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Restoration of a herd of alarmed Miocene-Pleistocene peccaries of the genus Platygonus. Charles R. Knight (1922). †Platygonus †Platygonus compressus; Promenetus †Promenetus exacuous; Pterostichus †Pterostichus dormitans – type locality for species; Rangifer †Rangifer tarandus; Sorex †Sorex cinereus †Sorex hoyi; Sphaerium ...
Gray Fossil Site: Miocene: North America: US: Tennessee: Mammals Fossil Butte National Monument [Note 3] Green River Formation: Eocene: North America: US: Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming: Fishes [Note 1] Schreiber, Ontario [Note 2] Gunflint Chert: Late Archaean – Early Proterozoic: North America: Canada: western Ontario & US: Minnesota (Gunflint ...
Daeodon shoshonensis life restoration Daeodon (Dinohyus) hollandi, complete skeleton from the Agate Springs Fossil Quarry in Nebraska. See text for nomenclature history. Daeodon is an extinct genus of entelodont even-toed ungulates that inhabited North America about 29 to 15.97 million years ago during the latest Oligocene and earliest Miocene.
Miocene mammals of South America (1 C, 227 P) B. Miocene bats ... Miocene Artiodactyla (151 P) F. Fossil cetaceans misidentified as reptiles (3 P) M. Miocene ...
This list of the Paleozoic life of Ohio contains the various prehistoric life-forms whose fossilized remains have been reported from within the US state of Ohio and are between 538.8 and 252.17 million years of age.
During the late Mississippian Ohio was covered by a shallow sea. Near the end of the Mississippian the seas withdrew from the state. Ohio was located near the equator. The fossil record of Ohio includes greater numbers of land plants, brachiopods, clams, crinoids, fishes. [4] Ohio was a low-lying swampy plain near the coast during the ...
Romaleodelphis was a medium sized toothed whale with long and slender jaws that make up about 71% of the total skull length. The animal was homodont, meaning that like most modern toothed whales and unlike several now extinct forms that coexisted with Romaleodelphis it possessed only a single type of tooth in its jaws.
Moropus (meaning "slow foot") [2] is an extinct genus of large perissodactyl mammal in the chalicothere family. They were endemic to North America during the Miocene from ~20.4–13.6 Mya, existing for approximately