Comparative Anatomy of the Petrosal Bone of Dichobunoids,Early Members of Artiodactylamorpha (Mammalia) |
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Authors: | M. J. Orliac M. A. O’Leary |
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Affiliation: | 1. ISE-M, Université Montpellier2, Place Eugène Bataillon, 34095, Montpellier cedex 05, France 2. Department of Anatomical Sciences, HSC-T-8 (040), Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, 11794-8081, USA
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Abstract: | Among Artiodactylamorpha, dichobunoids are some of the oldest fossil species that have been associated with Artiodactyla, the crown clade that includes hippopotamids, camelids, suoids, ruminants, and cetaceans. These important fossil species are known from early Eocene rocks of North America, Europe, and Asia, but their phylogenetic position has yet to be well resolved. Before generating such a phylogeny, it is first critical to document all of the anatomy of known dichobunoid fossils. Here we use CT scans to describe previously undescribed anatomy of the petrosal bone, a complex part of the mammalian skull that contains many variable and phylogenetically informative features. Results show that these extinct species share a number of features that are not documented in modern species including a lateral process of the epitympanic wing constituting the medial border of the piriform fenestra, and a tegmen tympani foramen that may have given passage to the ramus superior of the stapedial artery. Future comprehensive phylogenetic studies may show that many of these characters are plesiomophic for Artiodactylamopha. Some species (Diacodexis, Homacodon and ?Helohyus) exhibit a dorsolateral exposure of the mastoid region of the petrosal on the temporal part of the cranium. This uncommon feature has, to our knowledge, not been reported in another euungulate group. |
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