The scimitar‐cat Homotherium from the submerged continental shelf of the Gulf Coast of Texas

Author:

Moretti John A.1ORCID,Flores Deanna23,Bell Christopher J.1,Godwin Will4,Hartstone‐Rose Adam5ORCID,Lewis Patrick J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Jackson School of Geosciences The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

2. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oregon Eugene Oregon USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences Sam Houston State University Huntsville Texas USA

4. Sam Houston State Natural History Collections Sam Houston State University Huntsville Texas USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences North Carolina State University Raleigh North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractThe machairodontine felid Homotherium achieved a global geographic distribution throughout much of the Pleistocene. Accordingly, that large carnivore is important for understanding patterns of community composition. We report on a new record of Homotherium based on a fragmentary premaxilla–maxilla discovered on McFaddin Beach, Texas, along the Gulf of Mexico. Skeletal remains of extinct, Pleistocene vertebrates accumulate on McFaddin Beach. Those fossils appear to originate from submerged deposits on the continental shelf in the Gulf of Mexico, an area that was subaerially exposed in the Late Pleistocene during glacial intervals. Marine erosion and transport altered the externally visible morphology of the current specimen, obscuring and/or damaging taxonomically informative details of the preserved dentition. However, high‐resolution X‐ray computed tomography revealed diagnostic portions of the unerupted crown of an upper canine within its alveolus. The serrated edges of the canine combined with the position of the incisors demonstrate that the specimen from McFaddin Beach represents a species of Homotherium. That specimen is the latest in a larger sample of Homotherium in Texas that spans most of the Pliocene–Pleistocene. This is the first occurrence of Homotherium from the continental shelf of the Gulf Coast. That landscape may have formed a broad subtropical Gulf Coast corridor that facilitated the dispersal of Neotropical taxa along the coast between Texas and Florida. The associated fauna from McFaddin Beach contains Neotropical mammals common to southern Texas and Florida and indicates that Homotherium was a member of the fauna inhabiting the Gulf Coast corridor during the Late Pleistocene.

Funder

North Carolina State University

University of Texas at Austin

Publisher

Wiley

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