| Microtomarctus Temporal range:  | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Replica of lower jaw at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota | 
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Chordata | 
| Class: | Mammalia | 
| Order: | Carnivora | 
| Family: | Canidae | 
| Subfamily: | †Borophaginae | 
| Tribe: | †Borophagini | 
| Genus: | †Microtomarctus Wang et al., 1999 | 
| Species: | †M. confertus | 
| Binomial name | |
| †Microtomarctus confertus Matthew, 1918 | |
Microtomarctus is an extinct monospecific genus of the Borophaginae subfamily of canids native to North America. It lived during the Early to Middle Miocene,[1] and existed for approximately 7 million years. Fossil specimens have been found in Nebraska, coastal southeast Texas, California, New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado. It was an intermediate-size canid, and more predaceous than earlier borophagines.[2]
Like some other borophagines it had powerful, bone-crushing jaws and teeth.
References
- ↑ PaleoBiology Database: Microtomarctus Taxonomy, Species
- ↑ Wang, Xiaoming; Tedford, Richard H. (2008). Dogs, Their Fossil Relatives and Evolutionary History. Columbia. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-231-13528-3.
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