Tooth microwear and premaxillary shape of an archaic antelope |
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Authors: | NIKOS SOLOUNIAS SONJA MC MOELLEKEN |
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Institution: | Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 725 North Wove Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA |
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Abstract: | Extant ungulates can be divided into three dietary categories: browsing feeders, grazing feeders, and mixed feeders. Dietary adaptations can be differentiated in extinct ruminants based upon tooth microwear analysis as well as evaluation of premaxillary morphology. Tooth microwear shows that the extinct bovid Kipsigicerus labidotus from the Miocene of Fort Ternan in Kenya (14 million years old) was most likely a grazing feeder, with mixed-feeder tendencies, while morphologically the premaxilla most closely resembles that of a mixed feeder. Because the paleoenvironment at Fort Ternan was likely to have been forested, as shown by paleosol isotopic studies, grazing in this particular ruminant evolved within a forested environment preceding the origin of savanna. □ Tooth microwear, premaxilla, Miocene, Kenya, bovid, paleodiet. |
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