Ursus etruscus
Ursus etruscus Temporal range:
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Fossils | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Carnivora |
Family: | Ursidae |
Genus: | Ursus |
Species: | U. etruscus
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Binomial name | |
Ursus etruscus Cuvier, 1823
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Ursus etruscus (the Etruscan bear) is an extinct species of bear, endemic to Europe, Asia and North Africa during the Pliocene through Pleistocene, living from ~5.3 Mya—100,000 years ago, existing for approximately 5.2 million years.
Ursus etruscus appears to have evolved from Ursus minimus and gave rise to the modern brown bear, Ursus arctos, and the extinct cave bear, Ursus spelaeus.[citation needed] The range of Ursus etruscus was mostly continental Europe with specimens also recovered in the Great steppe region of Eurasia. The latest[when?] fossil evidence for Ursus etruscus was recovered in Israel, Croatia, and Toscana, Italy.
Some scientists have proposed that the early, small variety of U. etruscus of the middle Villafranchian era survives in the form of the modern Asian black bear.[1]
Morphology
Not unlike the brown bears of Europe in size, it had a full complement of premolars, a trait carried from the genus Ursavus.
Fossil distribution
Sites and specimen ages:
- Vassiloudi, Macedonia Greece ~5.3—1.8 Ma.
- Obigarm, Tajikistan ~5.3—1.8 Ma.
- Ahl al Oughlam, Morocco ~3.6—1.8 Ma.
- Pardines, Auvergne, France ~2.5—1.8 Ma.
- Dmanisi, Georgia ~1.8 Ma.—800,000 years ago.
- Mestas de Con, Cangas de Onis, Asturias, Spain ~1.8—100,000 years ago.[2]
- Strmica, Croatia
References
- ^ Aspects of Evolution and Adaptation in American Black Bears (Ursus americanus Pallas) and Brown and Grizzly Bears (U. arctos Linne.) of North America, Stephen Herrero, Research Associate, Environmental Sciences Centre (Kananaskis), and Assistant Professor, Department of Biology and Psychology, University of Calgary, Alberta.
- ^ Paleobiology Database: Mestas de Con, Cangas de Onis collection
- Catherine Hanni, Vincent Laudet, Dominique Stehelin, and Pierre Taberleto (1994). Tracking the origins of the cave bear (Ursus spelaeus) by mitochondrial DNA sequencing. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 91, pp. 12336-12340.