New research reveals mammals were abandoning trees millions of years before the asteroid hit changing everything we know about their survival.
The Great Mammal Migration: From Trees to Terrain

For decades, scientists believed mammals only flourished after dinosaurs went extinct. But a groundbreaking 2025 study analyzing fragmentary limb bones from Late Cretaceous mammals reveals a shocking twist:
- Marsupials & placentals were already shifting groundward 10 million years before the asteroid
- Arboreal species dominated early Cretaceous forests, but by the Maastrichtian, terrestrial mammals outnumbered them 2:1
- Key evidence: Fossilized elbow and knee joints show adaptations for running, not climbing
“This wasn’t a sudden revolution it was a quiet rebellion,” says lead author Prof. Christine Janis (University of Bristol).
Flowering Plants: The Hidden Architects of Evolution
The shift coincided with an angiosperm explosion that reshaped ecosystems:
Conifer Forests (Early Cretaceous) | Angiosperm Woodlands (Late Cretaceous) |
Sparse understory | Dense shrubs & ground cover |
Limited food sources | Insects, seeds, fungi proliferated |
Arboreal niches dominant | New terrestrial microhabitats emerged |
Critical finding: Mammals didn’t wait for dinosaurs to die they pre-adapted to the future.
The Survival Lottery: Why Ground-Dwellers Won

When the asteroid struck, arboreal specialists faced extinction while terrestrial mammals survived. The reasons:
- Shelter access: Burrows protected against fires/acid rain
- Diet flexibility: Ground feeders ate seeds, roots, and decaying matter
- Energy efficiency: Running used 30% less energy than climbing
“Tree-dwellers were like high-rise residents during an earthquake nowhere to hide,” explains co-author Dr. Alberto Martín-Serra.
Marsupial Mystery: The Price of Arboreal Loyalty

Metatherians (marsupial ancestors) paid a heavy toll:
- Pre-extinction: 40+ species, both arboreal & terrestrial
- Post-extinction: Just 1 survivor (Peradectes, a ground-dweller)
Stunning contrast: Placental ancestors flourished in 75% of Paleocene mammals descended from terrestrial eutherians.
Bone Detectives: How Tiny Fragments Rewrote History

The study’s breakthrough came from analyzing micro-features that are often overlooked:
- Humeral trochleae (elbow joints): Wider in runners
- Femoral condyles (knee joints): Flatter in climbers
- Statistical match: 89% accuracy vs. modern mammal locomotion
“We’re reading evolution in bone wrinkles,” marvels Janis.
Lessons for the Next Mass Extinction

The findings reveal 3 survival rules still relevant today:
- Flexibility beats specialization
- Ground-level resources buffer collapse
- Slow adaptation > sudden innovation
“Dinosaurs were the headline act, but plants wrote the script,” concludes Martín-Serra.
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