Or a better snack selection. Opossums are opportunistic omnivores, equipped with 50 teeth — a record among North American mammals. They'll eat fruits, insects, nuts, pet food, small rodents, Big Macs. "They're vacuum eaters," said Alfred Gardner, an opossum expert at the Smithsonian Institution. "They'll take in anything with nutritional value."

If a leaf has an egg mass on it, or a paper is streaked with grease, leaf and paper get scarfed down. Because they are not as dexterous as raccoons at digging and foraging, opossums are not considered the sort of "subsidized predators" that clean out the nests of endangered songbirds and turtles. They can, however, catch and eat snakes, and they are among the few animals to be resistant to the venom of rattlesnakes and other pit vipers. No matter what they eat, opossums are poor at storing body fat, and as the Fuller team discovered, they survive harsh winters only by taking advantage of the happenstance scraps and warm shelter that humans supply.

The most outstanding feature of a marsupial is its approach to childbearing. Embryonic opossums spend about 12 days in the mother's ill-equipped uterus before emerging as so-called joeys, which are roughly the size of rice grains. Those joeys must then crawl their way into the mother's pouch and latch onto a nipple, where they remain attached and nursing for the next couple of months. After leaving the pouch they remain with the mother for another few weeks, and then they're on their own. Most marsupials have large litters, which helps offset the brevity of their lives. Whereas raccoons can survive well into their teens, even in coddled captivity opossums are dead by age 4.

In the past, researchers thought marsupials were the primitive predecessors to placental mammals, but they have since learned that both mammalian groups arose about the same time, 125 million years or so ago, and then evolved along independent tracks. The placental plan appears to have the upper hand, however. "Wherever there has been contact, placentals have replaced the marsupials," Dr. Gardner said. Only in Australia and surrounding islands and parts of South America, where marsupials have been relatively isolated for long periods, have they managed to thrive. Perhaps the placentals' advantage lies with their relatively larger brains, Dr. Gardner said. Dr. Horovitz suggested that because embryonic marsupials need well-developed forelimbs to crawl their way to a lactational lifeline, they lose the potential for the diversity of limb and body shape seen in placentals.

Yet we have our opossum, a living piece of the Cretaceous. If you're lucky enough to see one, say hello — and goodbye.