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Notiomastodon

Notiomastodon is an extinct genus of gomphothere proboscidean (related to modern elephants), endemic to South America from the Pleistocene to the beginning of the Holocene.[1] Notiomastodon specimens reached a size similar to that of the modern Asian elephant. Like other brevirostrine gomphotheres such as Cuvieronius and Stegomastodon, Notiomastodon had a shortened lower jaw and lacked lower tusks, unlike more primitive gomphotheres like Gomphotherium.

Notiomastodon
Temporal range: late Early Pleistocene-Early Holocene
(Possible Earliest Pleistocene record)
~0.8–0.011 Ma
Skeleton at the Centro Cultural del Bicentenario de Santiago del Estero
Skull at the Natural History Museum, London
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Proboscidea
Family: Gomphotheriidae
Genus: Notiomastodon
Cabrera, 1929
Species:
N. platensis
Binomial name
Notiomastodon platensis
(Ameghino, 1888) [originally Mastodon]
Synonyms

Genus synonymy:

  • Haplomastodon Hoffstetter 1950
  • Amahuacatherium Romero-Pittman, 1996

Species synonymy:

List
  • Elephas humboldtii Blainville, 1845
  • Mastodon platensis Ameghino, 1888
  • Mastodon superbus Ameghino, 1888
  • Mastodon bonaerensis Moreno, 1888 nomen nudum.
  • Stegomastodon platensis Ameghino, 1888
  • Mastodon rectus Ameghino, 1889
  • Mastodon maderianus Ameghino, 1891
  • Notiomastodon ornatus Cabrera, 1929
  • Stegomastodon waringi Holland, 1920
  • Haplomastodon waringi Holland, 1920
  • Haplomastodon chimborazi Proaño, 1922
  • Haplomastodon guayasensis Hoffstetter, 1952
  • Amahuacatherium peruvium Romero-Pittman, 1996

Notiomastodon ranged widely over most of South America, and was a generalist mixed feeder that fed on a variety of plants, with its diet varying according to local conditions. The genus was originally named in 1929, and has been controversial in the course of taxonomic history as it has frequently been confused with or synonymized with forms called Haplomastodon and Stegomastodon. Extensive anatomical studies since the 2010s have shown that Notiomastodon represents the only valid proboscidean in lowland South America, Haplomastodon is synonymous and Stegomastodon is limited to North America, with the only other gomphothere in South America Cuvieronius confined to the northwestern part of the continent.

Notiomastodon became extinct approximately 11,000 years ago at the end of the Pleistocene epoch, simultaneously along with the majority of large (megafaunal) animals native to the Americas as part of the Late Pleistocene extinctions. Specimens have been found associated with human artifacts, suggesting that hunting by recently arrived humans may have played a role in their extinction.

Research history edit

Initial research edit

 
Two gomphothere teeth from Cuvier (1806) with "A" referring to “mastodonte des cordillères” and "B" referring to “mastodonte humboldien

Traditionally, several species of gomphotheres from the late Pleistocene in South America were distinguished. These included, on the one hand, a highland form from the Andes, Cuvieronius, whose classification has not been controversial, and, on the other hand, several forms present in the lowlands, such as Haplomastodon and Notiomastodon. In addition to this is Stegomastodon, which has a North American distribution. The relationships of the three genres with each other on their independence or synonymization have been the subject of continuous discussion. Research on South American proboscideans began with the expeditions of Alexander von Humboldt in the transition from the 18th to the 19th century. From his collection of finds, Georges Cuvier published two teeth in 1806, one of which came from the vicinity of the Imbabura Volcano near Quito in Ecuador, and the other from Concepción in Chile. Cuvier did not give them scientific names that are valid today, but simply called the first in French "Mastodon des cordilléres" and the second "Mastodon humboldien".[2] In 1814, Gotthelf Fischer von Waldheim coined for first time scientific names for the South American proboscideans by renaming Cuvier's "Mastodon des cordilléres" as Mastotherium hyodon and "Mastodon humboldien" as Mastotherium humboldtii.[3] Cuvier himself would refer both species to the now-disused genus "Mastodon" in 1824, but created a new name of species for the Ecuadorian find which is "Mastodon" andium (he placed the Chilean find in "Mastodon" humboldtii).[4] From the present point of view, both teeth do not have specific diagnostic characteristics that allow them to be assigned to a species in particular. In the following years, the number of discovered fossils increased, which led Florentino Ameghino in 1889 to give the first general review of the proboscideans in his extensive work on the extinct mammals of Argentina. In this he listed several species, all of which he considered analogous to Cuvier's "Mastodon". In addition to the species already created by Cuvier and Fischer, Ameghino named some new ones, including "Mastodon" platensis, which he had already established a year earlier and whose description was based on a tusk fragment of an adult individual from San Nicolás de los Arroyos in the province of Buenos Aires, on the shores of the Paraná River, (catalog number MLP 8-63).[5][6] Henry Fairfield Osborn used "Mastodon" humboldtii in 1923 to include it in the new genus Cuvieronius (another genus name he created in 1926, Cordillerion based on "Mastodon" andium, is now considered a synonym of Cuvieronius).[7][8] Forty years after Ameghino, Ángel Cabrera reviewed the proboscidean finds. He named the genus Notiomastodon,[nb 1] "southern mastodon" and assigned to it the new species Notiomastodon ornatus, of which he had found a mandible and another tusk fragment at Playa del Barco near Monte Hermoso also in Buenos Aires province (catalog number MACN 2157). For his part, he assigned Ameghino's "Mastodon" platensis to Stegomastodon and synonymized this species with some of the names previously proposed by Ameghino.[10] The genus Stegomastodon itself dates back to Hans Pohlig in 1912, who referred it to some findings of North American mandible.[11][12]

 
Haplomastodon waringi molar

In the northernmost part of South America, Juan Félix Proaño discovered in 1894 an almost complete skeleton near Quebrada Chalán, in the vicinity of Punín in the Ecuadorian province of Chimborazo. The skeleton he named as the new species "Masthodon" chimborazi in 1922. However, in 1929 it was almost completely lost in a fire at the University of Quito, along with another skeleton recovered at Quebrada Callihuaico near Quito a year earlier. In 1950, Robert Hoffstetter used the right and left humeri of the Quebrada Chalán skeleton to name Haplomastodon, which he considered to be a subgenus of Stegomastodon. As type species he assigned Haplomastodon chimborazi (catalog numbers MICN-UCE-1981 and 1982); in 1995 Giovanni Ficcarelli et al. identified a neotype with catalog number MECN 82 to 84 from Quebrada Pistud in the Ecuadorian province of Carchi, which also included a complete skeleton.[13] Only two years later Hoffstetter raised Haplomastodon to the level of the genus, and the main criterion for distinguishing it from Stegomastodon being the absence of a transverse opening in the atlas (first cervical vertebra). Simultaneously, he distinguished two more subgenera, Haplomastodon and Aleamastodon, which he differentiated from each other by the absence and presence of said openings in the axis, respectively.[14]

Stegomastodon, Notiomastodon and Haplomastodon edit

Since the establishment of Stegomastodon by Pohlig in 1912, Notiomastodon by Cabrera in 1929, and Haplomastodon as an independent genus by Hoffstetter in 1952, there have been multiple discussions about the validity of these three taxa.[15] As early as 1952, Hoffstetter had limited Haplomastodon to northwestern South America, while for the remaining finds such as those from Brazil, he preferred to place them within Stegomastodon. This was reviewed by George Gaylord Simpson and Carlos de Paula Couto in 1957 in their extensive work Mastodonts of Brazil. In this, both authors referred all the Brazilian finds to Haplomastodon. They determined that the other two genera, Notiomastodon and Stegomastodon, were found further to the southeast in the Pampas region. The features of the transverse foramina of the first cervical vertebra, which Hoffstetter applied to distinguish Haplomastodon from Stegomastodon, turned out to be highly variable, even in the same individual, according to the investigations of Simpson and Paula Couto. Therefore, both highlighted as a diagnostic feature of Haplomastodon compared to Notiomastodon and Stegomastodon the much more upwardly curved upper tusks, which do not present any layer of enamel. Simpson and Paula Couto established Haplomastodon waringi as the type species of the genus.[16] The designation of this species refers to "Mastodon" waringi, a taxon coined by William Jacob Holland in 1920. This was based on a highly fragmented remains of a jaw found in Pedra Vermelha in the Brazilian state of Bahia,[17] and because it was named much earlier, Simpson and Paula Couto argued and in accordance with ICZN nomenclature rules, this name has priority over Haplomastodon chimborazi.[16] However, the validity of the designation of this species was frequently criticized, including by Hoffstetter himself, given that the material from Brazil is of little significance due to its poor preservation status. Other authors followed this idea and considered Haplomastodon chimborazi as the valid name (although in 2009 the taxon "Mastodon" waringi was preserved by the ICZN due to its multiple mentions in the scientific literature[18]).[19][14][16]

In 1995, Maria Teresa Alberdi and José Luis Prado synonymized Notiomastodon with Stegomastodon, leaving Stegomastodon platensis as the valid species. In the same study they also synonymized Haplomastodon with Stegomastodon creating the combination Stegomastodon waringi. According to his vision, in his time Stegomastodon was the only gomphotherid genus present in the South American lowlands.[20] However, in 2008 Marco P. Ferretti defended the independent classification of Haplomastodon, but at the same time questioned the separation of Notiomastodon respect to Stegomastodon.[21] Only two years later, he published an exhaustive work focused on the anatomy of the skeleton of Haplomastodon, in which he clearly separated it from Stegomastodon and gave it an intermediate position between it and Cuvieronius in the Andes.[14] Around the same period, Spencer George Lucas and collaborators reached a similar conclusion, especially after examining an almost complete skeleton of Stegomastodon from the Mexican state of Jalisco and determined that this genus should be separated from the South American gomphotheres due to its different musculoskeletal characteristics. They differentiated Notiomastodon from Haplomastodon due to the much more complex chewing surface of their molariforms. According to this, there would be at least two species of gomphotheres living in the lowlands of South America.[22][23][24] Analysis by a team of researchers led by Dimila E. Mothé in the early 2010s gave a different result. After examining abundant material from South American proboscideans, they determined that apart from Cuvieronius, there was only one other genus of proboscidean in South America during the Pleistocene. In their opinion, this animal showed great variability in relation to the morphology of the teeth and skull, mainly in the shape of the tusks and molariform teeth. By following the ICZN priority rules, the first genus name given to this gomphothere, which would be Notiomastodon, remains valid, and with only one species which must be called Notiomastodon platensis.[25][26] This is the classification that has been adopted at various times in the following years, and Mothé and colleagues through extensive morphological analysis of the teeth and skeletons, found that Stegomastodon differed significantly from Notiomastodon and was confined to North America.[27][12][28] Later, Spencer George Lucas also supported this idea.[29] However, some authors as Alberdi & Prado considered this is inconclusive, as they think the North American Stegomastodon material is too scarce and fragmentary to make a definitive statement.[30] However, in a review about the fossil record of gomphotherids in South America published in 2022, both authors agreed to call it Notiomastodon.[31]

