The Sharps Formation  is a geologic formation  in South Dakota . It preserves fossils  dating back to the Paleogene .[ 1] 
The Sharps Formation is the namesake of the community of Sharps Corner, South Dakota .[ 2] 
Fossil content 
 
 
  
Color key 
 
Notes small text ; crossed out  taxa are discredited.
 
Mammals 
Carnivorans 
Carnivorans  reported from the Sharps Formation 
Genus 
Species 
Location
 
Stratigraphic position 
Material Notes 
Images
  
Archaeocyon A. leptodus 
Shannon  & Jackson  counties, South Dakota.[ 3] Middle & upper part of the formation.[ 3]  
Skull elements.[ 3]  
A borophagine  dog.
 
 
A. pavidus 
Southeast corner of Sheep Mountain, Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 3]  
Lower part of the formation.[ 3]  
2 partial skeletons.[ 3]  
A borophagine  dog.
 
  
Cormocyon C. haydeni 
Wounded Knee area, Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 3]  
Upper part of the formation.[ 3]  
Left maxillary (F:AM 49436).[ 3]  
A borophagine  dog.
 
  
Cynarctoides C. lemur 
Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 3] Lower & upper parts of the formation.[ 3]  
Jaw elements.[ 3]  
A borophagine  dog also known from the John Day , Brule  & Browns Park  formations.
 
 
C. roii 
Wounded Knee Area, Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 1] [ 3]  
Upper part of the formation.[ 3]  
Skull elements.[ 1] [ 3]  
A borophagine  dog also known from the lower Arikaree Group 
 
  
Cynodesmus C. cooki 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Mandibles.[ 1]  
Reassigned to the genus Otarocyon [ 3]  
  
Ekgmoiteptecela 
E. olsontau 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
Rockyford Member.[ 1]  
Right ramus (SDSM 54247).[ 1]  
Junior synonym  of Hoplophoneus  cerebralis[ 4] 
  
Enhydrocyon E. crassidens 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Crania .[ 1] A hesperocyonine  dog also known from the Harrison Formation .
 
 
E. pahinsintewakpa 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1] [ 5]  
Near the top of the formation.[ 5]  
Right mandible.[ 1] [ 5]  
A hesperocyonine  dog.
 
 
Hesperocyon H. leptodus 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Skull elements.[ 1]  
Reassigned to the genus Archaeocyon [ 3]  
  
Hoplophoneus H. cerebralis 
Wounded Knee Area, South Dakota.[ 1] [ 4]  
Rockyford Member.[ 1]  
Right ramus (SDSM 54247).[ 1]  
A nimravid .
 
 
Leptocyon L. douglassi 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 6]  
 
Maxillary  fragments.[ 6] A canine  dog also known from the Toston  & John Day  formations.
 
 
Mesocyon M. robustus 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Mandibles.[ 1]  
A hesperocyonine  dog.
 
  
"M." temnodon 
Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 5] Basal part and near the top of the formation.[ 5]  
Rami .[ 5] A hesperocyonine  dog.
 
  
Nothocyon N. geismarianus 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Jaw elements.[ 1]  
An arctoid  formerly thought to be a canid , also known from the Monroe Creek Formation .
 
  
N. lemur 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1] [ 3]  
 
Jaw elements.[ 1] [ 3]  
Reassigned to Cynarctoides  
  
N. roii 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1] [ 3]  
 
Skull elements.[ 1] [ 3]  
Reassigned to Cynarctoides  
  
Otarocyon O. cooki 
Wounded Knee Area, Shannon County, South Dakota .[ 3]  
Upper part of the formation.[ 3]  
Partial rami .[ 3]  
A small borophagine  dog also known from the lower Arikaree Group .
 
 
Palaeogale P. dorothiae 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Fragment of right mandible  (SDSM  53326).[ 1]  
A palaeogalid .
 
 
Paradaphoenus P. tooheyi 
South Dakota.[ 7]  
 
Maxilla  (LACM  21649).[ 7] A bear-dog .
 
  
Philotrox P. condoni 
Wounded Knee area, Shannon County  & Quiver Hill localities, Washabaugh County .[ 5]  
Middle member.[ 5]  
Skull and jaw remains.[ 5]  
A hesperocyonine  dog also found in the John Day Formation .
 
