?Amphictis (Carnivora, Ailuridae) from the Belgrade Formation of North Carolina, USA

Author:

Baskin Jon12,Dickinson Edwin3,DuBois John4,Galiano Henry5,Hartstone-Rose Adam3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Health Sciences, Texas A&M University—Kingsville, Kingsville, TX, United States of America

2. UT Jackson School of Geoscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States of America

3. Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, United States of America

4. Benson, NC, United States of America

5. Maxilla & Mandible, Ltd., New York, NY, United States of America

Abstract

Miocene terrestrial mammals are poorly known from the Atlantic Coastal Plain. Fossils of the Order Carnivora from this time and region are especially rare. We describe a carnivoran mandible with a p4 from the late Oligocene or early early Miocene Belgrade Formation in Jones County, North Carolina. Comparisons are made with carnivoran jaws with similar premolar and molar lengths from the late Oligocene and Miocene of North America and Eurasia. These indicate that the North Carolina jaw is assignable to the Ailuridae, a family whose only living member is the red panda. The jaw is tentatively referred to Amphictis, a genus known elsewhere from the late Oligocene and early Miocene of Europe and the early Miocene (Hemingfordian) of North America. The North Carolina mandible compares best with the late Oligocene (MP 28) Amphictis ambiguus from Pech du Fraysse, France, the oldest known member of the Family Ailuridae, and with the early Miocene (MN 1–MN 2a) A. schlosseri from southwestern Germany. This identification is compatible with a late late Arikareean (Ar4, early Miocene, MN 2-3 equivalent) age assignment for the other terrestrial mammals of the Belgrade Formation.

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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