Amahuacatherium edit

Especially problematic is the genus Amahuacatherium, which was described in 1996 by Lidia Romero-Pittman based on a fragmented mandible and two isolated molars found in the Madre de Dios region of southeastern Peru. The findings come from the Ipururo Formation, which outcrops along the Madre de Dios River. However, a partial skeleton that had been discovered along with these fossils was lost during a violent flood. As a special feature of Amahuacatherium, the authors highlighted the short mandible with sockets for rudimentary incisors and molars with moderately complex molar masticatory surface pattern. The age of the sedimentary layers of these fossil remains is estimated at 9.5 million years, which corresponds to the late Miocene. This would make Amahuacatherium one of the first mammals to reach South America from the north before the Great American Biotic Interchange, which would only begin about six million years later.[32] Additionally, this find is much older than the gomphotherid evidence considered as the oldest in both Central and South America, dating back to 7 and 2.5 million years, respectively. Only a few years later, several authors expressed doubts about the identity of this genus and its age. For example, their molars were considered to be barely distinguishable from other South American gomphotheres and the presence of alveoli for the lower tusks would be a misinterpretation of the mandibular cavities. Geologic age is also difficult to determine due to the complex stratigraphic conditions at the site.[33][34] Other scientists agreed with this,[29] and further dental analysis revealed no significant differences with Notiomastodon, relative to the other South American finds.[27]

Classification edit

Phylogeny edit

Notiomastodon is a genus of proboscidean in the family Gomphotheriidae. The proboscideans are a relatively successful mammalian order with a long history, which began at the end of the Paleocene. Originally from Africa, they reached a great diversity and expansion in both the Old and the New World in the course of their evolutionary history. Different phases of evolutionary radiation can be distinguished. The gomphotheres belong to the second phase, which began in the lower Miocene. The main characteristic of true gomphotheres is the formation is the formation of three transverse ridges on first and second molars (trilophodont gomphotheres; later forms with four tusks are sometimes known as tetralophodont gomphotheres, but are no longer included in the family). As in extant elephants, gomphotheres had a horizontal tooth replacement pattern which includes them in the modern group Elephantimorpha, compared to their ancestors which lacked this trait.[35] In contrast to vertical tooth replacement which is used for most mammals, in which all permanent teeth are available at the same time, in horizontal replacement the individual molariform teeth erupt one after another in a row. This originated from jaw shortening in the course of proboscidean evolution and is first detectable in Eritreum in the late Oligocene, about 28 million years ago. Still, unlike modern elephants, gomphotheres possess a number of primitive and advanced traits. These include, for example, a generally flatter skull, the formation of upper and lower fenders as well as molariform teeth with fewer ridges and a mamelonated masticatory surface pattern. For this reason, gomphotheres are often placed in their own superfamily, the Gomphotherioidea,[36] which is sister to the modern Elephantoidea. However, they are sometimes considered to be members of the Elephantoidea.[37] In general, the gomphotheres are one of the most successful groups among the proboscideans, which underwent numerous changes in their long existence. These include a substantial increase in their overall size, their tusks and their molar teeth, as well as an increase in their complexity.[38]

Possible relationships of the short-faced gomphotheres according to Mothé et al. 2019[28]
 Gomphotheriidae 

 Gomphotherium

 Gnathabelodon

 Eubelodon

 Brevirostral gomphotheres 

Gomphotheres are first recorded at the end of the Oligocene in Africa and are among the first representatives of the proboscideans to leave that continent after the closure of the Tethys Ocean and the appearance of the land bridge to Eurasia during the transition to the Miocene. Among others, Gomphotherium reached North America about 16 million years ago through the Bering Strait, while in Central America they are recorded as early as the end of the Miocene about 7 million years ago. Gomphotherids reached South America during the Great American Interchange between 3.5 and 2.5 million years ago. South American gomphotheres differ from their relatives in other parts of the world by their relatively short snouts (brevirostral gomphotheres) and high-domed skulls. Additionally, they only had upper tusks. The two known South American genera (Notiomastodon and Cuvieronius) together with their North American relative (Stegomastodon) form a monophyletic group known as the subfamily Cuvieroniinae,[36] which in turn are grouped with Rhynchotherium in a larger group called Rhynchotheriinae.[39] Some researchers have proposed the idea that Cuvieronius is a direct descendant of Rhynchotherium, as evidenced by its highly specialized upper tusks, which feature a spiral enamel band. Notiomastodon could have descended directly from Cuvieronius. The idea is supported by the recognition that unlike adult specimens, juvenile Cuvieronius still had lower tusks, while in Rhynchotherium the mandible has lower tusks at all ages. This idea does not take into account relationships with other short-faced gomphotherids which are mostly unclear. The situation of Sinomastodon, an East Asian form with skeletal characteristics very similar to South American gomphotheres, is problematic. In several phylogenetic studies, Sinomastodon forms a group with Stegomastodon, Cuvieronius and Notiomastodon, for which its presence in Asia is interpreted as a migration from America.[40][41][42][28] Due to its geographic isolation from the American genera, the Chinese scientists usually place it in the independent subfamily Sinomastodontinae.[43] Taking into account the lack of intermediate forms, some authors consider the similarities between Sinomastodon and the South American gomphotheres to be the result of convergent evolution.[29]

As with many mammals known only from fossils, phylogenetic relationships are inferred from skeletal anatomical features. It is only since the 2000s that methods based on molecular genetics and biochemical analyzes have gradually acquired a greater role. In addition to the woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), the Columbian mammoth (Mammuthus columbi) and the straight-tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) which are members of the modern family Elephantidae, the American mastodon (Mammut americanum) of the family Mammutidae is the only non elephantid proboscidean whose molecular data has been sequenced.[44][45][46] Notiomastodon is the only representative of the gomphotheres for which biochemical data are available for comparison. In stark contrast to what was suspected of its close anatomical resemblance to elephantids, a study published in 2019 indicated a closer relationship to mastodonts. It is unclear whether this result can be extrapolated to the rest of the entire group of gomphotherids.[47] On the other hand, a 2021 study based on mitochondrial DNA determined that Notiomastodon is more closely related to modern elephants than to Mammut.[48]

Within this genus, only one species is recognized:[27][12][28]

  • N. platensis (Ameghino, 1888)

Various other forms have been described throughout history, some of them associated with Notiomastodon (N. ornatus), some also with Haplomastodon (H. waringi, H. chimborazi), but are now considered more recent synonyms of N. platensis.[27][12][28]

Evolutionary history edit

The appearance of gomphotherids in South America originates with the Great American Interchange. This began in the Pliocene about 3.5 million years ago, when the Isthmus of Panama closed and a mainland connection between North and South America was established.[49] This exchange occurred in both directions, so that for example ground sloths and glyptodonts arrived in the north, while carnivorous mammals and artiodactyls, as well as proboscideans, among others, mixed with the endemic fauna of the south. The oldest record of proboscideans from South America comes from the middle section of the Uquia Formation in northwestern Argentina. It dates from about 2.5 million years ago,[50] and the findings, which correspond to fragmentary remains of vertebrae, are not attributable to a particular genus.[51][23] It is unknown when Notiomastodon originated. There are no clear documented finds of this genus in Central America. On another hand, Cuvieronius appeared in the region about 7 million years ago.[23] It has been generally assumed that the gomphotherids invaded South America in two independent waves. Cuvieronius used a corridor west of the Andes, while Notiomastodon used an eastern one along the Atlantic coast and lowlands.[20][34][41] It is possible that the emigration to South America was much more complex, since Cuvieronius does not show a restriction to the highlands in Central America, but can also be found there in lowlands.[27] The oldest unambiguous evidence of Notiomastodon in South America is an individual tooth found on the continental shelf off the Brazilian coast in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, which was radiometrically dated to 464,000 years ago and therefore corresponds to the Middle Pleistocene.[52] The vast majority of Notiomastodon finds belong to the late Middle Pleistocene and Late Pleistocene. Its distribution areas in central Chile may have been reached relatively late, either by a route from the Pampas to the low inter-Andean valleys or from the north through the Amazonian lowlands. This may have occurred during the warm periods of the last glacial period, when the Patagonian ice cap was less extensive.[53][54]

Description edit

Size edit

 
Skeleton of Notiomastodon compared to a human

Notiomastodon was a medium to large proboscidean. A complete skeleton was reconstructed a height at the withers of about 2.5 meters and a body weight of 3.15 tons,[14] while other analyzes put the weight of the same individual at more than 4.4 tons.[55] For another individual, the weight calculations vary between 4.1 and 7.6 tons. Since these estimates are based on the dimensions of the limb bones, but these differ proportionally from those of extant elephants, these values can only be considered as an approximation.[56][57] In general, this genus reached approximately the dimensions of current Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). A partial femur head from Yumbo in Colombia, with a circumference of 51.2 cm, suggests that this specimen could have exceeded 7.9 tons in weight;[58] some specimens could reach 3 meters in height.[34]

Skull and teeth edit

Notiomastodon's skull was short and tall, and compared to that of its relative Cuvieronius, it was narrower and shorter. In side view, this was pronounced in a dome, comparable to that of the skulls of today's elephants. However, in the case of modern elephants, the skull has an even more upright orientation and the snout is much shorter. The skulls found have total lengths of 75 to 113 cm, and the height of these, measured from the upper edge to the dental alveoli, is 41 to 76 cm.[59] The upper part of the skull was characterized in frontal view by having two domes, between which is a slight suture along the center of the skull. Both domes were formed by the air-filled chambers of the neurocranium. These were larger than in Gomphotherium. The forehead was broad and flattened for the most part. As in all advanced proboscideans, the nasal bone was short and lay on top of the very wide but flat nasal opening where the trunk connected to the skull. Seen from the side, a groove bounded the nasal bone, which served as an anchor point for the maxillolabial muscle, which acted as a load-bearing arm for the tube. The remaining edges of the nasal opening were formed by the premaxillary bone and individual extensions of it. This bone also formed the alveoli of the upper incisors. These were very long, sometimes up to 59 cm, and they were very wide and their diameter increased towards the front. These only diverged slightly and in side view aligned with the profile of his forehead. This created a wide angle between the orientation of the tusks sockets and the plane of the chewing surface of the molars. Upwards, the alveoli of the incisors were slightly indented. In general, the premaxilla was much more massive than in Gomphotherium, for example. Due to the shortening of the skull at the snout, the eye orbit of Notiomastodon was above the front end of the molar tooth row, which is markedly more forward than in long-snouted gomphotheres such as Gomphotherium or Rhynchotherium. The zygomatic arch was robust and high. Its upper border was rather straight, while the lower one had a slight notch in which the masseter muscle began.[14][28]

