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| Miyumba chrisdickmani Churchill, Archer, Hand & Farman, 2026 Artist reconstruction by Neville Garden |
This study describes Miyumba chrisdickmani gen. et sp. nov., a new genus and species of dasyurid (Marsupialia, Dasyuridae) from Early Miocene deposits of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area in north-western Queensland. This taxon, similar in size to extant species of Antechinus and Sminthopsis (23–33.5 g), is the oldest and most plesiomorphic member of the family Dasyuridae. Character analysis identifies one new lower dental synapomorphy for Dasyuridae that previously lacked any dental synapomorphies uniting the family. Parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analysis supports the placement of M. chrisdickmani as the sister taxon to all other dasyurids. These analyses also recover the diminutive Mayigriphus orbus from early Late Miocene deposits of Riversleigh either as a sminthopsine dasyurid or as the second most plesiomorphic member of the family after M. chrisdickmani. Joculusium muizoni from Riversleigh’s Middle Miocene deposits was recovered outside Dasyuridae as a sister taxon by both phylogenetic analyses. Urrayira whitei was recovered by both analyses as a member of the dasyurid genus Planigale, whereas Antechinus yuna and Antechinus yammal were supported as species of Antechinus. Morphological similarity of M. chrisdickmani to extant dasyurids from New Guinea suggests a possible close phylogenetic relationship between these lineages and may represent yet another remnant New Guinean group of rainforest-adapted marsupials that had its origins in the Miocene rainforests of Riversleigh.
Keywords: Dasyuridae, dasyuromorphia, dentition, fossil, Marsupialia, Miyumba, palaeontology, phylogenetics, Riversleigh, systematics
Systematic palaeontology
MAMMALIA Linnaeus 1758
MARSUPIALIA Illiger 1811sensuBeck et al. (2014)
DASYUROMORPHIA Gill 1872sensuKealy and Beck (2017)
DASYURIDAE Goldfuss 1820
Type species: Dasyurus maculatus Geoffroy 1796.
Revised familial diagnosis: All dasyurids possess a p3 that is absent, reduced, or subequal in length relative to p1 and p2. In addition to these features, dasyurids differ from malleodectids in p2 being narrow, blade-like and smaller in all dimensions relative to m2. In addition to the above features, dasyurids differ from thylacinids in metaconids being present on m1 and not highly reduced on m2-4 (except secondarily in S. harrisii), and from the myrmecobiid, M. fasciatus in possessing an unreduced dentition with deciduous premolars lost in adulthood.
†MIYUMBA gen. nov
Type species: Miyumba chrisdickmani.
Generic diagnosis:
The new taxon differs from all other dasyurids in the following combination of lower dental features: p1 reduced so as to be approximately subequal (~10% shorter) in length to p1; p2 longer than p1 and p3; no premolar diastemata present; m1 not reduced compared to m2 and m3; paraconid unreduced on m1; metaconids unreduced on all molars; anterior cingulids present; posterior cingulids present; buccal cingulids well-developed on premolars and molars; preentocristids well-developed; three cusps on m4 talonid; and m4 approximately subequal in length compared to other molars.
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Etymology: The genus name Miyumba comes from the Waanyi word ‘miyumba’, which describes the land where the Riversleigh World Heritage Area is located.
MIYUMBA CHRISDICKMANI sp. nov.
Species diagnosis: As for genus until more species attributable to Miyumba are discovered.
Etymology: The species name chrisdickmani honours the significant contributions of Professor Chris Dickman to our understanding of the biology of dasyurid marsupials and a plethora of other arid-adapted Australian species.
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| Artist reconstruction of Miyumba chrisdickmani. Artwork: Neville Garden |
Timothy J. Churchill, Michael Archer, Suzanne J. Hand and Roy M. Farman. 2026. A New Genus of dasyurid Miyumba chrisdickmani (Marsupialia, Dasyuridae) from the Early Miocene Deposits of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, north-western Queensland. Australian Zoologist. 45 (2): AZ26024. DOI: doi.org/10.1071/AZ26024 [17 July 2026]









































