• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Smallest Mammal In The World Lived 53 Million Years Ago

May 3, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

When the age of dinosaurs came crashing to a close with the arrival of Chicxulub, the vacant niches left in their wake were free real estate for mammals who wriggled their way to the top. In that time, we’ve seen incredible species evolve, like the largest mammal ever  – Paraceratherium – but who claims the title of the smallest mammal in the world?

Advertisement

Whether you’re interested in the smallest ever, or the smallest alive today, it all looks a bit shrew-like.

Advertisement

The smallest mammal ever to exist

An early Eocene insectivore claims the title of smallest mammal the Earth’s ever seen. At least, until scientists discover another one. Batodonoides vanhouteni was a shrew-like mammal that lived around 53 million years ago, known from teeth that indicated a body size smaller than any other mammal known to science.

It was first identified in the Wasatchian Formation in Wyoming and the Uintan Formation in California back in 1998. Its reach is hard to estimate because the teeth are so small (less than 1 millimeter) that they’ve likely gone undetected in some methods used to sample substrate.

The scientists behind the discovery estimated it probably weighed 1.3 grams (0.05 ounces), concluding that, “B. vanhouteni is the smallest terrestrial mammal yet known, and quite possibly the most diminutive of all mammals – smaller even than the chiropteran C. thonglongyai […] This leaves us with a question, what is the lower limit of mammalian size?”

the smallest mammal in the world, the etruscan shrew, next to a 50 euro cent coin for size comparison

The Etruscan shrew is bigger than Batodonoides vanhouteni is estimated to have been.

The smallest mammal in the world today

The Etruscan shrew, Suncus etruscus, is the smallest mammal in the world today. Adults weigh 1.8 to 3 grams (0.06 to 0.1 ounces), and their body length is 35 to 48 millimeters (1.4 to 1.9 inches), which makes them about 20 times lighter than your average mouse.

Advertisement

Being so mini means that even a grasshopper represents a sizable meal, which is good, because Etruscan shrews have to eat eight times their body weight in food daily. To tackle such a massive appetite, they’ve evolved super senses that landed them a spot in National Geographic’s series Super/Natural.

Those senses include the ability to strike 12 times faster than the blink of an eye, and being able to sense the environment thanks to a mess of super-sensitive whiskers that make up for their comparatively lousy vision and hearing. Best of all, when they have babies, the mothers get them safely from A to B by forming a kind of conga line, each shrew clamping onto the base of the tail of the shrew in front.

If all this talk of tiny mammals has you feeling a little cumbersome, get a load of the prehistoric slab that was Paraceratherium.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-NZ players reach Dubai after ‘specific, credible threat’ derailed Pakistan tour
  2. Soccer-Liverpool’s Alexander-Arnold ruled out of Man City game
  3. What Are Baby Platypuses Called?
  4. Should You Wash Chicken Before Cooking It?

Source Link: The Smallest Mammal In The World Lived 53 Million Years Ago

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Deepest Fish Ever Filmed Was Found 8,336 Meters Below The Surface In A Vast Ocean Trench
  • Supersonic Flight Without The Boom: NASA’s X-59 Experimental Aircraft Takes Flight For First Time
  • The Oldest Ice Ever Recovered Contains Antarctic Air Bubbles From 6 Million Years Ago
  • Freaky “Frankenstein” Worms Can Get Reproduction Wrong And End Up With Two Heads
  • Hedgehog, Lasagna, and Brussels Sprouts: Meet 2025’s Newly Named North Atlantic Right Whales
  • Can You Be Allergic To Other People? Yes, And It Sounds Like The Worst Thing Ever
  • Animals With “Urban Superpowers” Lurk In London’s Underground, And Some Of Them Want To Drink Your Blood
  • This Is The Largest Radio Color Image Of The Milky Way Ever Assembled – And It’s Gorgeous
  • Why We Can’t Stop Watching True Crime: The Psychological Pull And The Ethical Push
  • “Silent, Ongoing Genocide”: World’s 196 Uncontacted Tribes Are Facing Grave Threats To Their Survival
  • Golden Tigers Are Among The Rarest Big Cats In The World, But They Spell Bad News For Tigers
  • Rare 2-Million-Year-Old Infant Facial Fossils Expand What We Know About Prehistoric Human Children
  • First-Ever 3D Map Of Planet Outside Solar System Reveals Distant World’s Hot Spot And Cool Ring
  • From Chains To Forests: Working Elephants Set To Be Rehabilitated In The Wild Under New Project
  • Why Does Death Have Such A Distinctive Smell?
  • Blue Dogs Have Been Spotted In Chernobyl: What Is Going On?
  • Record-Breaking Gravitational Wave Detection Suggests These Black Holes Merged Before
  • Hurricane Melissa Is 2025’s Strongest Storm Yet, With Turbulence So Bad It Saw Off The Hurricane Hunters
  • Fancy Seeing Your Organs In 4D? Pretty Soon, You Might Be Able To
  • First Known Bats To Glow In The Dark In The US Discovered – But Scientists Aren’t Sure Why
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version