 
Notiomastodon skull with almost straight tusks
 
Notiomastodon skull with clearly curved tusks

The jaw reached 77 cm in length, and the area where the teeth were inserted was quite wide and noticeably arched at its lower edge. The height under the molars was more than 15 cm. In contrast, Stegomastodon had a mostly straight lower border. The symphysis was typical of South American gomphotheres as it was relatively short (brevirostral), and in some individuals it pointed downwards and sometimes formed a small prominence, as is the case in Cuvieronius. Downward directed symphysis is considered a diagnostic feature. On the other hand, in Stegomastodon, this prominence was significantly reduced. In some cases, there were as many as three holes known as mental foramina. The ascending ramus of the mandible was massive and rose up to 47 cm. The leading and trailing edges showed a parallel orientation. The frontal process was significantly lower than that of the joint, which was not the case in Stegomastodon. The joint ended transverse to the longitudinal axis of the mandible and was very robust, with a distance between its tips from side to side of 57 cm. Also unlike Stegomastodon, the angular process was less prominent.[14][28]

The teeth consisted of its large tusks and the molariform teeth. In contrast to Eurasian gomphotheres, incisors were only formed in the upper dentition, although small sockets were sometimes formed in the lower jaw. As in all proboscideans, the upper tusks were actually hypertrophied second incisor teeth. These tusks could vary in shape in each individual, so that the tusks could be short and with the tips clearly curved upwards or relatively straight. The enamel layer disappears in adult individuals. This differentiates it from Cuvieronius, whose upper tusks were spiraled with an enamel band that wrapped around them. Additionally, in the latter, lower tusk appear in juveniles.[23][29][42] In general, the tusks of Notiomastodon were very robust. Their lengths could reach more than 88 cm outside the alveoli, and in particularly long specimens it could reach 128 cm measured on the external curvature. The cross section was oval in shape and varied from 11.5 to 16.4 cm in diameter.[60]

The remaining dentition was composed of the premolars and molars as in modern elephants, which erupted one after the other due to the horizontal replacement of the teeth. The chewing surface was generally composed of seven pairs of ridges or lophs, which gave the teeth a bunodont pattern. The first two molars had three pairs of ridges (trilophodonts) that were oriented along the longitudinal axis. The upper three, meanwhile, had four and the lower one more than five pairs of ridges (tetra- and pentalophodont), so these additional ridges were less pronounced. Stegomastodon, on the other hand, had five ridges on the upper teeth and more than eight on the lower ones. The upper and lower third molars (M3/m3) were tetralophodont or pentalophodont; and their wear morphology in the occlusal phase varies from simple to complicated due to the presence of central conules and accessory conules between the main cusps of pre- and postrites,[59] which makes it look like a double trefoil.[61] It is characteristic of this species is a greater proportion of teeth with these very complex trefoil figures and marked ptychodonty in their enamel.

Additionally, two morphotypes can be identified in Notiomastodon in relation to molars, one with two additional central ridges on each half side of the tooth longitudinally and one without. Also very characteristic is the cloverleaf structure on the individual ridges in the weathered state. In general, the dental structure of Notiomastodon was characterized by a basal pattern, which was more similar to that of Cuvieronius. However, due to the different morphotypes, it more closely approximated the complex pattern of the chewing surface of Stegomastodon, which was formed mainly by the formation of additional lateral ridges. The last chewing molar would have had between 35 and 82 ridges in Notiomastodon, 33 and 60 in Cuvieronius, and 57 and 104 in Stegomastodon. In total, the chewing surface of the last molar in Notiomastodon was 57 to 160 cm² (12 to 32 cm² per lophid) and in Stegomastodon 72 to 205 cm² (12 to 34 cm² per lophid). Thus the teeth were typical for a relatively large proboscidean. The lower last molar was 21.6 cm long, and the upper last molar was over 19.3 cm.[14][27][28]

Postcranial skeleton edit

In terms of the shape of its postcranial skeleton, Notiomastodon was for the most part similar to living elephants, but generally stockier. The humerus was massive and 78 to 87 cm long. This widened towards the ends of the joints, the joint head was wide and clearly rounded. However, only some prominences showed rough areas on the axis. The ulna was rather gracile, with a total length of 75 to 80 cm but almost as large as the humerus. Due to the large olecranon, the superior joint extension, the length of the bone was only 57 to 64 cm. As a result, the ulna was functionally much shorter than the humerus, which is characteristic of South American gomphotheres compared to their Eurasian relatives. The physiological length of the ulna also corresponded to the approximate total length of the radius. The femur was 96 to 100 cm long and consisted of a nearly cylindrical shaft, slightly flattened only at the front and back. The spherically shaped femoral head towered over the other prominence, but sat on a shorter neck than that of Cuvieronius.[24] At the lower end, the prominence internal was greater than the external. The fibula, which was up to 70 cm long, was characterized by a prismatic axis and a higher end at the lower joint. The hands and feet had five fingers, as in modern elephants. The limbs of Notiomastodon, like those of other short-jawed gomphotheres, were generally more massive and robust than in extant elephants. It is also very curious that the length of the upper and lower sections of the legs of Notiomastodon were more balanced with each other than those of modern elephants and Stegomastodon. In the case of the latter, the length of the femur exceeded that of the tibia by almost twice. Another important difference can be seen in the ratio of the front legs compared to the hind legs. These have an average of 82% for Notiomastodon and 93% for Stegomastodon, which means that the hind legs of the latter were significantly shorter than the front ones. In Stegomastodon, the ratio of the upper and lower sections of its legs as well as the fore and hind legs to each other gave it a better adaptation for open environments and long strides and a greater degree of graviportality, than in the case of Notiomastodon. This is also reflected in the build of the feet, which were slimmer and taller than in Stegomastodon.[14][24][28]

Paleobiology edit

Diet edit

The bunodont chewing pattern of gomphotheres is usually associated with a generalist diet, which suggests a preference for mixed feeding on both grass and foliage. This has also been delineated in studies on traces of wear and scratches on Notiomastodon molars from the Upper Pleistocene site of Aguas de Araxin Island in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. The teeth exhibit a high number of nicks and scratches, which is consistent with similar abrasion marks on the teeth of extant ungulates that consume both hard and soft plants. Through some plant residues from the teeth, it was possible to identify that the basis of their diet were conifers, knotweed plants and polypodiacean ferns.[62] In contrast, isotope analyzes of other areas of South America paint a more complex picture. This results in a predominance of C4 plants in the dietary spectrum of Upper Pleistocene specimens from northern and central South America such as Ecuador or the Gran Chaco, while those from southern regions such as the Pampas fed mostly on C3 plants.[63][34] In the intermediate areas, a mixed diet could be reconstructed based on the isotopes.[64] Specimens from Mato Grosso indicate N. platensis had a generalised browsing diet in that region,[65] with N. platensis from Paraíba similarly being identified as mixed feeders during isotopic analysis.[66] The dietary flexibility of N. platensis was particularly apparent in the fossil finds from the Quequen Grande site in the Argentine province of Buenos Aires. Isotope studies of finds there from the Middle Pleistocene indicate a relatively mixed diet, while others from the Late Pleistocene suggest that it specialized in consuming grasses.[67][62] Remains near Santiago del Estero from the Last Glacial Maximum show a diet exclusively composed of C4 plants.[59] Notiomastodon may have been an opportunistic herbivore adapting its habits food to local conditions, similar to what has been documented in living elephants. Especially during the course of the Late Pleistocene, when climatic changes from the last glacial period in the Southern Cone caused forests to shrink and be replaced by grassland environments, this was an important adaptive phenomenon.[62]

Palaeopathologies edit

Pathological vertebrae belonging to N. platensis have been found in Late Pleistocene deposits at Anolaima, Cundinamarca, Colombia. Specifically, they consist of deep bone lesions on the spinous process, osteoarthritic lesions, and asymmetrical articulations of the zygaphophyses, which were caused by nutrient deficiencies caused by environmental perturbations and likely exacerbated by excessive biomechanical stress on the bones as the proboscidean moved through the uneven, upland terrain of the region.[68] Late Pleistocene N. platensis fossils from Águas de Araxá in Brazil have been shown to exhibit Schmorl's node, osteoarthritis, and osteomyelitis.[69]

Population structure and reproduction edit

Like modern elephants, Notiomastodon is suggested to have lived in social family groups.[70] The Águas de Araxá site is significant as it has one of the largest collections of Notiomastodon fossils. These are interpreted as the remains of a local population that was wiped out by a catastrophic event. According to dental studies, the group consisted of 14.9% juveniles (0 to 12 years of age), 23.0% near-adult individuals (13 to 24 years of age), and 62.1% of adult individuals (25 years of age and older). This last group can be broken down into 27.7% of middle-aged animals (25 to 36 years) and 17.2% of old (37 to 48 years) and senile (49 to 60 years) specimens. The large proportion of individuals over 37 years of age is notable, suggesting that there was a high survival rate in this group.[70] Some of the adult animals suffered from pathological changes in their bones from Schmorl's nodes, osteomyelitis and osteoarthritis. These are evident in the vertebrae and long bones among others, and may be due to individual diseases. Osteomyelitis has also been diagnosed in Notiomastodon finds from other sites.[71][72] The remains found at Águas de Araxá must have been exposed for a long time after their deposit. Not only did this allow dermestid beetles to bore into the bones, but there is also evidence of bite marks from large canids such as Protocyon. The gnawed bone marks are the result of carrion consumption, possibly caused by a period of food scarcity. Due to its size, Notiomastodon would hardly have natural enemies in life.[73][74] Traces left by a large predator were also found on a skeleton from the Pilauco site in southern Chile.[75]

A study of the tusk of a male animal from the Santiago de Chile basin allowed the analysis of the last four years of its life by means of isotope and thin-section analyses. During this period, tusk appositional thickness increased by about 10 mm per year. This growth rate was found to be cyclical, slowing briefly in early summer with reduced tooth growth. The reduced growth is interpreted to correspond to the musth stage, a hormone-controlled phase that occurs annually in modern elephants and is characterized by a huge increase in testosterone. During the musth, males become extremely aggressive and battles for mating rights can ensue, sometimes with fatal consequences. An external feature is the increased flow of a secretion from the temporal gland. In the case of the animal from Santiago de Chile, growth abnormalities were partially linked to a change in diet. The individual's death took place relatively abruptly in early autumn.[76]

