Protypotherium

Protypotherium
Fossil of P. australe. Exhibit in the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, Japan
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Notoungulata
Family: Interatheriidae
Subfamily: Interatheriinae
Genus: Protypotherium
Ameghino 1882
Type species
Protypotherium antiquum
Moreno 1882
Species

See text

Synonyms
  • Toxodontophanus Moreno 1882

Protypotherium is an extinct genus of notoungulate mammals native to South America during the Oligocene and Miocene epochs. A number of closely related animals date back further, to the Eocene. Fossils of Protypotherium have been found in the Deseadan Fray Bentos Formation of Uruguay, Muyu Huasi and Nazareno Formations of Bolivia, Cura-Mallín and Río Frías Formations of Chile, and Santa Cruz, Salicas, Ituzaingó, Aisol, Cerro Azul, Cerro Bandera, Cerro Boleadoras, Chichinales, Sarmiento and Collón Curá Formations of Argentina.

The taxonomy of the genus and the species within has a long and complicated history. Other genera of interatheriids such as Epipatriarchus, Eudiastatus, and Toxdontophanus, have been named, but no complete specimens exist, making comparison and classification difficult. Most modern scientists consider these genera to be junior synonyms of Protypotherium, and it is thought to contain the following species; P. australe, P. praerutilum, P. antiquum, P. altum, P. attenuatum, P. claudum, P. colloncurensis, P. diastematum, P. distinctum, P. minutum, P. endiadys, P. sinclairi, and P. concepcionensis. The most completely-known species is P. australe, so most reconstructions of the genus are based on it.