A new odontocete (Inioidea, Odontoceti) from the late Neogene of North Carolina, USA
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Published:2021-09-02
Issue:2
Volume:24
Page:275-285
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ISSN:2193-0074
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Container-title:Fossil Record
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Foss. Rec.
Author:
Godfrey Stephen J.,Gutstein Carolina S.,Morgan III Donald J.
Abstract
Abstract. A new monotypic genus of Neogene odontocete (Isoninia borealis) is named on the
basis of a partial skull (CMM-V-4061). The holotype was found on the
riverbed of the Meherrin River (North Carolina, USA) and probably
originated from the Miocene marine Eastover Formation. Deep interdigitation
of the cranial sutures indicates that this individual was mature. The new
taxon differs from all other delphinidans in the unique combination of the
following characters: anteriorly retracted premaxillae and maxillae;
premaxillae not contacting nasals; thick nasals with ventrolateral margins
deeply imbedded within corresponding troughs in the frontals (this is an
apomorphy); nasals with transversely convex dorsal surface; nearly
symmetrical vertex; os suturarum (or interparietal or extra folds of the
frontals) at the vertex; large dorsal infraorbital foramen level with the
posterior margin of the external bony nares; and a postorbital recess on the
ventrolateral face of the frontal below and behind the postorbital process
of the frontal. This odontocete exhibits two small but pronounced
concavities on the cerebral face of the frontal/presphenoid that are
presumed to have held vestigial olfactory bulbs in life. Inioidea is only
diagnosed by a single unequivocal synapomorphy: width across nasals and
nares subequal. Isoninia shares this feature with other inioids and forms the basis
for the placement of Isoninia within this clade. A relatively high vertex coupled
with a supraoccipital that is deeply wedged between the frontals suggests
placement of this new inioid species within the family Iniidae. This is the
second inioid described from the Eastover Formation (the other being
Meherrinia isoni). This new species adds new cranial morphology and a new combination of
cranial characters to this taxonomically small but growing group of mostly
marine and mostly Western Hemisphere odontocetes (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E8B817CA-B250-42B3-9365-36EFBFE351C9).
Publisher
Pensoft Publishers
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