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Three-toed browsing horse <I>Anchitherium</I> (Equidae) from the Miocene of Panama

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dc.contributor.author MacFadden, Bruce J. en
dc.date.accessioned 2011-04-21T16:39:35Z
dc.date.available 2011-04-21T16:39:35Z
dc.date.issued 2009
dc.identifier.citation MacFadden, Bruce J. 2009. "<a href="https://repository.si.edu/handle/10088/15923">Three-toed browsing horse Anchitherium (Equidae) from the Miocene of Panama</a>." <em>Journal of Paleontology</em>. 83 (3):489&ndash;492. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1666/08-155.1">https://doi.org/10.1666/08-155.1</a> en
dc.identifier.issn 0022-3360
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10088/15923
dc.description.abstract DURING THE Cenozoic, the New World tropics supported a rich biodiversity of mammals. However, because of the dense vegetative ground cover, today relatively little is known about extinct mammals from this region (MacFadden, 2006a). In an exception to this generalization, fossil vertebrates have been collected since the second half of the twentieth century from Neogene exposures along the Panama Canal. Whitmore and Stewart (1965) briefly reported on the extinct land mammals collected from the Miocene Cucaracha Formation that crops out in the Gaillard Cut along the southern reaches of the Canal. MacFadden (2006b) formally described this assemblage, referred to as the Gaillard Cut Local Fauna (L.F., e.g., Tedford et al., 2004), which consists of at least 10 species of carnivores, artiodactyls (also see recent addition of peccary in Kirby et al., 2008), perissodactyls, and as described by Slaughter (1981), rodents. Prior to the current report, the horses (Family Equidae) from the Gaillard Cut L.F. consisted of only four fragmentary specimens including: two isolated teeth, i.e., one each of A<I>rchaeohippus s</I>p. Gidley, 1906 and A<I>nchitherium clarencei S</I>impson, 1932; a heavily worn partial dentition with p2–p4 of A<I>. clarenci;</I> and a partial calcaneum of A<I>rchaeohippus.</I> Although meager, these fossils appear to represent two distinct taxa of three-toed horses otherwise know from the middle Miocene of North America, i.e., the dwarf-horse A<I>rchaeohippus s</I>p. and the larger A<I>nchitherium clarencei</I> en
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of Paleontology en
dc.title Three-toed browsing horse <I>Anchitherium</I> (Equidae) from the Miocene of Panama en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.identifier.srbnumber 78978
dc.identifier.doi 10.1666/08-155.1
rft.jtitle Journal of Paleontology
rft.volume 83
rft.issue 3
rft.spage 489
rft.epage 492
dc.description.SIUnit NH-EOL en
dc.description.SIUnit Center for Tropical Palaeoecology and Archaeology en
dc.description.SIUnit STRI en
dc.citation.spage 489
dc.citation.epage 492


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