Machaeroides

Machaeroides
Temporal range: Eocene
Machaeroides eothen skull
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Creodonta
Family: Incertae sedis
Subfamily: Machaeroidinae
Genus: Machaeroides
Species
  • M. eothen
  • M. simpsoni

Machaeroides ("dagger-like") is a genus of sabre-toothed creodont that lived during the Eocene (56 to 34 mya). Its fossils were found in the U.S. state of Wyoming.

Description

Restoration

Either species bore a passing, or superficial resemblance to a very small, dog-sized saber-toothed cat. Machaeroides could be distinguished from actual saber-toothed cats by their more-elongated skulls, and their plantigrade stance. Machaeroides species are distinguished from the closely related Apataelurus by the fact that the former genus had smaller saber-teeth.

M. eothen weighed an estimated 10-14 kg, thus matching in size a smallish Staffordshire Terrier. M. simpsoni was smaller.(Egi 2001)

Taxonomic Placement

Although it is undeniably a creodont, its position within the order is in dispute. Experts seem equally divided over whether Machaeroides and its sister-genus, Apataelurus, belong in Oxyaenidae or Hyaenodontidae.

References