Miolabis, HAY, 1899
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5070/P9351037578 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B21F87F3-8C4F-FFCB-FEF1-FC5FFAE4FD55 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Miolabis |
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Miolabis transmontanus COPE, 1879
Referred specimens —Cottonwood Creek: nearly complete cranium, AMNH FM 8196; JDNM-4*: nearly complete mandible, JODA 1326.
Occurrence —Cottonwood Creek, JDNM-4*
Comments — AMNH FM 8196 is the type specimen ap (mm) t (mm)
i1 8.04 5.35
i2 8.45 5.16
i3 7.03 5.22
c 8.91 --
dia 39.76 --
p2 9.18 4.94
p3 13.47 5.87
p4 13.37 7.290
m1 15.14 12.31
m2 18.98 14.90
m3 28.24 13.70 for Miolabis transmontanus named by Cope (= Protolabis transmontanus ). Honey et al. (1998) used this specimen as the type for the genus. The skull was found by Charles Sternberg in the Cottonwood Creek area near Dayville, OR. Measurements for AMNH FM 8196 are presented in Cope (1879) and Downs (1956), and figured in Cope (1886). JODA 1326 is assigned to this species based on the following: no p1, premolars stouter and less compressed than Protolabis Cope, 1876, p2 shortened and simplified, p3 is shortened with a high, central protoconid, p4 has enlarged hypoconid, molars low-crowned, but they do not have strong metastylids (this may be due to the extreme wear of the teeth), m3 less anteroposteriorly expanded relative to m2 than in Protolabis . Measurements for JODA 1326 are included in Table 8. JODA 1326 may be the mandible to the skull found by Sternberg. Both specimens have heavily worn teeth, however, it is unclear where JODA 1326 was found.
AMNH |
American Museum of Natural History |
FM |
Department of Nature, Fujian Province Museum |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Miolabis
Maguire, Kaitlin Clare & Schmitz, Joshua X. Samuels and Mark D. 2018 |
Miolabis transmontanus
COPE 1879 |