Pentacodontidae
| Pentacodontidae Temporal range:  early to late Paleocene | |
|---|---|
|   | |
| mandibula of Aphronorus fraudator | |
|   | |
| mandibula of Bisonalveus browni | |
| Scientific classification   | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Chordata | 
| Class: | Mammalia | 
| Mirorder: | Ferae | 
| Order: | †Pantolesta | 
| Family: | † Simpson, 1937[1] | 
| Type genus | |
| †Pentacodon Scott, 1892 | |
| Genera | |
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| Synonyms | |
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Pentacodontidae ("teeth with five points") is an extinct family of placental mammals from extinct order Pantolesta, that lived in North America and Europe[2] from the early to late Paleocene.[3][4]
Classification and phylogeny
Taxonomy
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References
- ^ G. G. Simpson (1937.) "The Fort Union of the Crazy Mountain field, Montana and its mammalian faunas." Bulletin of the United States National Museum 169:1-287
- ^ Eric De Bast; Thierry Smith (2016). "The oldest Cenozoic mammal fauna of Europe: implication of the Hainin reference fauna for mammalian evolution and dispersals during the Paleocene". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 15 (9): 741–785. doi:10.1080/14772019.2016.1237582. S2CID 89203431.
- ^ L. Van Valen (1967.) "New Paleocene insectivores and insectivore classification." Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 135(5):217-284
- ^ Malcolm C. McKenna, Susan K. Bell: Classification of Mammals: Above the Species Level in Columbia University Press, New York (1997), 631 Seiten.

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