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Amphimachairodus
''Amphimachairodus'' is an extinct genus of large machairodonts. It is also a member of the tribe Homotherini within Machairodontinae and is most closely related to such species as ''Xenosmilus'', ''Homotherium'' itself, and ''Nimravides''. It inhabited Eurasia, Northern Africa and North America during the late Miocene epoch. Description There was marked sexual dimorphism in ''A. giganteus'', with males being much larger than females. The species ''Amphimachairodus coloradensis'', from the United States (formerly ''Machairodus coloradensis'') was a significantly large animal, about at the shoulder, according to skeletal and life reconstructions, potentially making it one of the largest known felids. All ''Amphimachairodus'' species have a developed mandibular flange, however, ''A. colaradensis'' is distinguishable from ''A. giganteus'' and ''A. kurteni'' by subtle differences in the shape of the mandible and placement of lower carnassials. In size and proportions, the Eurasian ...
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Amphimachairodus Giganteus Forefoot
''Amphimachairodus'' is an extinct genus of large machairodonts. It is also a member of the tribe Homotherini within Machairodontinae and is most closely related to such species as ''Xenosmilus'', ''Homotherium'' itself, and ''Nimravides''. It inhabited Eurasia, Northern Africa and North America during the late Miocene epoch. Description There was marked sexual dimorphism in ''A. giganteus'', with males being much larger than females. The species ''Amphimachairodus coloradensis'', from the United States (formerly ''Machairodus coloradensis'') was a significantly large animal, about at the shoulder, according to skeletal and life reconstructions, potentially making it one of the largest known felids. All ''Amphimachairodus'' species have a developed mandibular flange, however, ''A. colaradensis'' is distinguishable from ''A. giganteus'' and ''A. kurteni'' by subtle differences in the shape of the mandible and placement of lower carnassials. In size and proportions, the Eurasian ...
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Machairodus Palanderi
''Amphimachairodus'' is an extinct genus of large machairodonts. It is also a member of the tribe Homotherini within Machairodontinae and is most closely related to such species as ''Xenosmilus'', ''Homotherium'' itself, and ''Nimravides''. It inhabited Eurasia, Northern Africa and North America during the late Miocene epoch. Description There was marked sexual dimorphism in ''A. giganteus'', with males being much larger than females. The species ''Amphimachairodus coloradensis'', from the United States (formerly ''Machairodus coloradensis'') was a significantly large animal, about at the shoulder, according to skeletal and life reconstructions, potentially making it one of the largest known felids. All ''Amphimachairodus'' species have a developed mandibular flange, however, ''A. colaradensis'' is distinguishable from ''A. giganteus'' and ''A. kurteni'' by subtle differences in the shape of the mandible and placement of lower carnassials. In size and proportions, the Eurasian ...
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Machairodontinae
Machairodontinae is an extinct subfamily of carnivoran mammals of the family Felidae (true cats). They were found in Asia, Africa, North America, South America, and Europe from the Miocene to the Pleistocene, living from about 16 million until about 11,000 years ago. The Machairodontinae contain many of the extinct predators commonly known as "saber-toothed cats", including the famed genus ''Smilodon'', as well as other cats with only minor increases in the size and length of their maxillary canines. The name means "dagger-tooth", from Greek μάχαιρα (''machaira''), sword. Sometimes, other carnivorous mammals with elongated teeth are also called saber-toothed cats, although they do not belong to the felids. Besides the machairodonts, other saber-toothed predators also arose in the Nimravidae, nimravids, Barbourofelidae, barbourofelids, Machaeroidinae, machaeroidines, Hyaenodonta, hyaenodonts and even in two groups of metatherians (the Thylacosmilidae, thylacosmilid Spara ...
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Homotherini
Homotherini is an extinct tribe (or subtribe) of carnivoran mammals of the family Felidae (true cats). The tribe is commonly known as scimitar-toothed cats. These saber-toothed cats were distributed en North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America from the Miocene to Pleistocene living from c. 23 Ma until c. 12,000 years ago. Description Compared to the usually massively built dirk-toothed phenotype, apparent in ''Smilodon'', ''Megantereon'' and the feliform ''Barbourofelis'' (just to list a few), their upper canines were smaller than those of equally sized cats of that phenotype, but they had serrated edges. The scimitar-toothed phenotype has also evolved independently in other mammal families. Evolution Based on mitochondrial DNA sequences extracted from fossils, the lineage of ''Homotherium ''Homotherium'', also known as the scimitar-toothed cat or scimitar cat, is an extinct genus of machairodontine saber-toothed predator, often termed scimitar-toothed cats, t ...
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Machairodus
''Machairodus'' (from el, μαχαίρα , 'knife' and el, ὀδούς 'tooth') is a genus of large machairodontine saber-toothed cats that lived in Africa, Eurasia and North America during the late Miocene. It is the animal from which the subfamily Machairodontinae gets its name and has since become a wastebasket taxon over the years as many genera of sabertooth cat have been and are still occasionally lumped into it. Discovery ''Machairodus'' was first named in 1832, by German Naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup. Though its remains had been known since 1824, it was believed by Georges Cuvier that the fossils had come from a species of bear, which he called ''Ursus cultridens'' (known today as ''Megantereon'') based on composite sample of teeth from different countries, species and geologic ages, leading to what would become a long series of complications. Kaup however, recognized the teeth as those of felids and promptly reclassified the existing specimens as ''Machairodus'', incl ...
