A dentary fragment containing the last two molars (m2–3)
from the Late Cretaceous (Santonian–?Campanian) Bostobe
Formation exposed at the locality of Shakh Shakh,
northeast Aral Sea region, Kazakhstan, is attributed to a
new taxon of Zhelestidae, Zhalmouzia bazhanovi Averianov
and Archibald gen. et sp. nov. This specimen is only the
second mammal described from Shakh Shakh, the unidentifiable
eutherian Beleutinus orlovi Bazhanov, 1972, being
the first, and it is only the fifth Mesozoic mammal named
from Kazakhstan. Zhalmouzia Averianov and Archibald
gen. nov. belongs to the endemic clade of Middle Asian zhelestids
(Zhelestinae), better known from the Turonian of
Uzbekistan.