Armenohyrax
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| Armenohyrax Temporal range: late Pliocene | |
|---|---|
| The skull of Armenohyrax | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Hyracoidea |
| Family: | †Pliohyracidae |
| Genus: | †Armenohyrax Becker et al., 2026 |
| Type species | |
| A. aznavouriani Becker et al., 2026 | |
Armenohyrax is an extinct genus of pliohyracid hyracoid from the late Pliocene of Armenia. Similar to other members of the family, Armenohyrax had a narrow snout with large, ever-growing first incisors. Though unlike other members, these teeth also point away from one another. Another notable feature of the hyrax is a lack of a canine tooth, a feature not seen in other members of the family. Phylogenic analyses place the genus as close to the genus Postschizotherium, a much more well known member of the family. The dentition of Armenohyrax is largely lophoselenodont, though the labial side of the dentition is also partly hypsodont. The genus is only known from a single species: A. aznavouriani.
The holotype (JRD20/01) of Armenohyrax was collected from layer JZ-7 of the Jradzor locality, a late Pliocene-aged locality in Armenia. After collection of the specimen, Renaud Roch from the JURASSICA Museum, Switzerland prepared the material whereafter it was stored in the collections of the Institute of Geological Sciences, National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia, Yerevan, Armenia. The specimen was eventually described by Damien Becker and coauthors in 2026 within the Swiss Journal of Paleontology. Along with the description of the holotype, the paper also carried out the first phylogenic analysis of the family Pliohyracidae to confirm both suspected placements and monophyly of the group.[1]
The generic name of Armenohyrax is a combination of "Armeno" in reference the country where the holotype was found, and "hyrax" which is an English word derived from ancient Greek that is a common suffix for naming members of Hyracoidea. The specific name "aznavouriani" is in memory of Charles Aznavourian who was a famous French-Armenian singer and songwriter.[1] The songwriter was specifically chosen due to his cultural ties to both Armenia and Switzerland, with the scientists from both of those countries collaborating for the description of the genus.[2]
Description
The holotype of Armenohyrax is made up of a dorsoventrally flattened, largely complete skull with the entire upper dentition preserved. The specimen itself shows that the animal was a medium-sized member of the group. A deciduous premolar still being a part of the dentition shows that the individual was a subadult.[1]
Skull
The skull of Armenohyrax is overall similar to other members of the family in having a narrow snout though it has a flat posterior portion of the frontals. The anterior most bone of the snout, the premaxilla, slopes slightly forwards at the tip. Two pairs of incisive foramina are found on the underside of the bone, with a pair being on each side of the midline palatal suture. The suture between this bone and the maxilla is located near the first premolar and is triangular, ending in between the second and third premolars. Like other closely-related members of the family like Postschizotherium, the orbits are placed relatively high on the skull. These orbits also extend slightly outwards, with this being most visible in dorsal view. A pair of holes, the infraorbital foramen, are positioned just about the fourth premolar. The bottom edge of the orbit is make up of the zygomatic arch which starts parallel to the first molar. Towards the end of the arch, it fused with the frontal bone, causing them to form a complete postorbital bar. The fronto-parietal crests are only slightly visible and come together right in front of the occipital crest.[1]

Dentition
The dentition of Armenohyrax differs from all other members of Pliohyracidae due to the lack of canines, resulting in a dental formula of 3 incisors (I1-3), 4 premolars (P1-4), and 3 molars (M1-3). Similar to other members of the family however, the incisors are large and have a diastema between the I1s. The I1s differ from the I1s of other pliohyracids due to them being ever-growing, recurved teeth that point away from the midline. There is also a diastema present between the I1 and I2. Unlike the I1, the I3s are premolariform and have two roots that are differently sized: with the root towards the tongue being split into two partially fused parts and much larger than the one closer to the cheek. The premolars of the animal are less molariform than other members of the family. Both the premolars and molars have trapezoidal surfaces that are wider than they are long. Between I3 and P3, the size and molarization of the teeth increase with the premolars. Even with this increase in size, the premolars are all much smaller than the molars. Due to the teeth being much larger, the molar series is much longer than the premolar series. Similar to the premolar series, there is a increase in size down the molar series. As a whole, the dentition of Armenohyrax is lophoselenodont and labially hypsodont. The M2 of the holotype lacks any sort of roots, unlike the M1, though this is most likely due to the young age of the individual rather than it being something seen in adult specimens. This tooth also shows a bunodont-like protocone and hypocone.[1]