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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saltaodus
Temporal range: Late Eocene
~37–34 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Family: Didolodontidae
Genus: Saltaodus
Gelfo et al 2020
Type species
Saltaodus sirolli
Gelfo et al, 2020
Species
  • S. sirolli Gelfo et al 2020

Saltaodus is an extinct genus of mammals, belonging to the family Didolodontidae. It lived during the Late Eocene, in what is now South America.[1]

Description

This genus is only known from a left mandible, making it impossible to reconstruct its overall appearance. It is assumed to have been a small sized animal, and comparison with its better known relative Didolodus indicates that Saltaodus must have weighed less than five kilograms. It was characterized by the presence of a well developed canine and a brachydont dentition. The first and second lower premolars were single rooted. Compared to the Kollpaniidae, another group of archaic South American mammals, Saltaodus had taller and more separated cusps, with a well developed cristid. The basin of the talonids was large and wasn't filled by the base of the hypoconid or by the distal wall of the metaconid. The fourth lower premolar was distinctly similar to a molar.[1]

Classification

Saltaodus was a member of the Didolodontidae, an enigmatic clade of south american ungulates, who lived during the beginning of the Cenozoic, perhaps close to the ancestor of Litopterna. Saltaodus was one of the smallest known didolodontids, and one of the few known from the low latitudes of South America.[1]

Saltaodus sirolli was first described in 2020, based on fossils found in the Lumbrera Formation, near San Antonio de los Cobres, in the Salta Province of Argentina.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d *Javier N. Gelfo, Ricardo N. Alonso, Richard H. Madden, and Alfredo A. Carlini "An Eocene Bunodont South American Native Ungulate (Didolodontidae) from the Lumbrera Formation, Salta Province, Argentina," Ameghiniana 57(2), 132-145, (10 December 2019). https://doi.org/10.5710/AMGH.29.11.2019.3293


This page was last edited on 22 September 2023, at 04:13
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