Sumatran rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)
Photo by redape_oz
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Sumatran rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)
Photo by redape_oz
What's the most unexpected fossil you'd think could be found on the island of Jamaica?
How about an ancient rhino?
Hyrachyus here was an early member of the rhinocerotoids, a lineage of odd-toed ungulates that also includes the true rhinoceroses, the tapir-like and hippo-like amynodontids, the long-legged hyracodontids, and the giant indricotheriines.
This particular genus was very widespread for much of the Eocene, found across Europe, Asia, and North America, crossing back and forth between the continents via the North Atlantic land bridge.
The Jamaican Hyrachyus lived during the mid-Eocene, around 45 million years ago, and was very anatomically similar to the North American Hyrachyus affinis – with the known fossil material not being considered distinct enough to be assigned to a new species yet. It was also about 15-20% smaller than its mainland relative, standing only 25cm tall at the shoulder (10"), but it's not yet clear if this was a case of insular dwarfism or not.
Its presence in ancient Jamaica suggests that there may have been some sort of land connection between the proto-island and Central America during the early Eocene, when a chunk of what would eventually become western Jamaica was located much closer to the coasts of Honduras and Nicaragua. It's the only fossil ungulate known from the Caribbean, and one of only a few terrestrial mammals in the region with North American evolutionary roots (the others being the extinct rodents Caribeomys merzeraudi and Oryzomys antillarum, and modern solenodons).
Unfortunately these little rhinos didn't get much time on their island home. Jamaica subsided fully underwater about 40 million years ago, drowning its unique Eocene ecosystem entirely, and wouldn't re-emerge and be re-colonized until much later in the Cenozoic.
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Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)
Photo by Kat Jenkinson
Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)
Photo by Bill Konstant
Eastern black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis michaeli)
Photo by Helene Hoffman
Eastern black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis michaeli)
Photo by Sean Crane
Baird's tapir (Tapirus bairdii)
Photo by Daniel Scherer
Much like how hyraxes were once far more diverse than their modern representatives, some ancient members of the tapir lineage were similarly weird.
Lophialetes expeditus was one of these odd tapir-relatives, living in Mongolia and China during the mid-Eocene about 48-37 million years ago. Standing around 50cm tall at the shoulder (1'8") it had a build more resembling a deer or a horse than its pig-like modern cousins, and it was adapted for fast running in open plains, with long slender legs and three-toed hoofed feet that bore most of its weight on the middle digit.
Its skull had a nasal region similar to both modern tapirs and saiga antelope, suggesting the presence of a short trunk-like nose – but since some of its closest relatives didn't have nearly such well-developed snouts, it seems that Lophialetes evolved its trunk separately to modern tapirs.
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