يحاول ذهب - حر
Thylacosmilus: The South American Sabertooth Predator
Fall 2019
|Prehistoric Times
Everyone knows about the cats of the Pleistocene that sported enlarged, trenchant canines, such as the sabertooth Smilodon and the scimitartooth Homotherium.

Although their canines were large indeed, it was Thylacosmilus—the much less famous South American “marsupial sabertooth”—that took enlargement well beyond anything seen in placental cats.
Until about 3 million years ago, the Cenozoic fauna of South America had evolved in almost complete isolation from that of North America. As a result, niches that typically would have been filled by artiodactyls, carnivorans, rodents or other major placental groups were instead occupied by endemic South American mammals. Many of these taxa were astonishingly different from their ecological counterparts on northern continents. A good case in point is the sabertooth avatar of this story, Thylacosmilus atrox, a member of a wholly extinct group related to crown marsupials called Sparassodonta. Thylacosmilus evolved in the late Miocene from more generalized predaceous ancestors in the clade Borhyaenoidea, a remarkable group of metatherians that included bearsized Proborhyaena gigantea as well as species with dental adaptations somewhat similar to those seen in bone-cracking hyaenas, such as Borhyaena tuberata and Arctodictis munizi.
هذه القصة من طبعة Fall 2019 من Prehistoric Times.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Prehistoric Times

Prehistoric Times
What's New in review
Papo of France creates highly detailed prehistoric animal figures (if not always the most scientifically accurate.)
6 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
The Thunderbird
Today we have an excellent, new kit based upon a scene from Ray Harryhausen's cowboys vs. dinosaur film, The Valley of Gwangi.
2 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
WHAT I DID ON MY LOCKDOWN
A tyrannosaur in the local area? How cool!
4 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
The Forgotten Dinosaur Art of Robert T. Bakker
A renaissance marks a shift in the attitudes and behaviours of an entire society.
8 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
Sauropelta
A flock of Deinonychus dart from the dense forest they had been moving through across the broad floodplain to the tree line on the far side.
10 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
Reminiscing Over Dinosaurus!
“Alive! After 70 million years! Roaring! Walking! Destroying!” (Ad line for Dinosaurus!)
7 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
Longisquama
“Determined to travel from the North Pole to the South Pole, Amos Barrett and his team of adventurers have arrived in the Late Triassic to drive the length of Pangea, the only time in the planet’s history when the continents had fused into one giant landmass.
11 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
How to Draw Dinosaurs
Putting it all together, the body of Ankylosaurus
8 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
Dinosauriana Imagined 13
Dinosauriana Iberiana (A Spain-ful Endeavor)
5 mins
Winter 2021 #136

Prehistoric Times
Paleoracism
With the nation and much of the western world contending with the fallout of the chronic problem of racism, this is as good a time as any to take a look at the issue within the world of vertebrate paleontology.
16 mins
Fall 2020 # 135
Translate
Change font size