Peltephilus
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Peltephilus, the horned armadillo, is an extinct genus of armadillo xenarthran mammals that first inhabited Argentina during the Oligocene epoch, and became extinct in the Miocene epoch. Notably, the scutes on its head were so developed that they formed horns. Aside from the horned gophers of North America, it is the only known fossorial horned mammal.
Description
P. ferox had a skull about 11.7 centimetres (4.6 in) long, and its estimated body mass is around 11.07 kilograms (24.4 lb).
The upper teeth on the anterior side of the skull were sharp, and they passed outside the lower teeth when the jaw was shut. The teeth of Peltephilus were covered in dentin. Visually, it looks as if Peltephilus had a full set of incisors, though they only bore one on each side, like modern armadillos. The centre of the molariform teeth was formed by degenerated linear osteodentine. The orthodentine contained odontoblastic processes with abundant short extensions and reached the outer surfaces. Cementum was absent from the teeth.
Taxonomy
The genus was originally classified as belonging to the family Chlamyphoridae, but in 2007 was placed in its own family Peltephilidae by Darin A. Croft, John J. Flynn and Andre Wyss.
Palaeobiology
Palaeoecology
Although it had traditionally been perceived as a carnivore because of its large, triangular-shaped teeth, Vizcaino and Fariña argued in 1997 that Peltephilus was a herbivore.
Distribution
Fossils of Peltephilus have been found in:
- Argentina – Sarmiento Formation
- Bolivia – Salla Formation
Miocene
- Argentina – Colloncuran Collón Curá Formation and Santacrucian Santa Cruz Formation
- Bolivia – Colloncuran Nazareno Formation
- Chile – Santacrucian Chucal Formation
Bibliography
- Croft, Darin A.; Flynn, John J.; Wyss, André R. (2007). . Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 21 (4): 781–797. doi:. S2CID .
- González Ruiz, Laureano Raúl; Góis, Flavio; Ciancio, Martín Ricardo; Scillato Yané, Gustavo Juan (2013). (PDF). Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia. 16 (2): 319–330. doi:.
- Shockey, Bruce J (2017). . Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 58 (2): 371–396.