Palaeoamasia

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Palaeoamasia
Temporal range: Ypresian
55–48 Ma
(possible Paleocene record)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Embrithopoda
Family: Palaeoamasiidae
Genus: Palaeoamasia
Ozansoy, 1966[1]
Species:
P. kansui
Binomial name
Palaeoamasia kansui
Ozansoy, 1966[1]

Palaeoamasia is an extinct herbivorous paenungulate mammal of the embrithopod order, making it distantly related to elephants, sirenians, and hyraxes. Palaeoamasia fossils have been found in Turkish deposits of the Çeltek Formation, dating to the Ypresian. It has unique bilophodont upper molars, an embrithopod synapomorphy.[2][3]

Palaeoamasia kansui (Ozansoy, 1966), the type species, was first discovered in Anatolia, Turkey in 1966.[3] Since then, Palaeoamasia fossils have only been found In Anatolia. The fossil record of Palaeoamasia is scarce, although a new species of Palaeoamasia was discovered in 2014. The Palaeoamasia sp. nov. fossil is the youngest found to date, extending the period of survival of the genus to the early Oligocene.[3] The fossils recorded consist mostly of tooth and jaw fragments. The tooth fossils show that Palaeoamasia has two prominent transverse crests on upper molars, signifying the embrithopod synapomorphy of bilophodont upper molars.[2]

Distribution

Description

References

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