Ichnofossils edit

Proboscidean footprint fossils documented in South America are relatively rare. One of the most important sites is Pehuen Có near Bahía Blanca in the Argentine province of Buenos Aires. The site was discovered in 1986 and covers an area of 1.5 km2. The numerous footprints were printed on a substrate that was originally soft. It has been possible to identify several ichnogenera produced by mammals, such as Megalamaichnum (corresponding to the camelid Hemiauchenia), Eumacrauchenichnus (from the native ungulate Macrauchenia), Glyptodontichnus (produced by the armadillo relative Glyptodon) or Neomegatherichnum (the giant sloth Megatherium), and additionally, footprints of birds such as Aramayoichnus, which would represent a rhea, have also been found. Due to the diversity of footprints, Pehuen Có is one of the most important sites with ichnofossils in the world. It has been dated to about 12,000 years before present. Proboscidean tracks, however, are not common there. The main trail comprises seven footprints over a length of 4.4 meters. The individual prints have an oval shape with lengths from 23 to 27 cm and widths from 23 to 30 cm. In general, these have a depth of 8 cm below the surface. In some cases, small prominences are found on the front edge, which are interpreted as markings of three to five fingers, comparable to the nail-shaped structures of living elephants. The largest frontal footprints have five, and those of the smallest in some cases only have three of those prominences. In the same way they have a flattened shape that was generated by the fat pads of the legs as it happens in modern elephants. The footprints of Pehuen Có are assigned to the ichnogenus Proboscipeda, whose synonym is Stegomastodonichnum. The size of these footprints suggests that they were made by animals the size of the Asian elephant, roughly matching Notiomastodon.[77]

Distribution edit

 
Restoration of Notiomastodon and other mammals of Late Pleistocene Chile

The geographic range of Notiomastodon extended through northern, eastern, and southern South America, with its southernmost distribution limit between the latitudes of 37 and 38 south.[78][34] The specimens of this proboscidean are found mostly in the lowlands, while in the mountainous areas of the Andes it was largely absent, with Cuvieronius present in these regions instead. It is possible that both proboscideans avoided direct competition due to the strict definition of habitat, since both had a similar ecological spectrum.[27] Modern elephants also generally avoiding higher elevation areas due to the associated energy cost of traversing them. In Colombia, it is suggested that Notiomastodon migrated through inter-Andean valleys.[79] Many fossils of Notiomastodon have been found in the Pampas region and the Gran Chaco in Argentina. These include deposits such as Santa Clara del Mar in the province of Buenos Aires and the Río Dulce in the province of Santiago del Estero.[80][59] Remains have also been documented from southern Bolivia, which are still found in the Gran Chaco area. Otherwise, most of the finds from that area correspond to Cuvieronius.[81] The southernmost evidence of this proboscidean comes from isolated remains from Chile,[53][54] with the southernmost remains in the country being from Chiloé Island.[82] There are several findings in Uruguay[83][84] and Paraguay.[10][16]

Other finds are known from Brazil, where Notiomastodon was widely distributed from the open areas of the southern Chaco to the current Amazon basin, and fossil remains have been found on the continental shelf of the Atlantic coast.[52][85][86] One of the sites most important, however, is the state of Minas Gerais. At least 47 Notiomastodon individuals were found there. These were preserved in a sinkhole with coarse-grained sediments.[70][62] The genus has also been reported from Peru,[33] Ecuador,[19] Colombia,[87][88] and Venezuela.[89] Is interesting to note that some of the localities with Notiomastodon remains in these countries, as Nemocón in Colombia, Punín, in Ecuador and Leclishpampa, Lima in Peru, are located in high mountain deposits, meanwhile that in La Huaca in Peru, a lowland environment, has been found remains of Cuvieronius, in contrast with the traditional division between lowland/mountain habitats for these animals.[27] In Ecuador, the Quebrada Pistud site near Bolívar in the province of Carchi is noteworthy. This contained about 160 Notiomastodon fossil remains housed over several dozen square meters in flood deposits. These represented at least seven specimens, and a single skeleton consisted of 68 bone elements scattered over an area of 5 m2.[19][14] Another important site there is the natural asphalt pit of Tanque Loma on the Santa Elena peninsula, which had over 1000 individual bones. About 660 of them were examined in detail, and about 11% can be placed in Notiomastodon. These correspond to 3 individuals, including two juveniles.[90][91]


Paleoecology edit

 
Notiomastodon (upper right) and contemporary animals in Brazil

Large, mesoherbivorous mammals in the Brazilian Intertropical Region were widespread and diverse, including the cow-like toxodontids Toxodon platensis and Piauhytherium, the macraucheniid litoptern Xenorhinotherium and equids such as Hippidion principale and Equus neogaeus. Toxodontids were large mixed feeders as well and lived in forested areas, while the equids were nearly entirely grazers. Xenarthran fossils are present in the area as well from several different families, like the giant megatheriid ground sloth Eremotherium, the fellow scelidotheriid Valgipes, the mylodontids Glossotherium, Ocnotherium, and Mylodonopsis. Smaller ground sloths such as the megalonychids Ahytherium and Australonyx and the nothrotheriid Nothrotherium have also been found in the area. Eremotherium was a generalist, while Nothrotherium was a specialist for trees in low density forests, and Valgipes was an intermediate of the two that lived in arboreal savannahs. Glyptodonts and cingulates like the grazing glyptodonts Glyptotherium and Panochthus and the omnivorous pampatheres Pampatherium and Holmesina were present in the open grasslands. Carnivores included some of the largest known mammalian land carnivores, like the giant felid Smilodon populator and the bear Arctotherium wingei.[92][93] Several extant taxa are also known from the BIR, like guanacos, giant anteaters, collared peccaries, and striped hog-nosed skunks.[94] Two crab-eating types of extant mammals are also known from the BIR, the crab-eating raccoon and the crab-eating fox, indicating that crabs were also present in the region.[94] The environment of the BIR is unclear, as there were both several species that were grazers, but the precede of the arboreal fossil monkeys Protopithecus and Caipora in the area causes confusion over the area’s paleoenvironment. Most of Brazil was thought to have been covered in open tropical cerrado vegetation during the Late Pleistocene, but if Protopithecus and Caipora were arboreal, their presence suggests that the region may have supported a dense closed forest during the Late Pleistocene.[94][95] It is possible that the region alternated between dry open savannah and closed wet forest throughout the climate change of the Late Pleistocene.[96]

Extinction edit

During the last few thousand years of its existence, Notiomastodon was contemporary with the first human groups of hunter-gatherers that arrived in South America. Notiomastodon disappeared simultaneously with most other megafauna (large animals) in the Americas at the end of the Pleistocene as part of the Late Pleistocene extinctions, the exact causes of which are the subject of long-standing controversy in the scientific literature. By the time of the extinct It is not clear if the Paleo-Indians played a decisive role in the extinction of Notiomastodon through active hunting. In total, there are less than a dozen sites in South America where Notiomastodon is associated with human presence. These are scattered throughout the north and southwest of South America, while in the entire Pampas region there are no known finds with the joint presence of proboscideans and humans. Therefore, there is little actual evidence of active hunting. Among the most significant finds are those made in Taima Taima in the coastal area of north-central Venezuela. There, an El Jobo-type projectile point was found in a Notiomastodon skeleton, and this site also contains remains of the ground sloth Glossotherium. The age of these finds dates back to 13,000 years ago.[97][98] Some of the finds at Monte Verde in central Chile, are also associated with human hunting. The pieces found there, however, are very fragmented and frequently limited to tusks and molars as well as individual elements of the skeleton,[53][54] which is why some authors suppose that the remains of proboscideans come from corpses located in another location and were later consumed there.[99] In 2019, a description of a young specimen from Brazil was published which had an artifact lodged into its skull, providing clear evidence that this individual was hunted.[100]

Some very recent finds of Notiomastodon are 11,740 to 11,100 years old and were obtained from Quereo in Chile, from Itaituba on the Tapajós River in central Brazil, and from Tibitó in Colombia, the latter being associated with three dozen tools of stone.[87][88] Even more recent is a skull from Taguatagua in Chile, estimated to be 10,300 years before present.[54] On the other hand, some scientists suggest a review of individual sites with finds dated to the early Holocene, as in Quebrada Ñuagapua in Bolivia.[101][102] A find of a gomphothere, probably Notiomastodon in Totumo, Colombia was dated as recently as 6,060 ± 60 years before present,[58] however, given how much later this date is than other finds of Notiomastodon, this date should be considered with caution without other corroboration.[103] The climatic models projected for South America during the latter Pleistocene and the early Holocene suggests that the habitats were more humid and with more presence of forests, which could reduce the suitable habitat for Notiomastodon and Equus neogeus, another species commonly found in open habitats, along with the subsequent changes in the vegetation could affect to these large mammals.[104]

Notes edit

  1. ^ From the Ancient Greek: νότιος (nótios, "southern")[9]

