Calippus (mammal) explained
Calippus is an extinct genus of hoofed mammals in the horse family (Equidae), known from the Middle Miocene through the Early Pliocene of North and Central America. Fossils have been found in the Central United States and the Eastern United States, ranging south to Honduras.[1] These equines had high crowned teeth and a quadrangular, wide muzzle, and were small compared to their contemporary relatives,[2] with C. elachistus weighing 49 kg, C. cerasinus weighing 102 kg,[3] 132 kg for C. theristes and 73 kg for C. mccartyi.[4]
Notes and References
- Hulbert. Richard C. Jr.. 1988. Calippus and Protohippus (Mammalia, Perissodactyla, Equidae) from the Miocene (Barstovian-Early Hemphillian) of the Gulf Coastal Plain. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum Biological Sciences . 32. 3. 221–340.
- Web site: altondooley. 2010-12-13. From the collections room (Calippus). 2021-06-27. Updates from the Paleontology Lab. en.
- Ungulates from Late Miocene Love Bone Bed. In: Body size in mammalian paleobiology: estimation and biological implications. JD Damuth & BJ MacFadden. Cambridge University Press (1990).
- David Lambert . W. . Functional Convergence of Ecosystems: Evidence from Body Mass Distributions of North American Late Miocene Mammal Faunas . Ecosystems . 2006 . 9 . 9 . 97–118 . 10.1007/s10021-005-0076-8 . 2006Ecosy...9...97L . 30660487 .