
Pliohyrax - Wikipedia
Pliohyrax, is a genus of hyracoids (the cavy-like group of animals most closely related to elephants and manatees). It grew to sizes greatly exceeding those of any living hyrax , though …
Pliohyracidae | Encyclopedia MDPI
Nov 21, 2022 · Five extant species are recognised: the rock hyrax (Procavia capensis) and the yellow-spotted rock hyrax (Heterohyrax brucei), which both live on rock outcrops, including …
age and belongs to the genus Pliohyrax. Several hyracoid remains are known from the late Miocene of Turkey, where the genus Pliohyrax is recognized in several localities (Baudry …
New Neogene Hyracoid Specimens from the Peri-Tethys …
Sep 1, 2009 · Another hyracoid from China Hengduanshanhyrax has upper molars that recall those of Pliohyrax, but this genus differs from Pliohyrax in possessing diastemata between the …
About: Pliohyrax - DBpedia Association
Pliohyrax, is a genus of hyracoids (the cavy-like group of animals most closely related to elephants and manatees). It grew to sizes greatly exceeding those of any living hyrax, though …
Tooth Enamel Microstructure of Living and Extinct Hyracoids …
Jan 8, 2016 · These studies have revealed the dominance of a fairly simple enamel microstructure, called radial enamel, in Procavia and Pliohyrax. Based on macroscopic …
Pliohyrax - SciiFii Wiki | Fandom
The European hyrax (Pliohyrax gracilis) is a species of mammal belonging to the hyrax family that originally lived in Afghanistan, France, and Turkey as an extinct species of Pliohyrax during …
Pliohyrax - Wikispecies - Wikimedia
On Pliohyrax kruppii Osborn, a fossil hyracoid, from Samos, Lower Pliocene, in the Stuttgart Collection. A new type, and the first known Tertiary Hyracoid. In Proceedings of the fourth …
Pliohyrax - mindat.org
Pliohyrax, a genus believed extinct since the Pliocene, is one of the larger hyracoids (the cavy-like group of animals most closely related to elephants and manatees). It grew to sizes greatly …
Pliohyrax Osborn, 1899 - GBIF
Nomenclator Zoologicus, vols. 1-10 online. [developed by uBio, hosted online at MBLWHOI Library].