Propalaeotherium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Propalaeotherium Fossil range: Middle Eocene |
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Propalaeotherium parvulum & P. hassiacum
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Conservation status | ||||||||||||||||
Fossil
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||||
Propalaeotherium parvulum (Laurillard, 1849) |
Propalaeotherium was an early genus of perissodactyl ancestral to the horse. Its name means "before Palaeotherium", as it is the ancestor of Palaeotherium, another relative of early horses. Although they were descended from the earliest ancestral horse, Hyracotherium, the Propaleotheres and Paleotheres were not the ancestors of the modern horse; their line died out around 45 million years ago, leaving no descendants.
Propalaeotheres were small animals, ranging from 30–60 cm at the shoulder. They looked rather like very small tapirs. They had no hooves, having instead several small nail-like hooflets. They were herbivorous, and the amazingly well-preserved Messel fossils show that they ate berries, and leaf matter picked up from the forest floor.
[edit] In popular culture
Propalaeotherium was featured in Walking With Beasts.