Pachyaena

Pachyaena (literally, "Thick Hyena") was a genus of heavily built, relatively short-legged mesonychids, early Cenozoic mammals that evolved before the origin of either modern hoofed animals or carnivores, and combined characters similar to both. The genus likely originated from Asia and spread to Europe, and from there to North America across a land bridge in what is now the North Atlantic ocean.[1] Various described species of Pachyaena ranged in size from a coyote to a bear. However, recent work indicates that Pachyaena is paraphyletic, with P. ossifraga being closer to Synoplotherium, Harpagolestes and Mesonyx than to P. gigantea.[2]

Restoration of Pachyaena (above) and Hapalodectes

Pachyaena
Temporal range: Paleocene–Early Eocene
P. gigantea jaws
Scientific classification
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Pachyaena

Cope, 1874
Species
  • P. gigantea
  • P. intermedia
  • P. nemegetica
  • P. ossifraga
  • P. gracilis

Unlike many mesonychids, Pachyaena is known from skeletal material in addition to skulls and jaws. Analysis of three wolf- to bear-sized species from the early Eocene of Wyoming (Willwood formation) indicates they all had many adaptations for running, including paraxonic compressed feet with a vestigial first digit, lower sections of the limbs elongated compared with the upper sections, and limb joints with movement mostly restricted to a sagittal plane (back-and-forth movement). All these characteristics are common to both ungulates that run to escape predators and carnivores that run to pursue prey, though they probably evolved independently in mesonychids. Some adaptations are more typical of the grade of cursorial carnivores; others are more specialized, as in ungulates. Pachyaena was likely built for endurance rather than speed; the overall body shape of the genus would have resembled a modern tapir.[3]

Size varied depending on the species: For P. gracilis, the body mass estimated based in femur length is 24.0 kg, for P. ossifraga is about 56.9 kg, and for the large P. gigantea is 81.7 kg.[4][5] However, weight estimations of P. gigantea vary from 129 to 396 kg.[6]

Species

The genus' greatest diversity is seen in North America, with P. ossifraga known from Latest Paleocene strata of Wyoming, and P. gigantea, P. intermedia, and P. gracilis known from Early Eocene strata of Wyoming. P. nemegetica is known from Late Paleocene strata of Mongolia.

gollark: *Why* do you want that, exactly?
gollark: ```lualocal monitor_names = {}for _, n in pairs(peripheral.getNames()) do if peripheral.getType(n) == "monitor" then table.insert(monitor_names, n) endend```
gollark: If you want the *names* for whatever reason, that is somewhat harder.
gollark: It has multiple returns, so do `{peripheral.find "monitor"}` if you want a table of all monitors.
gollark: `peripheral.find "monitor"`

References

  1. Eberle, Jaelyn J; McKenna, Malcolm C (June 2002). "Early Eocene Leptictida, Pantolesta, Creodonta, Carnivora, and Mesonychidae (Mammalia) from the Eureka Sound Group, Ellesmere Island, Nunavut". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 39 (6): 899–910. Bibcode:2002CaJES..39..899E. doi:10.1139/e02-001. ISSN 0008-4077.
  2. "Mesonyx and the other mesonychid mesonychians (mesonychians part IV) | ScienceBlogs". scienceblogs.com. Retrieved 2019-05-16.
  3. O'Leary, Maureen A.; Rose, Kenneth D. (1995). "Postcranial Skeleton of the Early Eocene Mesonychid Pachyaena (Mammalia: Mesonychia)". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 15 (2): 401–430. doi:10.1080/02724634.1995.10011238. ISSN 0272-4634. JSTOR 4523639.
  4. http://paleodb.org/cgi-bin/bridge.pl?a=basicTaxonInfo&taxon_no=49575
  5. http://paleodb.org/cgi-bin/bridge.pl?a=basicTaxonInfo&taxon_no=49572
  6. J. Sargis, Eric (2009) Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology: A Tribute to Frederick S. Szalay p.130
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