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notiomastodon, extinct, genus, gomphothere, proboscidean, related, modern, elephants, endemic, south, america, from, pleistocene, beginning, holocene, specimens, reached, size, similar, that, modern, asian, elephant, like, other, brevirostrine, gomphotheres, s. Notiomastodon is an extinct genus of gomphothere proboscidean related to modern elephants endemic to South America from the Pleistocene to the beginning of the Holocene 1 Notiomastodon specimens reached a size similar to that of the modern Asian elephant Like other brevirostrine gomphotheres such as Cuvieronius and Stegomastodon Notiomastodon had a shortened lower jaw and lacked lower tusks unlike more primitive gomphotheres like Gomphotherium NotiomastodonTemporal range late Early Pleistocene Early Holocene Possible Earliest Pleistocene record 0 8 0 011 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Skeleton at the Centro Cultural del Bicentenario de Santiago del Estero Skull at the Natural History Museum London Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Proboscidea Family Gomphotheriidae Genus NotiomastodonCabrera 1929 Species N platensis Binomial name Notiomastodon platensis Ameghino 1888 originally Mastodon Synonyms Genus synonymy Haplomastodon Hoffstetter 1950 Amahuacatherium Romero Pittman 1996 Species synonymy List Elephas humboldtii Blainville 1845Mastodon platensis Ameghino 1888Mastodon superbus Ameghino 1888Mastodon bonaerensis Moreno 1888 nomen nudum Stegomastodon platensis Ameghino 1888Mastodon rectus Ameghino 1889Mastodon maderianus Ameghino 1891Notiomastodon ornatus Cabrera 1929Stegomastodon waringi Holland 1920Haplomastodon waringi Holland 1920Haplomastodon chimborazi Proano 1922Haplomastodon guayasensis Hoffstetter 1952Amahuacatherium peruvium Romero Pittman 1996 Notiomastodon ranged widely over most of South America and was a generalist mixed feeder that fed on a variety of plants with its diet varying according to local conditions The genus was originally named in 1929 and has been controversial in the course of taxonomic history as it has frequently been confused with or synonymized with forms called Haplomastodon and Stegomastodon Extensive anatomical studies since the 2010s have shown that Notiomastodon represents the only valid proboscidean in lowland South America Haplomastodon is synonymous and Stegomastodon is limited to North America with the only other gomphothere in South America Cuvieronius confined to the northwestern part of the continent Notiomastodon became extinct approximately 11 000 years ago at the end of the Pleistocene epoch simultaneously along with the majority of large megafaunal animals native to the Americas as part of the Late Pleistocene extinctions Specimens have been found associated with human artifacts suggesting that hunting by recently arrived humans may have played a role in their extinction Contents 1 Research history 1 1 Initial research 1 2 Stegomastodon Notiomastodon and Haplomastodon 1 3 Amahuacatherium 2 Classification 2 1 Phylogeny 2 2 Evolutionary history 3 Description 3 1 Size 3 2 Skull and teeth 3 3 Postcranial skeleton 4 Paleobiology 4 1 Diet 4 2 Palaeopathologies 4 3 Population structure and reproduction 4 4 Ichnofossils 5 Distribution 6 Paleoecology 7 Extinction 8 Notes 9 ReferencesResearch history editInitial research edit nbsp Two gomphothere teeth from Cuvier 1806 with A referring to mastodonte des cordilleres and B referring to mastodonte humboldien Traditionally several species of gomphotheres from the late Pleistocene in South America were distinguished These included on the one hand a highland form from the Andes Cuvieronius whose classification has not been controversial and on the other hand several forms present in the lowlands such as Haplomastodon and Notiomastodon In addition to this is Stegomastodon which has a North American distribution The relationships of the three genres with each other on their independence or synonymization have been the subject of continuous discussion Research on South American proboscideans began with the expeditions of Alexander von Humboldt in the transition from the 18th to the 19th century From his collection of finds Georges Cuvier published two teeth in 1806 one of which came from the vicinity of the Imbabura Volcano near Quito in Ecuador and the other from Concepcion in Chile Cuvier did not give them scientific names that are valid today but simply called the first in French Mastodon des cordilleres and the second Mastodon humboldien 2 In 1814 Gotthelf Fischer von Waldheim coined for first time scientific names for the South American proboscideans by renaming Cuvier s Mastodon des cordilleres as Mastotherium hyodon and Mastodon humboldien as Mastotherium humboldtii 3 Cuvier himself would refer both species to the now disused genus Mastodon in 1824 but created a new name of species for the Ecuadorian find which is Mastodon andium he placed the Chilean find in Mastodon humboldtii 4 From the present point of view both teeth do not have specific diagnostic characteristics that allow them to be assigned to a species in particular In the following years the number of discovered fossils increased which led Florentino Ameghino in 1889 to give the first general review of the proboscideans in his extensive work on the extinct mammals of Argentina In this he listed several species all of which he considered analogous to Cuvier s Mastodon In addition to the species already created by Cuvier and Fischer Ameghino named some new ones including Mastodon platensis which he had already established a year earlier and whose description was based on a tusk fragment of an adult individual from San Nicolas de los Arroyos in the province of Buenos Aires on the shores of the Parana River catalog number MLP 8 63 5 6 Henry Fairfield Osborn used Mastodon humboldtii in 1923 to include it in the new genus Cuvieronius another genus name he created in 1926 Cordillerion based on Mastodon andium is now considered a synonym of Cuvieronius 7 8 Forty years after Ameghino Angel Cabrera reviewed the proboscidean finds He named the genus Notiomastodon nb 1 southern mastodon and assigned to it the new species Notiomastodon ornatus of which he had found a mandible and another tusk fragment at Playa del Barco near Monte Hermoso also in Buenos Aires province catalog number MACN 2157 For his part he assigned Ameghino s Mastodon platensis to Stegomastodon and synonymized this species with some of the names previously proposed by Ameghino 10 The genus Stegomastodon itself dates back to Hans Pohlig in 1912 who referred it to some findings of North American mandible 11 12 nbsp Haplomastodon waringi molar In the northernmost part of South America Juan Felix Proano discovered in 1894 an almost complete skeleton near Quebrada Chalan in the vicinity of Punin in the Ecuadorian province of Chimborazo The skeleton he named as the new species Masthodon chimborazi in 1922 However in 1929 it was almost completely lost in a fire at the University of Quito along with another skeleton recovered at Quebrada Callihuaico near Quito a year earlier In 1950 Robert Hoffstetter used the right and left humeri of the Quebrada Chalan skeleton to name Haplomastodon which he considered to be a subgenus of Stegomastodon As type species he assigned Haplomastodon chimborazi catalog numbers MICN UCE 1981 and 1982 in 1995 Giovanni Ficcarelli et al identified a neotype with catalog number MECN 82 to 84 from Quebrada Pistud in the Ecuadorian province of Carchi which also included a complete skeleton 13 Only two years later Hoffstetter raised Haplomastodon to the level of the genus and the main criterion for distinguishing it from Stegomastodon being the absence of a transverse opening in the atlas first cervical vertebra Simultaneously he distinguished two more subgenera Haplomastodon and Aleamastodon which he differentiated from each other by the absence and presence of said openings in the axis respectively 14 Stegomastodon Notiomastodon and Haplomastodon edit Since the establishment of Stegomastodon by Pohlig in 1912 Notiomastodon by Cabrera in 1929 and Haplomastodon as an independent genus by Hoffstetter in 1952 there have been multiple discussions about the validity of these three taxa 15 As early as 1952 Hoffstetter had limited Haplomastodon to northwestern South America while for the remaining finds such as those from Brazil he preferred to place them within Stegomastodon This was reviewed by George Gaylord Simpson and Carlos de Paula Couto in 1957 in their extensive work Mastodonts of Brazil In this both authors referred all the Brazilian finds to Haplomastodon They determined that the other two genera Notiomastodon and Stegomastodon were found further to the southeast in the Pampas region The features of the transverse foramina of the first cervical vertebra which Hoffstetter applied to distinguish Haplomastodon from Stegomastodon turned out to be highly variable even in the same individual according to the investigations of Simpson and Paula Couto Therefore both highlighted as a diagnostic feature of Haplomastodon compared to Notiomastodon and Stegomastodon the much more upwardly curved upper tusks which do not present any layer of enamel Simpson and Paula Couto established Haplomastodon waringi as the type species of the genus 16 The designation of this species refers to Mastodon waringi a taxon coined by William Jacob Holland in 1920 This was based on a highly fragmented remains of a jaw found in Pedra Vermelha in the Brazilian state of Bahia 17 and because it was named much earlier Simpson and Paula Couto argued and in accordance with ICZN nomenclature rules this name has priority over Haplomastodon chimborazi 16 However the validity of the designation of this species was frequently criticized including by Hoffstetter himself given that the material from Brazil is of little significance due to its poor preservation status Other authors followed this idea and considered Haplomastodon chimborazi as the valid name although in 2009 the taxon Mastodon waringi was preserved by the ICZN due to its multiple mentions in the scientific literature 18 19 14 16 In 1995 Maria Teresa Alberdi and Jose Luis Prado synonymized Notiomastodon with Stegomastodon leaving Stegomastodon platensis as the valid species In the same study they also synonymized Haplomastodon with Stegomastodon creating the combination Stegomastodon waringi According to his vision in his time Stegomastodon was the only gomphotherid genus present in the South American lowlands 20 However in 2008 Marco P Ferretti defended the independent classification of Haplomastodon but at the same time questioned the separation of Notiomastodon respect to Stegomastodon 21 Only two years later he published an exhaustive work focused on the anatomy of the skeleton of Haplomastodon in which he clearly separated it from Stegomastodon and gave it an intermediate position between it and Cuvieronius in the Andes 14 Around the same period Spencer George Lucas and collaborators reached a similar conclusion especially after examining an almost complete skeleton of Stegomastodon from the Mexican state of Jalisco and determined that this genus should be separated from the South American gomphotheres due to its different musculoskeletal characteristics They differentiated Notiomastodon from Haplomastodon due to the much more complex chewing surface of their molariforms According to this there would be at least two species of gomphotheres living in the lowlands of South America 22 23 24 Analysis by a team of researchers led by Dimila E Mothe in the early 2010s gave a different result After examining abundant material from South American proboscideans they determined that apart from Cuvieronius there was only one other genus of proboscidean in South America during the Pleistocene In their opinion this animal showed great variability in relation to the morphology of the teeth and skull mainly in the shape of the tusks and molariform teeth By following the ICZN priority rules the first genus name given to this gomphothere which would be Notiomastodon remains valid and with only one species which must be called Notiomastodon platensis 25 26 This is the classification that has been adopted at various times in the following years and Mothe and colleagues through extensive morphological analysis of the teeth and skeletons found that Stegomastodon differed significantly from Notiomastodon and was confined to North America 27 12 28 Later Spencer George Lucas also supported this idea 29 However some authors as Alberdi amp Prado considered this is inconclusive as they think the North American Stegomastodon material is too scarce and fragmentary to make a definitive statement 30 However in a review about the fossil record of gomphotherids in South America published in 2022 both authors agreed to call it Notiomastodon 31 Amahuacatherium edit Especially problematic is the genus Amahuacatherium which was described in 1996 by Lidia Romero Pittman based on a fragmented mandible and two isolated molars found in the Madre