Online Encyclopedia

AMBLYPODA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 796 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AMBLYPODA  , a suborder of

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primitive ungulate mammals, taking its name from the short and stumpy feet, which were furnished with five toes each, and supported massive pillar-like limbs . The brain,-cavity was extremely small, and insignificant in comparison to the bodily bulk, which was equal to that of the largest rhinoceroses . These animals are, in fact, descendants of the small ancestral ungulates which have retained all the primitive characters of the latter accompanied by a huge increase in bodily
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size . They are confined to the Eocene period, and occur both in North
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America and
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Europe . The cheek teeth are short crowned (brachyodont), with the tubercles more or less completely fused into transverse ridges, or
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cross-crests (lophodont type); and the
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total number of teeth is in one case the typical 44, but in another is reduced below this . The vertebrae of the neck unite by nearly flat surfaces, the humerus has lost the foramen, or perforation, at the
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lower end, and the third trochanter to the femur may also be wanting . In the fore-
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limb the upper and lower series of carpal bones scarcely alternate, but in the
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hind-
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foot the astragalus overlaps the cuboid, while the fibula, which is quite distinct from the
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tibia(as isthe
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radius from the ulna in the fore-limb), articulates with both astragalus and calcaneum . The most generalized type is Coryphadon, representing the
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family Coryphodontidae, from the lower Eocene of Europe and North America, in which there were 44 teeth, and no horn-like excrescences on the long
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skull, while the femur had a third trochanter . The canines are somewhat elongated, and were followed by a short
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gap in each jaw, and the cheek-teeth were adapted for succulent food . The length of the
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body reached about 6 ft. in some cases . In the
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middle Eocene formations of North America occurs the more specialized Uintatherium (or Dinoceras), typifying the family Uintatheriidae, which also contains
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species sometimes Restored
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skeleton of Uintathcrium (Dinoceras) mirabile . (After O .

C .

Marsh.) separated as Tinoceras . Uintatheres were huge creatures, with long narrow skulls, of which the elongated facial portion carried three pairs of bony horn-cores, probably covered with short horns in
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life, the hind-pair being much the largest . The dental formula is i . 1-, c. p. s -, m . I; the upper canines being long sabre-like weapons, protected by a descending flange on each side of the front of the lower jaw . In the basal Eocene,of North America the Amblypoda were represented by extremely primitive, five-toed; small ungulates such as Periptychus and Pantolambda, each of these typifying a family . The full typical series of 44 teeth was
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developed in each, but whereas in the Periptychidae the upper molars were bunodont and tritubercular, in the Pantolambdidae they have assumed a selenodont structure . Creodont characters (see
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CREODoNTA) are displayed in the skeleton . See also H . F . Osborn, "
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Evolution of the Amblypoda," Bull .

Amer . •

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Mus. vol. x. p . 169 . (R .

End of Article: AMBLYPODA
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