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Coryphodontidae is an extinct family of pantodont mammals known from the Late Paleocene to the Middle Eocene of Eurasia and North America. The type genus '' Coryphodon'' is known from around the Paleocene-Eocene transition in Europe, western United States, northern Canada, and eastern Asia. The remaining genera are known exclusively from the middle Eocene of Asia. The coryphodontids are related to the pantolambdids. ''Coryphodon'' are large, derived pantodonts first described in the mid-19th century, but no intermediate stages leading to their unusual upper molars are known. The last known species of ''Coryphodon'' have bilophodont molars similar to later, more derived coryphodontids, and, most likely, ''Coryphodon'' is the primitive sister taxon to the remaining genera and the entire lineage (or lineages) originated from within this genus. Two coryphodontids considerably larger than ''Coryphodon'' but endemic to China, '' Asiocoryphodon'' and '' Heterocoryphodon'', have more advanced bilophodont dentition. '' Metacoryphodon'' is morphologically transitional between ''Coryphodon'' and ''Eudinoceras''. Corypohodontids were slow-growing and long-living animals, and studies of a large sample of individuals from a single locality, assumed to be from the same population, suggest that coryphodontids had a
polygynous Polygyny (; from Neoclassical Greek πολυγυνία (); ) is the most common and accepted form of polygamy around the world, entailing the marriage of a man with several women. Incidence Polygyny is more widespread in Africa than in any ...
social structure in which males and females reached sexual maturity at different ages.


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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{Taxonbar, from=Q15728803 Pantodonts Paleocene first appearances Eocene extinctions Prehistoric mammal families