Ambolestes
Ambolestes is an extinct genus of eutherian mammal from the Early Cretaceous of China. It includes a single species, Ambolestes zhoui, known from a single complete skeleton recovered from the Yixian Formation, part of the fossiliferous Jehol biota. Ambolestes is one of the most basal eutherians, presenting a combination of features from both early eutherians and early metatherians. This is responsible for the generic name of Ambolestes: "ambo" is Latin for "both", while "-lestes" is a popular suffix for fossil mammals. The species name honors influential Jehol paleontologist Zhou Zhonghe.
Description
Ambolestes was a fairly small mammal, with an estimated mass of 34–44 g. It was likely similar in appearance and habits to other putative Yixian Formation therians, such as Eomaia and Sinodelphys.There are several similarities between Ambolestes and Sinodelphys. Both are interpreted to bear 8 upper postcanine teeth and 7 lower postcanine teeth on each side of the skull. The rear premolars are similar to the tall, sharp tribosphenic molars. Earlier premolars are smaller, blade-shaped, and widely spaced. The shape and number of incisors are unknown in Ambolestes, while the canines are distinctively double-rooted. The wrist has enlarged scaphoid, hamate, and triquetrum bones, similar to Sinodelphys and metatherians. Other traits are more similar to Eomaia and eutherians: the mandibular angle is not inturned, and the trapezium bone of the wrist is also large.
Ambolestes preserves an ectotympanic bone of the middle ear, a delicate bone which is rarely preserved in Mesozoic mammal fossils. The ectotympanic is horseshoe-shaped and thickened at its lower half, similar to that of short-tailed opossums. The lower part of the ectotympanic hosts a small groove, the meckelian sulcus. The sulcus is a vestige of the meckel's cartilage, a thin plate which connected the middle ear ossicles to the jaw in earlier mammals. Like other therians, the front part of the malleus is downcurved and confluent with the front edge of the ectotympanic, according to a facet on the latter bone. Ambolestes is also the first Mesozoic mammal to be discovered with a complete hyoid apparatus. The hyoid consists of seven linked bones, similar to some squirrels, though the thyrohyals are enlarged, more akin to the five-bone hyoids of marsupials.