docodonta




Hadrocodium




Kuehneotheriidae



crown group Mammals











Gallery[]

See also[]

  • List of prehistoric mammals
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