2016
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2639
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Hyainailourine and teratodontine cranial material from the late Eocene of Egypt and the application of parsimony and Bayesian methods to the phylogeny and biogeography of Hyaenodonta (Placentalia, Mammalia)

Abstract: Hyaenodonta is a diverse, extinct group of carnivorous mammals that included weasel- to rhinoceros-sized species. The oldest-known hyaenodont fossils are from the middle Paleocene of North Africa and the antiquity of the group in Afro-Arabia led to the hypothesis that it originated there and dispersed to Asia, Europe, and North America. Here we describe two new hyaenodont species based on the oldest hyaenodont cranial specimens known from Afro-Arabia. The material was collected from the latest Eocene Locality … Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 128 publications
(326 reference statements)
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“…The Borths et al (2016) analysis places Leakitherium within Hyainailourinae, a result congruent with earlier phylogenetic hypotheses (Lewis and Morlo, 2010). One feature uniting hyainailourines is the metacone morphology on M 1 and M 2 , reduced into a buccolingually compressed cusp that is partially or almost entirely fused to the paracone Savage, 1965) is a left maxilla fragment dP 3 and dP 4 shown in 1) occlusal view; 2) buccal view; and 3) lingual view.…”
Section: Remarkssupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…The Borths et al (2016) analysis places Leakitherium within Hyainailourinae, a result congruent with earlier phylogenetic hypotheses (Lewis and Morlo, 2010). One feature uniting hyainailourines is the metacone morphology on M 1 and M 2 , reduced into a buccolingually compressed cusp that is partially or almost entirely fused to the paracone Savage, 1965) is a left maxilla fragment dP 3 and dP 4 shown in 1) occlusal view; 2) buccal view; and 3) lingual view.…”
Section: Remarkssupporting
confidence: 69%
“…The KNM-RU 15182 (Figure 3) specimen suggests that in Leakitherium, dP 3 was retained longer than dP 4 . This deciduous replacement order is consistent with the deciduous replacement order that Bastl and Nagel (2013) observed in Hyaenodon, a hyaenodont taxon that likely diverged from the clade that includes Hyainailouroidea during the late Cretaceous or early Paleocene (Borths et al, 2016).…”
Section: Remarkssupporting
confidence: 64%
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