Antofagastia is an extinct genus of Notoungulate, belonging to the family Interatheriidae. It lived during the Late Eocene in what is today South America.[1]

Antofagastia
Temporal range: Late Eocene
~36–34 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Notoungulata
Family: Interatheriidae
Genus: Antofagastia
García-López & Babot, 2014
Species:
A. turneri
Binomial name
Antofagastia turneri
García-López & Babot, 2014

Description edit

This small animal was vaguely similar to a marmot or a nutria. It was characterized by its low-crowned (brachydont) premolars and molars, with a narrow lingual groove and small pits in the upper molars. The cheekbone, as in typical interatheriids, was characterized by the exclusion of the jugal bone from the orbit, due to the zygomatic process of the maxilla and the presence of a small descending process.[1]

It was much smaller than contemporary interatheres such as Notopithecus and Transpithecus.[1]

Classification edit

Antofagastia was a basal representative of the Interatheriidae, a family of typothere notoungulates that diversify during the Oligocene and Miocene. Antofagastia seems to occupy a position more derived than Notopithecus and Transpithecus, but less derived than Santiagorothia and Protypotherium.[1]

Antofagastia was first described in 2014, based on fossil remains found in the Geste Formation, from the Late Eocene of Northwestern Argentina. It was related to Punapithecus.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e *D. A. García-López & M. J. Babot (2014): Notoungulate faunas of north-western Argentina: new findings of early-diverging forms from the Eocene Geste Formation, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2014.930527