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Nimravides
''Nimravides'' is a genus of extinct saber-toothed cats that lived in North America during the Late Miocene, between 10.3 and 5.332 Ma. Despite its scientific name, ''Nimravides'' does not belong to the Nimravidae, but is a true cat, belonging to the family Felidae. ''Nimravides catacopsis'', one of the largest and latest species, was quite large, measuring at the shoulder and was similar in size to a large tiger. It was also possessed of long, powerful legs and a long back. For many decades, it was also believed to be a member of the genus ''Machairodus'', but, despite the similarities between them at first glance, based on autapomorphies in the skeleton, the two animals are too different to be classified as species of the same genus, and thus, ''Nimravides'' remains separate as its own genus within the Homotherini. Evidence published in November, 2022 suggests ''Nimravides'' was endemic to North America and that when the ''Machairodus''-''Amphimachairodus'' lineage emigrated ...
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Xenosmilus
''Xenosmilus hodsonae'' (from Greek, , ''xenos'', "strange" + , ''smilē'', " chisel" ) is an extinct species of the Machairodontinae, or saber-toothed cats. Description The species name ''hodsonae'' originates from Debra Hodson, the wife of a researcher. Two fairly intact specimens were found by amateur fossil hunters in 1983 (1981 by some sources) in the Haile limestone mines in Alachua County, Florida. In 1994, the fossils were examined, and it was decided that the cats were of an entirely new genus. The fossils were of Irvingtonian age (1.8 to 0.3 Ma). Because the skeletons were found beside each other, some suspect ''Xenosmilus'' was a social mammal. Found alongside the two skeletons were dozens of peccary bones. It seems likely, with their muscular builds, that ''X. hodsonae'' preyed upon peccaries. Physically, the cat reached around long with a highly muscular body and weighed around , making it similar in size to the fellow machairodonts '' Machairodus horribili ...
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Late Miocene
The Late Miocene (also known as Upper Miocene) is a sub-epoch of the Miocene epoch (geology), Epoch made up of two faunal stage, stages. The Tortonian and Messinian stages comprise the Late Miocene sub-epoch, which lasted from 11.63 Ma (million years ago) to 5.333 Ma. The evolution of life The gibbons (family Hylobatidae) and orangutans (genus ''Pongo'') are the first groups to split from the line leading to the hominins, including humans, then gorillas (genus ''Gorilla''), and finally, chimpanzees and bonobos (genus ''Pan (genus), Pan''). The splitting date between hominin and chimpanzee lineages is placed by some between 4 to 8 million years ago, that is, during the Late Miocene. References External links GeoWhen Database - Late Miocene
Miocene, .03 Miocene geochronology, 03 Messinian, * Tortonian, * {{geochronology-stub ...
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Comparison Of Skulls Of Lions And Tigers
Historically, a comparison of the tiger (''Panthera tigris'') versus the lion (''Panthera leo'') has been a popular topic of discussion by hunters, naturalists, artists and poets, and has inspired the popular imagination. In the past, lions and tigers reportedly competed in the wilderness, where their ranges overlapped in Eurasia. The most common reported circumstance of their meeting is in captivity, either deliberately or by accident. Opinions In general, the lion is a social animal, while the tiger is solitary, though at times, male lions are separate from the females, and tigers socialise, usually for mating, and rarely for hunts. There are differing scenarios regarding whether tigers would beat lions in fights, or vice-versa: Favoring the tiger * Craig Saffoe, a biologist and the curator of great cats at the National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C., said that the outcome of a given fight totally depended on the individuals, with their fighting style, physiology a ...
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Neontology
Neontology is a part of biology that, in contrast to paleontology, deals with living (or, more generally, '' recent'') organisms. It is the study of extant taxa (singular: extant taxon): taxa (such as species, genera and families) with members still alive, as opposed to (all) being extinct. For example: * The moose (''Alces alces'') is an extant species, and the dodo (''Raphus cucullatus'') is an extinct species. * In the group of molluscs known as the cephalopods, there were approximately 600 extant species and 7,500 extinct species. A taxon can be classified as extinct if it is broadly agreed or certified that no members of the group are still alive. Conversely, an extinct taxon can be reclassified as extant if there are new discoveries of living species ("Lazarus species"), or if previously-known extant species are reclassified as members of the taxon. Most biologists, zoologists, and botanists are in practice neontologists, and the term neontologist is used largel ...
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Zygomatic Arch
In anatomy, the zygomatic arch, or cheek bone, is a part of the skull formed by the zygomatic process of the temporal bone (a bone extending forward from the side of the skull, over the opening of the ear) and the temporal process of the zygomatic bone (the side of the cheekbone), the two being united by an oblique suture (the zygomaticotemporal suture); the tendon of the temporal muscle passes medial to (i.e. through the middle of) the arch, to gain insertion into the coronoid process of the mandible (jawbone). The jugal point is the point at the anterior (towards face) end of the upper border of the zygomatic arch where the masseteric and maxillary edges meet at an angle, and where it meets the process of the zygomatic bone. The arch is typical of '' Synapsida'' (“fused arch”), a clade of amniotes that includes mammals and their extinct relatives, such as ''Moschops'' and '' Dimetrodon''. Structure The zygomatic process of the temporal arises by two roots: * an ''anter ...
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Nasal Bone
The nasal bones are two small oblong bones, varying in size and form in different individuals; they are placed side by side at the middle and upper part of the face and by their junction, form the bridge of the upper one third of the nose. Each has two surfaces and four borders. Structure The two nasal bones are joined at the midline internasal suture and make up the bridge of the nose. Surfaces The ''outer surface'' is concavo-convex from above downward, convex from side to side; it is covered by the procerus and nasalis muscles, and perforated about its center by a foramen, for the transmission of a small vein. The ''inner surface'' is concave from side to side, and is traversed from above downward, by a groove for the passage of a branch of the nasociliary nerve. Articulations The nasal articulates with four bones: two of the cranium, the frontal and ethmoid, and two of the face, the opposite nasal and the maxilla. Other animals In primitive bony fish and tetrapod ...
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