“…Possibly among the major marine predators of their time, squalodontids are often seen as bridging the anatomical gap between the archaic Oligocene odontocetes and their late Miocene to Holocene relatives (GODFREY, 2013;MARX et al, 2016). For a long time, these longirostrine toothed whales have been regarded as members of the crown Odontoceti clade, in the superfamily Platanistoidea, which also includes the South Asian river dolphin Platanista gangetica (e.g., MUIZON, 1991MUIZON, , 1994FORDYCE, 1994;FORDYCE & MUIZON, 2001;TANAKA & FORDYCE, 2016); now however, many phylogenetic analyses recover squalodontids as late-branching stem odontocetes (e.g., GEISLER & SANDERS 2003;TANAKA & FOR-DYCE, 2014;CHURCHILL et al, 2016;BIANUCCI et al, 2018a). The current lack of consensus upon the phylogenetic position of the squalodontids is highlighted by the observation that several recent papers dealing with the affinities of the heterodont long-snouted toothed whales present both the aforementioned solutions as plausible (e.g., TANAKA & FORDYCE, 2015a, 2015bLAMBERT et al, 2018;MUIZON et al, 2018;VIGLINO et al, 2018).…”