Etayoa

Etayoa
Temporal range: Early Eocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Superorder: Meridiungulata
Order: Xenungulata
Family: Carodniidae
Genus: Etayoa
Villarroel[1]
Type species
Etayoa bacatensis

Etayoa is an ungulate of the family Carodniidae in the order Xenungulata that lived during the Early Eocene (~ 55 Ma) in northern South America.

The type species fossil specimen consists of a partial mandible with teeth, found in the Bogotá Formation in the locality Ciudad Bolívar of Bogotá, Colombia.[1] The estimated size of the ungulate is the size of a dog.[2]

Etymology

The type species Etayoa bacatensis was named by palaeontologist Carlos Villarroel after Fernando Etayo Serna, who contributed extensively to the paleontology and stratigraphy research in Colombia.[3] Bacatensis refers to Bacatá, the Chibcha name for the capital of the southern Muisca Confederation; the current Colombian capital Bogotá.

References

  1. 1 2 1987 - Description of Etayoa bacatensis - Paleobiology Database
  2. (Spanish) 2011 - Un xenungulado del Paleoceno de la sabana de Bogotá - Paleontología en Colombia
  3. (Spanish) 2012 - Etayoa bacatensis, un mamífero de hace 55 millones - Paleontología en Colombia - accessed 21-04-2016
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