Morenocetus Explained

Morenocetus is an extinct genus of primitive balaenid from the Early Miocene (Burdigalian and Colhuehuapian in the SALMA classification) Gaiman Formation of Patagonia, Argentina.

Description

Morenocetus is distinguished from more derived balaenids in the narrow exposure of the squamosal lateral to the exoccipital, a short supraorbital process of the frontal, straight lateral edges of the supraoccipital, and a postorbital process of the frontal oriented posteriorly. It can be distinguished from the only other Miocene balaenid, Peripolocetus in having a dorsoventrally expanded zygomatic process of the squamosal. The body length of Morenocetus is estimated at 5.2m-5.6mm (17.1feet-18.4feetm), and the rostrum is moderately arched dorsoventrally in contrast to crown Balaenidae.[1]

Classification

Morenocetus is the oldest named extinct balaenid so far, although a chaeomysticete specimen from late Oligocene marine deposits in New Zealand was reported as a stem-balaenid in an SVP 2002 abstract by Ewan Fordyce.[2]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Buono M.R., Fernández M.S., Cozzuol M.A., Cuitiño J.I., Fitzgerald E.M.G. (2017) The early Miocene balaenid Morenocetus parvus from Patagonia (Argentina) and the evolution of right whales. PeerJ 5:e4148 . 2018-09-30 . 2022-12-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221207111043/https://peerj.com/articles/4148.pdf . dead .
  2. Fordyce, R.E., 2002. Oligocene origin of skim–feeding right whales: a small archaic balaenid from New Zealand. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22:54A