 
Sunkahetanka S. geringensis 
Wounded Knee Area, Shannon  & Jackson  counties.[ 1] [ 5]  
Middle member.[ 5]  
Jaw elements.[ 1] [ 5]  
A hesperocyonine  dog also known from the topmost part of the Brule Formation .
 
 
S. pahinsintewakpa 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Right mandible.[ 1]  
Reassigned to Enhydrocyon  
  
Eulipotyphlans 
Lagomorphs 
Primates 
Primates  reported from the Sharps Formation 
Genus 
Species 
Location
 
Stratigraphic position 
Material Notes 
Images
  
Ekgmowechashala E. philotau 
Wounded Knee Area.[ 1]  
 
Jaw elements.[ 1]  
An adapiform .
 
  
Rodents 
Ungulates 
Reptiles 
Squamates 
See also 
References 
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er   Macdonald, J. R. (James Reid); Thomson, Albert Report of the expedition of 1906 to the Miocene on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (1963). "The Miocene faunas from the Wounded Knee area of western South Dakota. article 3" . Bulletin of the AMNH . 125 . hdl :2246/1259 . {{cite journal}}:  CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)^ Harksen, J. C.; Macdonald, J. R.; Sevon, W. D. (1961). "New Miocene Formation in South Dakota"  (PDF) . p. 2. Retrieved 2022-10-05   – via South Dakota Geological Survey. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x   Wang, Xiaoming; Tedford, Richard H.; Taylor, Beryl E. (1999). "Phylogenetic systematics of the Borophaginae (Carnivora, Canidae)" . Bulletin of the AMNH  (243): 9– 391. hdl :2246/1588 . ^ a b   Barrett, Paul Z. (2016-02-09). "Taxonomic and systematic revisions to the North American Nimravidae (Mammalia, Carnivora)" . PeerJ . 4 : e1658. doi :10.7717/peerj.1658 ISSN  2167-8359 . PMC  4756750 PMID  26893959 . ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l   Wang, Xiaoming (1994). "Phylogenetic systematics of the Hesperocyoninae (Carnivora, Canidae)" . Bulletin of the AMNH  (221). hdl :2246/829 . ^ a b   Tedford, Richard H.; Wang, Xiaoming; Taylor, Beryl E. (2009). Phylogenetic systematics of the North American fossil Caninae (Carnivora, Canidae). (Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, no. 325) hdl :2246/5999 . ^ a b   Hunt, Robert M. (2001). "Small Oligocene amphicyonids from North America (Paradaphoenus, Mammalia, Carnivora)" . American Museum Novitates  (3331): 1– 20. doi :10.1206/0003-0082(2001)330<0001:BAOTLL>2.0.CO;2 . hdl :2246/2884 . S2CID  83979855 . ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m   Hutchison, J. Howard (1972-12-29). "Review of the Insectivora from early Miocene Sharps formation of South Dakota" . Contributions in Science . 235 : 1––16. doi :10.5962/p.241219 ISSN  0459-8113 . S2CID  134450974 . ^ a b   Korth, William W. (1994). "Middle Tertiary Marsupials (Mammalia) from North America" Journal of Paleontology . 68  (2): 376– 397. Bibcode :1994JPal...68..376K . doi :10.1017/S0022336000022952 . ISSN  0022-3360 . JSTOR  1306077 . S2CID  130386546 . ^ a b c d   Parris, David C.; Green, Morton (1969). "Dinohyus (Mammalia: Entelodontidae) in the Sharps Formation, South Dakota" . Journal of Paleontology . 43  (5): 1277– 1279. ISSN  0022-3360 . JSTOR  1302440 . ^ a b   Hembree, Daniel I. (April 30, 2007). "Phylogenetic revision of Rhineuridae (Reptilia: Squamata: Amphisbaenia) from the Eocene to Miocene of North America" . The University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions  (15): 1– 20. doi :10.17161/PCNS.1808.3763 hdl :1808/3763 S2CID  59354440 . ^ a b c   Scarpetta, Simon G. (October 2019). "Peltosaurus granulosus (Squamata, Anguidae) from the Middle Oligocene of Sharps Corner, South Dakota, and the Youngest Known Chronostratigraphic Occurrence of Glyptosaurinae" Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . 39  (3): e1622129. Bibcode :2019JVPal..39E2129S . doi :10.1080/02724634.2019.1622129 . ISSN  0272-4634 . S2CID  196690362 .