I know it’s been awhile, but you may remember when I first wrote about the Cretaceous period, I mentioned that the mammals were present throughout the age of the dinosaurs. I said “Also during the Cretaceous period, the mammals were around, but they were primarily in hiding, tucked away underground and in the shadows. They were definitely Up To Something throughout that period, but that will be revealed later.”
It’s time to talk about exactly what it was that they were up to.
They were beginning to diversify! They were tucked away indoors, weathering out the great storm of dinosaurs and forming a game plan once they were able to go outside again. Animals that had been developing some mammalian characteristics had been around since the Permian Period. If you”ll remember, Dimetrodon was a synapsid, a proto-mammal that had differentiated teeth- two measures of teeth- that allowed the animal to tear and shear its meat, allowing for mammal-like animals to learn how to chew and digest food more efficiently. Synapsid jaws had a different shape from other vertebrates; the three small inner ear bones common to mammals are believed to have evolved from the synapsid jaw bones. Synapsids also had very exciting skin- it has a thick dermal layer lacking in reptiles that produces leather. It’s also full of glands! Tons of glands! Sweat glands, sebaceous glands, mammary glands- all those might come to be useful some day.
So we have an ability to chew, keen hearing, and thick leathery skin. The skin is useful because it’s protective but more pliable than armored, scaly skin. Better ways to chew and digest food is useful because it leads to more food sources, and keen hearing is very useful if you’re a mammal and you only go out at night to avoid the terrible lizards that dominate the daylight hours. Mammary glands allow an efficient way to supply nutrients to your offspring while minimizing the amount of time you need to go out and forage and expose yourself to danger. What’s also useful for nocturnal activity is a self-regulating body temperature, ie, being endothermic.
All the basic groundwork for mammals was quietly being laid out during the Permian and Triassic periods. The first true mammals evolved during the Jurassic period, right under the noses of the great dinosaurs. But it was during the Cretaceous that the mammals finished their quiet and subversive fine tuning.
The first marsupials and placental mammals developed during the Cretaceous periods. Before mammals diversified into placentals and marsupials, they were all egg-laying, just like dinosaurs and just like the platypuses and echidnas of today. Carrying the unborn offspring inside the body kept it safer than being in an egg in the outside world, plus it was a more energy-efficient way to supply it with nutrients. Marsupials had the right idea with this method, but it was the evolution of a placenta that optimized pregnancy. The placenta provides such an effective way to supply nutrients to the unborn that the offspring could stay in the womb for much longer than a marsupial, and so the animal could be fairly well-developed at birth.
There’s one other feature of placental mammals and marsupials that set them apart from monotremes- their butts. The term “montreme” means “one hole.” That one hole refers to a monotreme’s all-purpose hole, or the cloaca. The monotremes, just like birds and reptiles and dinosaurs, do all their dirty business with just that single hole. But the rest of the mammals have several holes around the butt. We’ve got a poopin’ hole, a sexin’ hole, a peein’ hole- we’ve got holes up the patootie! Holes all over the place! Brilliant, functional holes!
And all these specializations and holes and nipples all came out during the Cretaceous period, during the age of the Dinosaurs. And let’s not forget the the development of a neocortex, found only in mammals. This new-fangled neocortex was involved in higher functions such as sensory perception, generation of motor commands, spatial reasoning, and one day far into the future, the neocortex would be used for conscious thought and language. The mammals were going to become intelligent. Go mammals! You rock!
Nevertheless, mammals had very little opportunity to show off all these holes, neocortices and other new adaptations living in the shadow of the great dinosaurs. It took a giant asteroid to wipe out the dinosaurs and give the mammals an opportunity to come out of the burrows and show themselves. And what a day that was.

The picture above is straight from my all-time favorite childhood book, Ranger Rick’s Dinosaur Book. I loved that book more than I can describe. Of course, at the end of the book there is a chapter called “Death of the Dinosaurs” that features an ankylosaurus lying dead by a swamp. This was an emotional chapter for me. The following chapter was entitled “A New Day Dawns”, with the picture of the small mammals emerging in the morning light to explore the triceratops skull. If you go back to my Epidendrosaurus post, you might notice that I ended the post by saying goodnight to the dinosaurs and the Mesozoic era, following with a promise that “Tomorrow a new day dawns…” That was my personal shout-out to Ranger Rick.
That picture was also the inspiration for my first serious mammal painting in this series:
CENOZOIC ERA, PALEOGENE PERIOD. PALEOCENE EPOCH
65.5 – 55.8 MYA:
MULTITUBERCULATES

Most people with some familiarity with mammals know that there are three major divisions of them: the monotremes or prototherians, egg-laying mammals with only one hole; the metatherians or marsupials, the ones with the pouches and two holes; and eutherians or placentals, the ones with the placenta and holes all over the place. At least the females have a lot of holes.
But there was once a fourth major division of mammals- the allotheria or the multituberculates. The most unique feature of multituberculates is their teeth. You may think it’s frivolous to define an entire subclass based on unique teeth, but in the history of mammals, teeth are very important. In fact the first mammal-like feature to come about that set synapsids apart from reptiles was their heterodont teeth. Remember Dimetrodon?
And no other mammal has ever had teeth like those of the multituberculates. Let’s have a look:

At first glance you may think this looks like a set of rodent teeth, but there’s a difference. Rodent teeth are characterized by a prominent set of incisors, then a wide space called the diastema, followed by molars. No rodent has canine teeth, and no mammal at all other than multituberculates has a wide diastema followed by a strange, wide, sharp premolar. It looks like it would be useful as a slicer or a crusher. Like many rodents, multituberculates probably had a varied diet and may have been opportunistic omnivores. After the disaster of the K-T extinction, being able to eat almost anything and having a nice, diverse set of choppers was most likely critical to survival.
And survive they did. Multituberculates threw parties on the remains of their now-dead oppressors, smiling their peculiar, toothy smiles and enjoying this new dawn- while still keeping clear of terror birds. Multituberculates were so good at surviving that they are considered to be the most successful group of mammals in natural history, sticking around for over 100 million years. They never grew larger than about beaver-sized and never reached an apex predator status, but maybe that’s part of the secret to their success. We have already seen that the bigger they are, the harder they fall once the earth undergoes major changes.
But if they were so successful, why are they no longer with us today? Well, right around the early Paleocene, a group of animals evolved that resembled multituberculates. These animals are known as rodents, and they make up 40% of all mammals today. Just like multituberculates, rodents had prominent incisors, generally do not grow any larger than beaver-sized (except for the capybara), and tend to be adaptable and opportunistic feeders. Other than that peculiar premolar, rodents had one major difference from multituberculates- they were placental mammals. The narrow hips of the multituberculates suggest that they gave birth to tiny, grub-like young just like marsupials, and those young were helpless and required the mother’s care for a long time. It’s possible that the longer pregnancy of the rodents, leading to relatively more developed young was the key for the rodent outcompeting the multituberculate in all their ecological niches. The rodents are alive and well with us today, while the multituberculates left us for good by the Oligocene epoch.
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