Uintaceras

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Uintaceras
Temporal range: Middle Eocene, 46.2–40.4 Ma
Uintaceras radinskyi.png
Restoration
Forstercooperia grandis.png
Holotype jaw of the possible synonym Forstercooperia (Hyrachyus) grandis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Perissodactyla
Family:
Rhinocerotidae
Genus:
Uintaceras

Holbrook & Lucas, 1997
Binomial name
Uintaceras radinskyi
Holbrook & Lucas, 1997
Synonyms

Uintaceras is an extinct genus of medium-sized rhinoceros that lived in North America (Wyoming and Utah) during the Middle Eocene, with only the type species U. radinskyi, named in 1997, currently contained within the genus.[1][2] Uintaceras is the oldest and most primitive species of the Rhinocerotidae known to date, although it may have belonged to its own, currently unknown, separate family. The dubious species Forstercooperia (Hyrachyus) grandis (Radinsky, 1967; Peterson, 1919)[3][4] is also possibly the same animal as Uintaceras,[2][5] although the Asian material of F. grandis was assignable to Forstercooperia confluens.

Uintaceras weighed about 220 kilograms (490 lb) when fully grown.[citation needed] It was a relatively slender animal and Uintaceras resembled a typical hyracodontid (e.g. Hyracodon), but differed from the hyracodonts due to the presence of a primitive four-fingered hand and a number of other features of the structure of the legs, which were clearly not intended for fast and long running.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ "Uintaceras Holbrook & Lucas, 1997". www.gbif.org. GBIF. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  2. ^ a b L. T. Holbrook and S. G. Lucas. 1997. A New Genus of Rhinocerotoid from the Eocene of Utah and the Status of North American "Forstercooperia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 17(2):384-396
  3. ^ Radinsky, L.B. (1967). "A Review of the Rhinocerotoid Family Hyracodontidae (Perissodactyla)". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 136 (1): 1–46. hdl:2246/1987.
  4. ^ Peterson, O.A. (1919). "Report upon the Material Discovered in the Upper Eocene of the Uinta Basin by Earl Douglas[s] in the years 1908-1909, and by 0. A. Peterson in 1912". Annals of the Carnegie Museum. pp. 40–168.
  5. ^ a b Prothero, D.R. (2005). The Evolution of North American Rhinoceroses. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–218. ISBN 0-521-83240-3.


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