N. Czaplewski, G. Morgan, R. Emry, P. Gignac, H. O'Brien
{"title":"Three New Early Middle Eocene Bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from Elderberry Canyon, Nevada, USA","authors":"N. Czaplewski, G. Morgan, R. Emry, P. Gignac, H. O'Brien","doi":"10.5479/si.19874677","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We report three new taxa of bats from the late early Eocene to earliest middle Eocene (Bridgerian biochrons Br1b–Br2; ca. 50–48 Ma) Elderberry Canyon Quarry, Sheep Pass Formation, in the Egan Mountain Range of eastern Nevada, USA. Volactrix simmonsae gen. et sp. nov., represented by two dentaries, is tentatively referred to the family ?Onychonycteridae and exhibits a p3 that is much smaller than the p2, a semimolariform p4, and lower molars with a postcristid configuration intermediate between necromantodonty and nyctalodonty. The genus Palaeochiropteryx, a palaeochiropterygid otherwise known from the early and middle Eocene of Europe, is the first representative of its genus and of the family Palaeochiropterygidae outside Eurasia and the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent. Palaeochiropteryx is represented at the site by a partial skeleton with a crushed skull and two left dentaries (one unexposed within the same limestone block but revealed by micro-computed tomography scanning) and is formally named Palaeochiropteryx sambuceus sp. nov. A third taxon, Sonor handae gen. et sp. nov., is a probable vespertilionid, evidenced by a dentary fragment with double-rooted p3 and myotodont lower molar morphology, and provides the earliest occurrence of the family Vespertilionidae in the Western Hemisphere. Despite the small number of specimens, these three new taxa comprise the most diverse Eocene assemblage of bats yet found in a single quarry in the Western Hemisphere.","PeriodicalId":220288,"journal":{"name":"Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology","volume":"246 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5479/si.19874677","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
We report three new taxa of bats from the late early Eocene to earliest middle Eocene (Bridgerian biochrons Br1b–Br2; ca. 50–48 Ma) Elderberry Canyon Quarry, Sheep Pass Formation, in the Egan Mountain Range of eastern Nevada, USA. Volactrix simmonsae gen. et sp. nov., represented by two dentaries, is tentatively referred to the family ?Onychonycteridae and exhibits a p3 that is much smaller than the p2, a semimolariform p4, and lower molars with a postcristid configuration intermediate between necromantodonty and nyctalodonty. The genus Palaeochiropteryx, a palaeochiropterygid otherwise known from the early and middle Eocene of Europe, is the first representative of its genus and of the family Palaeochiropterygidae outside Eurasia and the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent. Palaeochiropteryx is represented at the site by a partial skeleton with a crushed skull and two left dentaries (one unexposed within the same limestone block but revealed by micro-computed tomography scanning) and is formally named Palaeochiropteryx sambuceus sp. nov. A third taxon, Sonor handae gen. et sp. nov., is a probable vespertilionid, evidenced by a dentary fragment with double-rooted p3 and myotodont lower molar morphology, and provides the earliest occurrence of the family Vespertilionidae in the Western Hemisphere. Despite the small number of specimens, these three new taxa comprise the most diverse Eocene assemblage of bats yet found in a single quarry in the Western Hemisphere.
本文报道了早始新世晚期至中始新世早期蝙蝠的3个新分类群(brigerian生物年代Br1b-Br2;约50-48马)接骨木峡谷采石场,羊通道形成,在伊根山脉的东部内华达州,美国。由两个齿状体代表的Volactrix simmonsae . et sp. nov.暂定为甲齿科,其p3齿比p2齿小得多,p4齿为半齿状,下磨牙的嵴后结构介于齿状和齿状之间。古手翼鸟属是一种来自欧洲始新世早期和中期的古手翼鸟,是欧亚大陆和印度-巴基斯坦次大陆以外该属和古手翼鸟科的第一个代表。古翼龙在该遗址发现了一具头骨破碎的部分骨架和两颗左齿(其中一颗未暴露在同一石灰岩块中,但通过显微计算机断层扫描发现),并被正式命名为古翼龙sambuceus sp. 11 .第三个分类群Sonor handae gen. et sp. nov.,可能是一种具有双根p3和肌状齿下磨牙形态的齿状碎片。并提供了西半球最早出现的狐蝠科。尽管标本数量很少,但这三个新分类群构成了迄今在西半球单个采石场发现的始新世蝙蝠最多样化的组合。