Amphirhagatherium
Amphirhagatherium is an extinct genus of artiodactyl that lived in northern Europe during the middle to late Eocene.[1]
Amphirhagatherium | |
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Model of A. weigelti | |
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Genus: | Amphirhagatherium Depéret, 1908 |
Type species | |
†A. fronstettense Depéret, 1908 | |
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The dentition of Amphirhagatherium suggests that the genus had a mixed diet of leaves and fruits likely eaten at ground level. Caniniform anterior teeth suggest that there may have been a small carnivorous dietary component, or were used for intraspecific combat.[1]
Distribution
- Eocene
- Creechbarrow Limestone, Upper Headon Beds and Bembridge Marls Formations, England
- Rocourt-Saint-Martin and Chéry-Chartreuve, France
- Frohnstetten, Germany
- Oligocene
- Bembridge Marls, England
References
- Hooker, J. J. (2001). "A New Species of Amphirhagatherium (Choeropotamidae, Artiodactyla, Mammalia) from the Late Eocene Headon Hill Formation of Southern England and Phylogeny of Endemic European 'anthracotherioids'". Palaeontology. 44 (5): 827. doi:10.1111/1475-4983.00203.
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