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Bloomington & Indianapolis iupress.indiana.edu 1-800-842-6796 INDI ANA F O R E R U N N E R S O F M A M M A L S R A D I AT I O N H I S T O L O G Y B I O L O G Y E D I T E D BY A N U S U YA C H I N S A M Y-T U R A N C H I N S A M Y T U R A N F O R E R U N N E R S O F M A M M A L S About 320 million years ago a group of reptiles known as the synapsids emerged and forever changed Earth’s ecological landscapes. This book discusses the origin and radiation of the synapsids from their sail-backed pelycosaur ancestor to their diverse descendants, the therapsids or mammal-like reptiles, which eventually gave rise to mammals. It further showcases the remarkable evolutionary history of the synapsids in the Karoo Basin of South Africa and the environments that existed at the time. By highlighting studies of synapsid bone microstructure, it offers a unique perspective of how such studies are utilized to reconstruct various aspects of biology, such as growth dynamics, biomechanical function, and the attainment of sexual and skeletal maturity. A series of chapters outline the radiation and phylogenetic relationships of major synapsid lineages and provide direct insight into how bone histological analyses have led to an appreciation of these enigmatic animals as once-living creatures. The penultimate chapter examines the early radiation of mammals from their nonmammalian cynodont ancestors, and the book concludes by engaging the intriguing question of when and where endothermy evolved among the therapsids. Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan is a paleobiologist and global expert on fossil bone microstructure. She is Professor and Fellow of the University of Cape Town and is former director of the National History Collections, Iziko Museums of Cape Town. She is author of The Microstructure of Dinosaur Bone: Deciphering Biology through Fine Scale Analysis and Famous Dinosaurs of Africa. Life of the Past James O. Farlow, editor S C I E N C E · PA L E O N TO LO G Y Jacket illustrations: Luis Rey “Ever since Nick Hotton’s book from the 1980s we have needed an update on the biology of therapsids, and it has been Anusuya ChinsamyTuran and her students and associates who through their bone histological work have made the greatest progress in this field.” Martin Sander, Steinmann Institute, University of Bonn ForerunnersMmec.indd 1 9/21/11 10:39 AM ...

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