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Thread: Species?

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  1. #1
    us
    Oct 2008
    Great Plains
    295
    4 times

    Species?

    What animal species is this?

    Thank you.

  2. #2
    us
    Feb 2009
    Northcentral Florida
    1,066
    2 times

    Re: Species?

    Quote Originally Posted by 11KBP
    What animal species is this?
    Thank you.
    Hmmmm . . . This appears to be a horse of the Subfamily EQUINAE.

    If you want to know the species or trivial name of this horse, that may be something of a challenge. For example, there are many named species within the genus Equus (Tribe EQUINI), some valid, some no longer valid. It is a taxonomist's playground. Six Pliocene and Pleistocene species of Equus are acknowledged in Hulbert's THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF FLORIDA. And there are other tribes.

    A museum may be useful of a precise identification.
    “A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away in the lumber room of his library, where he can get it if he wants it.”
    --Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle) in "The Sign of Four"

  3. #3
    us
    Oct 2008
    Great Plains
    295
    4 times

    Re: Species?

    Quote Originally Posted by Harry Pristis
    Quote Originally Posted by 11KBP
    What animal species is this?
    Thank you.
    Hmmmm . . . This appears to be a horse of the Subfamily EQUINAE.

    If you want to know the species or trivial name of this horse, that may be something of a challenge. For example, there are many named species within the genus Equus (Tribe EQUINI), some valid, some no longer valid. It is a taxonomist's playground. Six Pliocene and Pleistocene species of Equus are acknowledged in Hulbert's THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF FLORIDA. And there are other tribes.

    A museum may be useful of a precise identification.
    Thanks Harry.
    The skull was found in the same region as other late Pleistocene fauna have been found so I was assuming it could be from that time period. So, is this a valid assumption?

    11KBP

  4. #4
    us
    Feb 2009
    Northcentral Florida
    1,066
    2 times

    Re: Species?

    Thanks Harry.
    The skull was found in the same region as other late Pleistocene fauna have been found so I was assuming it could be from that time period. So, is this a valid assumption?

    11KBP
    Go with the best info you have. If you have no other data, Late Pleistocene is a reasonable working assumption.

    I looked at your image again, and noticed that this is a sub-adult horse. What you have in each dentary are P2 - M2 with the M2 still emergent. The P1 is lost (typical in Equus). The germ of M3 is still in its crypt.
    “A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away in the lumber room of his library, where he can get it if he wants it.”
    --Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle) in "The Sign of Four"

  5. #5
    us
    Oct 2008
    Great Plains
    295
    4 times

    Re: Species?

    Quote Originally Posted by Harry Pristis
    Thanks Harry.
    The skull was found in the same region as other late Pleistocene fauna have been found so I was assuming it could be from that time period. So, is this a valid assumption?

    11KBP
    Go with the best info you have. If you have no other data, Late Pleistocene is a reasonable working assumption.
    Thanks again Harry.

    11KBP

 

 

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