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A primitive ceratomorph (Perissodactyla, Mammalia) from the early Tertiary of Europe
Authors:J.J. HOOKER
Affiliation:Palaeontology Department, British Museum (Natural History), Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD
Abstract:Hyracotherium cuniculus Owen, 1842, from Palaeocene–Eocene boundary strata in NW Europe, was formerly considered to be an equoid. It is here placed in Cymbalophus gen. nov. , in the perissodactyl suborder Ceralomorpha, which comprises tapiroids and rhinocerotoids, as one of its most primitive and earliest members. This revised classification is based on an evaluation of its advanced versus primitive character states, and comparison with a variety of other primitive perissodactyls. Cheek tooth occlusal relationships in the early stages of ceratomorph evolution are discussed and contrasted with the fundamental perissodactyl morphotype as represented in Hyracotherium. It is suggested that the Lophiodontidae (formerly considered to be ceratomorphs; may be more closely related to chalicotheres; that the Isectolophidae may be the sister-group of chalicotheres and lophiodonts plus ceratomorplis; and that Cymbalophus is the most primitive known member of the newly restricted Ceratomorpha. Cymbalophus is placed tentatively in the family Helaletidae.
Keywords:Phylogeny    Hyracotherium    Cymbalophus gen. nov.    Lophiodontidae    Isectolophidae    teeth
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