Goniacodon

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Goniacodon
Temporal range: Paleocene
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Mesonychia
Family: Triisodontidae
Genus: Goniacodon
Scott, 1892 [1]
Species
  • G. gaudryanus(Cope, 1888)
  • G. hiawathaeVan Valen, 1978
  • G. levisanus(Cope, 1883)(type)

Goniacodon is an extinct genus from the Paleocene of North America.

Contents

Species

Related Research Articles

Arctocyonidae Extinct family of mammals

Arctocyonidae has been defined as an extinct family of unspecialized, primitive mammals with more than 20 genera. Animals assigned to this family were most abundant during the Paleocene, but extant from the late Cretaceous to the early Eocene . Like most early mammals, their actual relationships are very difficult to resolve. No Paleocene fossil has been unambiguously assigned to any living order of placental mammals, and many genera resemble each other: generalized robust, not very agile animals with long tails and all-purpose chewing teeth, living in warm closed-canopy forests with many niches left vacant by the K-T extinction.

<i>Triisodon</i>

Triisodon is a genus of extinct mesonychian mammal that existed during the Early Paleocene of New Mexico, North America. The genus was named by Edward Drinker Cope in 1881 as a member of the Acreodi, a now invalid taxon that encompassed both creodonts and mesonychians. The premolar teeth have three points, hence the generic name. Cope described the type specimen of T. quivirensis as "about the size of a wolf." A smaller species has also been identified from the same region. Since material from this genus is incomplete, the exact size of adults and whether they showed sexual dimorphism or regional variations in size is unknown.

References