Sansanosmilus

Sansanosmilus
Temporal range: Late Miocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Barbourofelidae
Genus: Sansanosmilus
Kretzoi, 1929
Species

S. palmidens
S. jourdani?
S. vallesiensis?

Sansanosmilus (pronounced - San-San-Oh-SMILE-Uss) is an extinct genus of carnivorous mammal of the family Barbourofelidae (false saber-tooth cats) endemic to Europe and Asia, which lived during the Miocene, 13.6—11.1 mya, existing for approximately 2.5 million years.[1]

Taxonomy

Sansanosmilus was named by Kretzoi (1929). It was assigned to Hoplophoneinae by Flynn and Galiano (1982); to Felidae by Carroll (1988); to Barbourofelinae by Bryant (1991); and to Barbourofelidae by Morlo et al. (2004) and Morlo (2006)

It had short legs, was very muscular and had a long tail. Sansanosmilus was 1.5 m long and probably weighed around 80 kg.

Species of Sansanosmilus

However, Robles et al. (2013) transferred S. jourdani (which they considered to be a senior synonym of S. vallesiensis) to the genus Albanosmilus.[2]

References

  1. PaleoBiology Database: Sansanosmilus, basic info
  2. Josep M. Robles, David M. Alba, Josep Fortuny, Soledad De Esteban-Trivigno, Cheyenn Rotgers, Jordi Balaguer, Raül Carmona, Jordi Galindo, Sergio Almécija, Juan V. Bertó and Salvador Moyà-Solà (2013). "New craniodental remains of the barbourofelid Albanosmilus jourdani (Filhol, 1883) from the Miocene of the Vallès-Penedès Basin (NE Iberian Peninsula) and the phylogeny of the Barbourofelini". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. in press. doi:10.1080/14772019.2012.724090.
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