Hoplitomeryx

Hoplitomeryx
Temporal range: Late Miocene–Early Pliocene
Cast of the holotype of H. matthei, Naturalis, National Natural History Museum, Leiden, the Netherlands
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Hoplitomerycidae
Genus: Hoplitomeryx
Leinders, 1984
Species
  • H. matthei Leinders, 1984
  • H. apruthiensis Mazza & Rustioni, 2011
  • H. apulicus Mazza & Rustioni, 2011
  • H. falcidens Mazza & Rustioni, 2011
  • H. magnus Mazza & Rustioni, 2011
  • H. minutus Mazza & Rustioni, 2011

Hoplitomeryx is a genus of extinct deer-like ruminants which lived on the former Gargano Island during the Miocene and the Early Pliocene, now a peninsula on the east coast of South Italy. Hoplitomeryx, also known as "prongdeer", had five horns and sabre-like upper canines similar to a modern musk deer.

Its fossilized remains were retrieved from the late 1960s onwards from reworked reddish, massive or crudely stratified silty-sandy clays (terrae rossae), which partially fill the paleo-karstic fissures in the Mesozoic limestone substrate and that are on their turn overlain by Late Pliocene-Early Pleistocene sediments of a subsequently marine, shallow water and terrigenous origin. In this way a buried paleokarst originated.

The fauna from the paleokarst fillings is known as Mikrotia fauna after the endemic murid of the region (initially named "Microtia", with a c, but later corrected, because the genus Microtia was already occupied). Later, after the regression and continentalization of the area, a second karstic cycle started in the late Early Pleistocene, the neokarst, which removed part of the paleokarst fill.