Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T04:19:49.825Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A new species of beaver (Rodentia, Castoridae) from the Middle Oligocene (Orellan) of Nebraska

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

William W. Korth*
Affiliation:
Research Associate, University of Nebraska State Museum, W436 Nebraska Hall, Lincoln 68588

Abstract

Agnotocastor readingi n. sp., from the Orellan of Nebraska, is intermediate in size between the Chadronian A. galushai Emry from Wyoming and the Orellan A. coloradensis Wilson from Colorado. It differs slightly in dental and mandibular morphology from these latter species and cannot be transitional between them. The simplification of the dentition in A. readingi may indicate a position ancestral to the Whitneyan A. praetereadens Stirton from South Dakota.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bowdich, T. E. 1821. An Analysis of the Natural Classifications of Mammalia for the Use of Students and Travellers. J. Smith, Paris, 115 p.Google Scholar
Emry, R. J. 1972. A new species of Agnotocastor (Rodentia, Castoridae) from the early Oligocene of Wyoming. American Museum Novitates, 2485:17.Google Scholar
Galbreath, E. C. 1953. A contribution to the Tertiary geology and paleontology of northeastern Colorado. University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions, Vertebrata, 4:1120.Google Scholar
Gray, J. E. 1821. On the natural arrangement of vertebrose animals. London Medical Repository, 15:296310.Google Scholar
Gustafson, E. P. 1986. Preliminary biostratigraphy of the White River Group (Oligocene, Chadron and Brule Formations) in the vicinity of Chadron, Nebraska. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences, 14:720.Google Scholar
Howe, J. A. 1966. The Oligocene rodent Ischyromys in Nebraska. Journal of Paleontology, 40:12001210.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. 1986. Aplodontid rodents of the genus Pelycomys Galbreath from the Orellan (Oligocene) of Nebraska. Journal of Mammalogy, 67:545550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korth, W. W.in press. Geomyoid rodents from the Orellan (Oligocene) of Nebraska. In Black, C. C. and Dawson, M. R. (eds.), Papers on Fossil Rodents Honoring Albert E. Wood. Special Publication of the Museum of Natural History of Los Angeles County.Google Scholar
Matthew, W. D. 1902. A Lower Miocene fauna from South Dakota. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 23:169219.Google Scholar
Schultz, C. B., and Stout, T. M. 1955. Classification of Oligocene sediments in Nebraska. Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum, 4:1752.Google Scholar
Stirton, R. A. 1935. A review of Tertiary beavers. University of California Publications in the Geological Sciences, 23:31458.Google Scholar
Stout, T. M. 1937. A stratigraphic study of the Oligocene rodents in the Nebraska State Museum. Unpubl. M.S. thesis, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 138 p.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. 1949. On some White River fossil rodents. Carnegie Institute of Washington Publication, 584:2950.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E., and Wilson, R. W. 1936. A suggested nomenclature for the cusps of the cheek teeth of rodents. Journal of Paleontology, 10:388391.Google Scholar