de Dios region of southeastern Peru The findings come from the Ipururo Formation which outcrops along the Madre de Dios River However a partial skeleton that had been discovered along with these fossils was lost during a violent flood As a special feature of Amahuacatherium the authors highlighted the short mandible with sockets for rudimentary incisors and molars with moderately complex molar masticatory surface pattern The age of the sedimentary layers of these fossil remains is estimated at 9 5 million years which corresponds to the late Miocene This would make Amahuacatherium one of the first mammals to reach South America from the north before the Great American Biotic Interchange which would only begin about six million years later 32 Additionally this find is much older than the gomphotherid evidence considered as the oldest in both Central and South America dating back to 7 and 2 5 million years respectively Only a few years later several authors expressed doubts about the identity of this genus and its age For example their molars were considered to be barely distinguishable from other South American gomphotheres and the presence of alveoli for the lower tusks would be a misinterpretation of the mandibular cavities Geologic age is also difficult to determine due to the complex stratigraphic conditions at the site 33 34 Other scientists agreed with this 29 and further dental analysis revealed no significant differences with Notiomastodon relative to the other South American finds 27 Classification editPhylogeny edit Notiomastodon is a genus of proboscidean in the family Gomphotheriidae The proboscideans are a relatively successful mammalian order with a long history which began at the end of the Paleocene Originally from Africa they reached a great diversity and expansion in both the Old and the New World in the course of their evolutionary history Different phases of evolutionary radiation can be distinguished The gomphotheres belong to the second phase which began in the lower Miocene The main characteristic of true gomphotheres is the formation is the formation of three transverse ridges on first and second molars trilophodont gomphotheres later forms with four tusks are sometimes known as tetralophodont gomphotheres but are no longer included in the family As in extant elephants gomphotheres had a horizontal tooth replacement pattern which includes them in the modern group Elephantimorpha compared to their ancestors which lacked this trait 35 In contrast to vertical tooth replacement which is used for most mammals in which all permanent teeth are available at the same time in horizontal replacement the individual molariform teeth erupt one after another in a row This originated from jaw shortening in the course of proboscidean evolution and is first detectable in Eritreum in the late Oligocene about 28 million years ago Still unlike modern elephants gomphotheres possess a number of primitive and advanced traits These include for example a generally flatter skull the formation of upper and lower fenders as well as molariform teeth with fewer ridges and a mamelonated masticatory surface pattern For this reason gomphotheres are often placed in their own superfamily the Gomphotherioidea 36 which is sister to the modern Elephantoidea However they are sometimes considered to be members of the Elephantoidea 37 In general the gomphotheres are one of the most successful groups among the proboscideans which underwent numerous changes in their long existence These include a substantial increase in their overall size their tusks and their molar teeth as well as an increase in their complexity 38 Possible relationships of the short faced gomphotheres according to Mothe et al 2019 28 Gomphotheriidae Gomphotherium Gnathabelodon Eubelodon Brevirostral gomphotheres Stegomastodon Sinomastodon Notiomastodon Rhynchotherium Cuvieronius Gomphotheres are first recorded at the end of the Oligocene in Africa and are among the first representatives of the proboscideans to leave that continent after the closure of the Tethys Ocean and the appearance of the land bridge to Eurasia during the transition to the Miocene Among others Gomphotherium reached North America about 16 million years ago through the Bering Strait while in Central America they are recorded as early as the end of the Miocene about 7 million years ago Gomphotherids reached South America during the Great American Interchange between 3 5 and 2 5 million years ago South American gomphotheres differ from their relatives in other parts of the world by their relatively short snouts brevirostral gomphotheres and high domed skulls Additionally they only had upper tusks The two known South American genera Notiomastodon and Cuvieronius together with their North American relative Stegomastodon form a monophyletic group known as the subfamily Cuvieroniinae 36 which in turn are grouped with Rhynchotherium in a larger group called Rhynchotheriinae 39 Some researchers have proposed the idea that Cuvieronius is a direct descendant of Rhynchotherium as evidenced by its highly specialized upper tusks which feature a spiral enamel band Notiomastodon could have descended directly from Cuvieronius The idea is supported by the recognition that unlike adult specimens juvenile Cuvieronius still had lower tusks while in Rhynchotherium the mandible has lower tusks at all ages This idea does not take into account relationships with other short faced gomphotherids which are mostly unclear The situation of Sinomastodon an East Asian form with skeletal characteristics very similar to South American gomphotheres is problematic In several phylogenetic studies Sinomastodon forms a group with Stegomastodon Cuvieronius and Notiomastodon for which its presence in Asia is interpreted as a migration from America 40 41 42 28 Due to its geographic isolation from the American genera the Chinese scientists usually place it in the independent subfamily Sinomastodontinae 43 Taking into account the lack of intermediate forms some authors consider the similarities between Sinomastodon and the South American gomphotheres to be the result of convergent evolution 29 As with many mammals known only from fossils phylogenetic relationships are inferred from skeletal anatomical features It is only since the 2000s that methods based on molecular genetics and biochemical analyzes have gradually acquired a greater role In addition to the woolly mammoth Mammuthus primigenius the Columbian mammoth Mammuthus columbi and the straight tusked elephant Palaeoloxodon antiquus which are members of the modern family Elephantidae the American mastodon Mammut americanum of the family Mammutidae is the only non elephantid proboscidean whose molecular data has been sequenced 44 45 46 Notiomastodon is the only representative of the gomphotheres for which biochemical data are available for comparison In stark contrast to what was suspected of its close anatomical resemblance to elephantids a study published in 2019 indicated a closer relationship to mastodonts It is unclear whether this result can be extrapolated to the rest of the entire group of gomphotherids 47 On the other hand a 2021 study based on mitochondrial DNA determined that Notiomastodon is more closely related to modern elephants than to Mammut 48 Within this genus only one species is recognized 27 12 28 N platensis Ameghino 1888 Various other forms have been described throughout history some of them associated with Notiomastodon N ornatus some also with Haplomastodon H waringi H chimborazi but are now considered more recent synonyms of N platensis 27 12 28 Evolutionary history edit The appearance of gomphotherids in South America originates with the Great American Interchange This began in the Pliocene about 3 5 million years ago when the Isthmus of Panama closed and a mainland connection between North and South America was established 49 This exchange occurred in both directions so that for example ground sloths and glyptodonts arrived in the north while carnivorous mammals and artiodactyls as well as proboscideans among others mixed with the endemic fauna of the south The oldest record of proboscideans from South America comes from the middle section of the Uquia Formation in northwestern Argentina It dates from about 2 5 million years ago 50 and the findings which correspond to fragmentary remains of vertebrae are not attributable to a particular genus 51 23 It is unknown when Notiomastodon originated There are no clear documented finds of this genus in Central America On another hand Cuvieronius appeared in the region about 7 million years ago 23 It has been generally assumed that the gomphotherids invaded South America in two independent waves Cuvieronius used a corridor west of the Andes while Notiomastodon used an eastern one along the Atlantic coast and lowlands 20 34 41 It is possible that the emigration to South America was much more complex since Cuvieronius does not show a restriction to the highlands in Central America but can also be found there in lowlands 27 The oldest unambiguous evidence of Notiomastodon in South America is an individual tooth found on the continental shelf off the Brazilian coast in the state of Rio Grande do Sul which was radiometrically dated to 464 000 years ago and therefore corresponds to the Middle Pleistocene 52 The vast majority of Notiomastodon finds belong to the late Middle Pleistocene and Late Pleistocene Its distribution areas in central Chile may have been reached relatively late either by a route from the Pampas to the low inter Andean valleys or from the north through the Amazonian lowlands This may have occurred during the warm periods of the last glacial period when the Patagonian ice cap was less extensive 53 54 Description editSize edit nbsp Skeleton of Notiomastodon compared to a human Notiomastodon was a medium to large proboscidean A complete skeleton was reconstructed a height at the withers of about 2 5 meters and a body weight of 3 15 tons 14 while other analyzes put the weight of the same individual at more than 4 4 tons 55 For another individual the weight calculations vary between 4 1 and 7 6 tons Since these estimates are based on the dimensions of the limb bones but these differ proportionally from those of extant elephants these values can only be considered as an approximation 56 57 In general this genus reached approximately the dimensions of current Asian elephants Elephas maximus A partial femur head from Yumbo in Colombia with a circumference of 51 2 cm suggests that this specimen could have exceeded 7 9 tons in weight 58 some specimens could reach 3 meters in height 34 Skull and teeth edit Notiomastodon s skull was short and tall and compared to that of its relative Cuvieronius it was narrower and shorter In side view this was pronounced in a dome comparable to that of the skulls of today s elephants However in the case of modern elephants the skull has an even more upright orientation and the snout is much shorter The skulls found have total lengths of 75 to 113 cm and the height of these measured from the upper edge to the dental alveoli is 41 to 76 cm 59 The upper part of the skull was characterized in frontal view by having two domes between which is a slight suture along the center of the skull Both domes were formed by the air filled chambers of the neurocranium These were larger than in Gomphotherium The forehead was broad and flattened for the most part As in all advanced proboscideans the nasal bone was short and lay on top of the very wide but flat nasal opening where the trunk connected to the skull Seen from the side a groove bounded the nasal bone which served as an anchor point for the maxillolabial muscle which acted as a load bearing arm for the tube The remaining edges of the nasal opening were formed by the premaxillary bone and individual extensions of it This bone also formed the alveoli of the upper incisors These were very long sometimes up to 59 cm and they were very wide and their diameter increased towards the front These only diverged slightly and in side view aligned with the profile of his forehead This created a wide angle between the orientation of the tusks sockets and the plane of the chewing surface of the molars Upwards the alveoli of the incisors were slightly indented In general the premaxilla was much more massive than in Gomphotherium for example Due to the shortening of the skull at the snout the eye orbit of Notiomastodon was above the front end of the molar tooth row which is markedly more forward than in long snouted gomphotheres such as Gomphotherium or Rhynchotherium The zygomatic arch was robust and high Its upper border was rather straight while the lower one had a slight notch in which the masseter muscle began 14 28 nbsp Notiomastodon skull with almost straight tusks nbsp Notiomastodon skull with clearly curved tusks The jaw reached 77 cm in length and the area where the teeth were inserted was quite wide and noticeably arched at its lower edge The height under the molars was more than 15 cm In contrast Stegomastodon had a