Stegomastodon | |
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S. mirificus fossil at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Proboscidea |
Family: | †Gomphotheriidae |
Genus: | †Stegomastodon Pohlig, 1912 |
Species | |
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Synonyms | |
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Stegomastodon ('roof breast tooth') is an extinct genus of gomphotheres, a family of proboscideans. It ranged throughout North America from the early Blancan ~4 Ma, to the early Irvingtonian (~1.2 Ma). The South American species have been synonymized with Notiomastodon platensis.
The following definite species have been described:[1]
S. waringi is considered synonymous with S. platensis. A dispute now exists over whether S. platensis should remain within the North and Central American genus Stegomastodon or should be moved over to the exclusively South American genus Notiomastodon.[2][3][4] The genus Haplomastodon is regarded as synonymous with the South American Stegomastodon species.[5][6]
Stegomastodon is considered by some to be derived from New World populations of Gomphotherium. The number of species within the genus has varied between S. mirificus being the only valid species, to Osborn's seven species of “ascending mutations” (S. primitivus, S. successor, S. mirificus, S. chapmani, S. texanus, S. arizonae and S. aftoniae) Lucas et al., 2013 accepted 3 overlapping chronospecies S. primitivus, S. mirificus S. aftoniae.[7]
Stegomastodon mirificus is known from NMNH 10707, a roughly 30-year-old male, of which most of the skeleton has been found. Alive, it stood about 2.6 m (8.5 ft) tall, with a weight around 4.7 tonnes (4.6 long tons; 5.2 short tons).[8] Like modern elephants, but unlike most of its closer relatives, it had just two tusks, which curved upward and were about 3.5 m (11.5 ft) long. The tall, head and robust lower jaw suggest a strong vertical bite. Stegomastodon's molars were covered in enamel and had a complex pattern of ridges and knobbly protrusions on them, giving the creature a large chewing surface that suggests it was a grazer.[7] During the early Irvingtonian, Stegomastodon was replaced by Mammuthus, which was presumably a more efficient grazer. Its brain weighed about 11 lb (5 kg).
The genus lived in North America from the Pliocene to the early Pleistocene. Originally, some specimens from Jalisco, Mexico were estimated to date to 28,000 BP,[9] but this age was rejected in 2011 by Spencer G. Lucas et. al, who stated that the date was far too young to be viable and that it actually dates to the Blancan (3-4 Ma).[10]
The South American Stegomastodon fossils were reassigned to Notiomastodon,[11] though in literature the outdated genus and species names continued to be used until 2016.[12]
Revised taxonomy of Stegomastodon and other trilophodont gomphotheres according to Mothé et al., 2017:[13]
†Gomphotheriidae (Gomphotheres)
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