Homalostylops sp.

Fernández, Mercedes, Zimicz, Ana N., Bond, Mariano, Chornogubsky, Laura, Arnal, Michelle, Cárdenas, Magalí & Fernicola, Juan C., 2021, New Eocene South American native ungulates from the Quebrada de los Colorados Formation at Los Cardones National Park, Argentina, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 66 (1), pp. 85-97 : 89

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00784.2020

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11093276

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/031187C5-FFAC-FF9B-48D8-FA68FA24F9B1

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Homalostylops sp.
status

 

? Homalostylops sp.

Fig. 1D View Fig .

Material.—IBIGEO-P 57a, left m1?, Quebrada Grande, Los Cardones National Park, Casamayoran SALMA, Eocene.

Description.—IBIGEO-P 57a is a worn cheek tooth, probably the m1. It is a low-crowned tooth, subrectangular in outline; the trigonid is simple and presents a subrectangular contour, being wider than long; the protolophid is short and mesio-lingually directed; the paralophid is more developed than the protolophid, and has already been fused to the mesial cingulid, deriving in an slightly disto-lingually directed lophid; the metalophid is almost transversal and well developed, protruding more lingually than the paralophid, and there is no trace of a paraconid or any accessory cuspid. The talonid is well developed and subquadrangular in outline, it is much longer than the trigonid, but both present a similar width; the cristid obliqua is conspicuous, and it is connected to the labial portion of the metalophid; the labial sulcus is transversally deep; there are traces of the disto-lingual sulcus that separates the hypoconulid from the distal face of the entoconid.

Remarks.—As mentioned above, the specimen IBIGEO-P 57a is very worn cheek tooth, but its morphology and size (see Table 1 View Table 1 ) fit well within the general characteristics and size recorded for the m1 in other species of Homalostylops (see Simpson 1948 for comparative measurements). Nevertheless, and mainly due to the heavy state of wear, we refer this specimen with doubts to the genus Homalostylops .

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