mostly straight lower border The symphysis was typical of South American gomphotheres as it was relatively short brevirostral and in some individuals it pointed downwards and sometimes formed a small prominence as is the case in Cuvieronius Downward directed symphysis is considered a diagnostic feature On the other hand in Stegomastodon this prominence was significantly reduced In some cases there were as many as three holes known as mental foramina The ascending ramus of the mandible was massive and rose up to 47 cm The leading and trailing edges showed a parallel orientation The frontal process was significantly lower than that of the joint which was not the case in Stegomastodon The joint ended transverse to the longitudinal axis of the mandible and was very robust with a distance between its tips from side to side of 57 cm Also unlike Stegomastodon the angular process was less prominent 14 28 The teeth consisted of its large tusks and the molariform teeth In contrast to Eurasian gomphotheres incisors were only formed in the upper dentition although small sockets were sometimes formed in the lower jaw As in all proboscideans the upper tusks were actually hypertrophied second incisor teeth These tusks could vary in shape in each individual so that the tusks could be short and with the tips clearly curved upwards or relatively straight The enamel layer disappears in adult individuals This differentiates it from Cuvieronius whose upper tusks were spiraled with an enamel band that wrapped around them Additionally in the latter lower tusk appear in juveniles 23 29 42 In general the tusks of Notiomastodon were very robust Their lengths could reach more than 88 cm outside the alveoli and in particularly long specimens it could reach 128 cm measured on the external curvature The cross section was oval in shape and varied from 11 5 to 16 4 cm in diameter 60 The remaining dentition was composed of the premolars and molars as in modern elephants which erupted one after the other due to the horizontal replacement of the teeth The chewing surface was generally composed of seven pairs of ridges or lophs which gave the teeth a bunodont pattern The first two molars had three pairs of ridges trilophodonts that were oriented along the longitudinal axis The upper three meanwhile had four and the lower one more than five pairs of ridges tetra and pentalophodont so these additional ridges were less pronounced Stegomastodon on the other hand had five ridges on the upper teeth and more than eight on the lower ones The upper and lower third molars M3 m3 were tetralophodont or pentalophodont and their wear morphology in the occlusal phase varies from simple to complicated due to the presence of central conules and accessory conules between the main cusps of pre and postrites 59 which makes it look like a double trefoil 61 It is characteristic of this species is a greater proportion of teeth with these very complex trefoil figures and marked ptychodonty in their enamel Additionally two morphotypes can be identified in Notiomastodon in relation to molars one with two additional central ridges on each half side of the tooth longitudinally and one without Also very characteristic is the cloverleaf structure on the individual ridges in the weathered state In general the dental structure of Notiomastodon was characterized by a basal pattern which was more similar to that of Cuvieronius However due to the different morphotypes it more closely approximated the complex pattern of the chewing surface of Stegomastodon which was formed mainly by the formation of additional lateral ridges The last chewing molar would have had between 35 and 82 ridges in Notiomastodon 33 and 60 in Cuvieronius and 57 and 104 in Stegomastodon In total the chewing surface of the last molar in Notiomastodon was 57 to 160 cm 12 to 32 cm per lophid and in Stegomastodon 72 to 205 cm 12 to 34 cm per lophid Thus the teeth were typical for a relatively large proboscidean The lower last molar was 21 6 cm long and the upper last molar was over 19 3 cm 14 27 28 Postcranial skeleton edit In terms of the shape of its postcranial skeleton Notiomastodon was for the most part similar to living elephants but generally stockier The humerus was massive and 78 to 87 cm long This widened towards the ends of the joints the joint head was wide and clearly rounded However only some prominences showed rough areas on the axis The ulna was rather gracile with a total length of 75 to 80 cm but almost as large as the humerus Due to the large olecranon the superior joint extension the length of the bone was only 57 to 64 cm As a result the ulna was functionally much shorter than the humerus which is characteristic of South American gomphotheres compared to their Eurasian relatives The physiological length of the ulna also corresponded to the approximate total length of the radius The femur was 96 to 100 cm long and consisted of a nearly cylindrical shaft slightly flattened only at the front and back The spherically shaped femoral head towered over the other prominence but sat on a shorter neck than that of Cuvieronius 24 At the lower end the prominence internal was greater than the external The fibula which was up to 70 cm long was characterized by a prismatic axis and a higher end at the lower joint The hands and feet had five fingers as in modern elephants The limbs of Notiomastodon like those of other short jawed gomphotheres were generally more massive and robust than in extant elephants It is also very curious that the length of the upper and lower sections of the legs of Notiomastodon were more balanced with each other than those of modern elephants and Stegomastodon In the case of the latter the length of the femur exceeded that of the tibia by almost twice Another important difference can be seen in the ratio of the front legs compared to the hind legs These have an average of 82 for Notiomastodon and 93 for Stegomastodon which means that the hind legs of the latter were significantly shorter than the front ones In Stegomastodon the ratio of the upper and lower sections of its legs as well as the fore and hind legs to each other gave it a better adaptation for open environments and long strides and a greater degree of graviportality than in the case of Notiomastodon This is also reflected in the build of the feet which were slimmer and taller than in Stegomastodon 14 24 28 Paleobiology editDiet edit The bunodont chewing pattern of gomphotheres is usually associated with a generalist diet which suggests a preference for mixed feeding on both grass and foliage This has also been delineated in studies on traces of wear and scratches on Notiomastodon molars from the Upper Pleistocene site of Aguas de Araxin Island in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais The teeth exhibit a high number of nicks and scratches which is consistent with similar abrasion marks on the teeth of extant ungulates that consume both hard and soft plants Through some plant residues from the teeth it was possible to identify that the basis of their diet were conifers knotweed plants and polypodiacean ferns 62 In contrast isotope analyzes of other areas of South America paint a more complex picture This results in a predominance of C4 plants in the dietary spectrum of Upper Pleistocene specimens from northern and central South America such as Ecuador or the Gran Chaco while those from southern regions such as the Pampas fed mostly on C3 plants 63 34 In the intermediate areas a mixed diet could be reconstructed based on the isotopes 64 Specimens from Mato Grosso indicate N platensis had a generalised browsing diet in that region 65 with N platensis from Paraiba similarly being identified as mixed feeders during isotopic analysis 66 The dietary flexibility of N platensis was particularly apparent in the fossil finds from the Quequen Grande site in the Argentine province of Buenos Aires Isotope studies of finds there from the Middle Pleistocene indicate a relatively mixed diet while others from the Late Pleistocene suggest that it specialized in consuming grasses 67 62 Remains near Santiago del Estero from the Last Glacial Maximum show a diet exclusively composed of C4 plants 59 Notiomastodon may have been an opportunistic herbivore adapting its habits food to local conditions similar to what has been documented in living elephants Especially during the course of the Late Pleistocene when climatic changes from the last glacial period in the Southern Cone caused forests to shrink and be replaced by grassland environments this was an important adaptive phenomenon 62 Palaeopathologies edit Pathological vertebrae belonging to N platensis have been found in Late Pleistocene deposits at Anolaima Cundinamarca Colombia Specifically they consist of deep bone lesions on the spinous process osteoarthritic lesions and asymmetrical articulations of the zygaphophyses which were caused by nutrient deficiencies caused by environmental perturbations and likely exacerbated by excessive biomechanical stress on the bones as the proboscidean moved through the uneven upland terrain of the region 68 Late Pleistocene N platensis fossils from Aguas de Araxa in Brazil have been shown to exhibit Schmorl s node osteoarthritis and osteomyelitis 69 Population structure and reproduction edit Like modern elephants Notiomastodon is suggested to have lived in social family groups 70 The Aguas de Araxa site is significant as it has one of the largest collections of Notiomastodon fossils These are interpreted as the remains of a local population that was wiped out by a catastrophic event According to dental studies the group consisted of 14 9 juveniles 0 to 12 years of age 23 0 near adult individuals 13 to 24 years of age and 62 1 of adult individuals 25 years of age and older This last group can be broken down into 27 7 of middle aged animals 25 to 36 years and 17 2 of old 37 to 48 years and senile 49 to 60 years specimens The large proportion of individuals over 37 years of age is notable suggesting that there was a high survival rate in this group 70 Some of the adult animals suffered from pathological changes in their bones from Schmorl s nodes osteomyelitis and osteoarthritis These are evident in the vertebrae and long bones among others and may be due to individual diseases Osteomyelitis has also been diagnosed in Notiomastodon finds from other sites 71 72 The remains found at Aguas de Araxa must have been exposed for a long time after their deposit Not only did this allow dermestid beetles to bore into the bones but there is also evidence of bite marks from large canids such as Protocyon The gnawed bone marks are the result of carrion consumption possibly caused by a period of food scarcity Due to its size Notiomastodon would hardly have natural enemies in life 73 74 Traces left by a large predator were also found on a skeleton from the Pilauco site in southern Chile 75 A study of the tusk of a male animal from the Santiago de Chile basin allowed the analysis of the last four years of its life by means of isotope and thin section analyses During this period tusk appositional thickness increased by about 10 mm per year This growth rate was found to be cyclical slowing briefly in early summer with reduced tooth growth The reduced growth is interpreted to correspond to the musth stage a hormone controlled phase that occurs annually in modern elephants and is characterized by a huge increase in testosterone During the musth males become extremely aggressive and battles for mating rights can ensue sometimes with fatal consequences An external feature is the increased flow of a secretion from the temporal gland In the case of the animal from Santiago de Chile growth abnormalities were partially linked to a change in diet The individual s death took place relatively abruptly in early autumn 76 Ichnofossils edit Proboscidean footprint fossils documented in South America are relatively rare One of the most important sites is Pehuen Co near Bahia Blanca in the Argentine province of Buenos Aires The site was discovered in 1986 and covers an area of 1 5 km2 The numerous footprints were printed on a substrate that was originally soft It has been possible to identify several ichnogenera produced by mammals such as Megalamaichnum corresponding to the camelid Hemiauchenia Eumacrauchenichnus from the native ungulate Macrauchenia Glyptodontichnus produced by the armadillo relative Glyptodon or Neomegatherichnum the giant sloth Megatherium and additionally footprints of birds such as Aramayoichnus which would represent a rhea have also been found Due to the diversity of footprints Pehuen Co is one of the most important sites with ichnofossils in the world It has been dated to about 12 000 years before present Proboscidean tracks however are not common there The main trail comprises seven footprints over a length of 4 4 meters The individual prints have an oval shape with lengths from 23 to 27 cm and widths from 23 to 30 cm In general these have a depth of 8 cm below the surface In some cases small prominences are found on the front edge which are interpreted as markings of three to five fingers comparable to the nail shaped structures of living elephants The largest frontal footprints have five and those of the smallest in some cases only have three of those prominences In the same way they have a flattened shape that was generated by the fat pads of the legs as it happens in modern elephants The footprints of Pehuen Co are assigned to the ichnogenus Proboscipeda whose synonym is Stegomastodonichnum The size of these footprints suggests that they were made by animals the size of the Asian elephant roughly matching Notiomastodon 77 Distribution editMain article List of gomphothere fossils in South America nbsp Restoration of Notiomastodon and other mammals of Late Pleistocene Chile The geographic range of Notiomastodon extended through northern eastern and southern South America with its southernmost distribution limit between the latitudes of 37 and 38 south 78 34 The specimens of this proboscidean are found mostly in the lowlands while in the mountainous areas of the Andes it was largely absent with Cuvieronius present in these regions instead It is possible that both proboscideans avoided direct competition due to the strict definition of habitat since both had a similar ecological spectrum 27 Modern elephants also generally avoiding higher elevation areas due to the associated energy cost of traversing them In Colombia it is suggested that Notiomastodon migrated through inter Andean valleys 79 Many fossils of Notiomastodon have been found in the Pampas region and the Gran Chaco in Argentina These include deposits such as Santa Clara del Mar in the province of Buenos Aires and the Rio Dulce in the province of Santiago del Estero 80 59 Remains have also been documented from southern Bolivia which are still found in the Gran Chaco area Otherwise most of the finds from that area correspond to Cuvieronius 81 The southernmost evidence of this proboscidean comes from isolated remains from Chile 53 54 with the southernmost remains in the country being from Chiloe Island 82 There are several findings in Uruguay 83 84 and Paraguay 10 16 Other finds are known from Brazil where Notiomastodon was widely distributed from the open areas of the southern Chaco to the current Amazon basin and fossil remains have been found on the continental shelf of the Atlantic coast 52 85 86 One of the sites most important however is the state of Minas Gerais At least 47 Notiomastodon individuals were found there These were preserved in a sinkhole with coarse grained sediments 70 62 The genus has also been reported from Peru 33 Ecuador 19 Colombia 87 88 and Venezuela 89 Is interesting to note that some of the localities with Notiomastodon remains in these countries as Nemocon in Colombia Punin in Ecuador and Leclishpampa Lima in Peru are located in high mountain deposits meanwhile that in La Huaca in Peru a lowland environment has been found remains of Cuvieronius in contrast with the traditional division between lowland mountain habitats for these animals 27 In Ecuador the Quebrada Pistud site near Bolivar in the province of Carchi is noteworthy This contained about 160 Notiomastodon fossil remains housed over several dozen square meters in flood deposits These represented at least seven specimens and a single skeleton consisted of 68 bone elements scattered over an area of 5 m2 19 14 Another important site there is the natural asphalt pit of Tanque Loma on the Santa Elena peninsula which had over 1000 individual bones About 660 of them were examined in detail and about 11 can be placed in Notiomastodon These correspond to 3 individuals including two juveniles 90 91 Paleoecology edit nbsp Notiomastodon upper right and contemporary animals in Brazil Large mesoherbivorous mammals in the Brazilian Intertropical Region were widespread and diverse including the cow like toxodontids Toxodon platensis and Piauhytherium the macraucheniid litoptern Xenorhinotherium and equids such as Hippidion principale and Equus neogaeus Toxodontids were large mixed feeders as well and lived in forested areas while the equids were nearly entirely grazers Xenarthran fossils are present in the area as well from several different families like the giant megatheriid ground sloth Eremotherium the fellow scelidotheriid Valgipes the mylodontids Glossotherium Ocnotherium and Mylodonopsis Smaller ground sloths such as the megalonychids Ahytherium and Australonyx and the nothrotheriid Nothrotherium have also been found in the area Eremotherium was a generalist while Nothrotherium was a specialist for trees in low density forests and Valgipes was an intermediate of the two that lived in arboreal savannahs Glyptodonts and cingulates like the grazing glyptodonts Glyptotherium and Panochthus and the omnivorous pampatheres Pampatherium and Holmesina were present in the open grasslands Carnivores included some of the largest known mammalian land carnivores like the giant felid Smilodon populator and the bear Arctotherium wingei 92 93 Several extant taxa are also known from the BIR like guanacos giant anteaters collared peccaries and striped hog nosed skunks 94 Two crab eating types of extant mammals are also known from the BIR the crab eating raccoon and the crab eating fox indicating that crabs were also present in the region 94 The environment of the BIR is unclear as there were both several species that were grazers but the precede of the arboreal fossil monkeys Protopithecus and Caipora in the area causes confusion over the area s paleoenvironment Most of Brazil was thought to have been covered in open tropical cerrado vegetation during the Late Pleistocene but if Protopithecus and Caipora were arboreal their presence suggests that the region may have supported a dense closed forest during the Late Pleistocene 94 95 It is possible that the region alternated between dry open savannah and closed wet forest throughout the climate change of the Late Pleistocene 96 Extinction editFor broader coverage of this topic see Late Pleistocene extinctions During the last few thousand years of its existence Notiomastodon was contemporary with the first human groups of hunter gatherers that arrived in South America Notiomastodon disappeared simultaneously with most other megafauna large animals in the Americas at the end of the Pleistocene as part of the Late Pleistocene extinctions the exact causes of which are the subject of long standing controversy in the scientific literature By the time of the extinct It is not clear if the Paleo Indians played a decisive role in the extinction of Notiomastodon through active hunting In total there are less than a dozen sites in South America where Notiomastodon is associated with human presence These are scattered throughout the north and southwest of South America while in the entire Pampas region there are no known finds with the joint presence of proboscideans and humans Therefore there is little actual evidence of active hunting Among the most significant finds are those made in Taima Taima in the coastal area of north central Venezuela There an El Jobo type projectile point was found in a Notiomastodon skeleton and this site also contains remains of the ground sloth Glossotherium The age of these finds dates back to 13 000 years ago 97 98 Some of the finds at Monte Verde in central Chile are also associated with human hunting The pieces found there however are very fragmented and frequently limited to tusks and molars as well as individual elements of the skeleton 53 54 which is why some authors suppose that the remains of proboscideans come from corpses located in another location and were later consumed there 99 In 2019 a description of a young specimen from Brazil was published which had an artifact lodged into its skull providing clear evidence that this individual was hunted 100 Some very recent finds of Notiomastodon are 11 740 to 11 100 years old and were obtained from Quereo in Chile from Itaituba on the Tapajos River in central Brazil and from Tibito in Colombia the latter being associated with three dozen tools of stone 87 88 Even more recent is a skull from Taguatagua in Chile estimated to be 10 300 years before present 54 On the other hand some scientists suggest a review of individual sites with finds dated to the early Holocene as in Quebrada Nuagapua in Bolivia 101 102 A find of a gomphothere probably Notiomastodon in Totumo Colombia was dated as recently as 6 060 60 years before present 58 however given how much later this date is than other finds of Notiomastodon this date should be considered with caution without other corroboration 103 The climatic models projected for South America during the latter Pleistocene and the early Holocene suggests that the habitats were more humid and with more presence of forests which could reduce the suitable habitat for Notiomastodon and Equus neogeus another species commonly found in open habitats along with the subsequent changes in the vegetation could affect to these large mammals 104 Notes edit From the Ancient Greek notios notios southern 9 References edit Shoshani Jeheskel Tassy Pascal 2005 Advances in proboscidean taxonomy amp classification anatomy amp physiology and ecology amp behavior Quaternary International 126 128 5 20 Bibcode 2005QuInt 126 5S doi 10 1016 j quaint 2004 04 011 ISSN 1040 6182 Cuvier Georges 1806 Sur differentes dents du genre des mastodontes mais d especes moindres que celle de l Ohio trouvees en plusieurs lieux des deux continents Annales du Museum d Histoire Naturelle 7 401 420 Fischer Gotthelf 1813 Zoognosia tabulis synopticis illustrata in Usum Praelectionem Academiae Imperialis Medico Chirurgicae Mosquensis Edita Vol 3 Classium ordinum generum illustratione perpetua aucta Illustrated Zoognosia in Synoptic Tables Produced from Lectures in the Imperial Medico Surgical Academy of Moscow by the Author Gotthelf Fischer Vol 3 Classes Orders Genera Enlarged Throughout with Illustration in Latin Vol 3 1 ed Moscow Nikolai Sergeyevich Vsevolozhsky Cuvier Georges 1824 Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles ou l on retablit les caracteres de plusieurs animaux dont les revolutions du globe ont detruit les especes Chez G Dufour et E d Ocagne Ameghino F 1888 Rapidas diagnosis de algunos mamiferos fosiles nuevos de la Republica Argentina Obras Completas Buenos Aires V 469 480 Florentino Ameghino Contribucion al conocimiento de los mamiferos fosiles de la Republica Argentina Academia Nacional Ciencias Cordoba 6 1889 S 1 1027 S 633 650 1 Henry Fairfield Osborn New subfamily generic and specific stages in the evolution of the Proboscidea American Museum Novitates 99 1923 S 1 4 Henry Fairfield Osborn Additional new genera and species of the mastodontoid Proboscidea American Museum Novitates 238 1926 S 1 16 notios Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project a b Angel Cabrera Una revision de los Mastodontes Argentinos Revista del Museo de La Plata 32 1929 S 61 144 2 Hans Pohlig Sur une vieille mandibule de Tetracaulodon ohioticum Blum avec defense in situ Bulletin de la Societe belge de geologie de paleontologie et d hydrologie 26 1912 S 187 193 3 a b c d Mothe Dimila dos Santos Avilla Leonardo Asevedo Lidiane Borges Silva Leon Rosas Mariane Labarca Encina Rafael Souberlich Ricardo Soibelzon Esteban Roman Carrion Jose Luis Rios Sergio D Rincon Ascanio D Cardoso de Oliveira Gina Pereira Lopes Renato 30 September 2016 Sixty years after The mastodonts of Brazil The state of the art of South American proboscideans Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae PDF Quaternary International 443 52 64 Bibcode 2017QuInt 443 52M doi 10 1016 j quaint 2016 08 028 Giovanni Ficcarelli Vittorio Borselli Gonzalo Herrera Miguel Moreno Espinosa amp Danilo Torre Taxonomic remarks on the South American mastodonts referred to Haplomastodon and Cuvieronius Geobios 28 6 1995 S 745 756 a b c d e f g h i Ferretti Marco P 2010 Anatomy of Haplomastodon chimborazi Mammalia Proboscidea from the late Pleistocene of Ecuador and its bearing on the phylogeny and systematics of south American gomphotheres Geodiversitas 32 4 663 721 doi 10 5252 g2010n4a3 S2CID 86792928 Perea D Alberdi M T 2015 12 30 Los gonfoteridos Mammalia Proboscidea de Uruguay taxonomia estratigrafia y cronologia Estudios Geologicos 71 2 e036 doi 10 3989 egeol 41864 346 hdl 10261 127862 ISSN 1988 3250 a b c d George Gaylord Simpson amp Carlos de Paula Couto The mastodons of Brazil Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 112 1957 S 131 189 W J Holland Fossil mammal collected at Pedra Vernelha Bahia Brazil by G A Waring Annals of the Carnegie Museum 13 1920 S 224 232 Spencer George Lucas Mastodon waringi Holland 1920 currently Haplomastodon waringi Mammalia Proboscidea proposed conservation of usage by designation of a neotype Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 66 2 2009 S 164 167 4 a b c Giovanni Ficcarelli Vittorio Borselli Miguel Moreno Espinosa amp Danilo Torre New Haplomastodon finds from the Late Pleistocene of Northern Ecuador Geobios 26 2 1993 S 231 240 a b Maria Teresa Alberdi amp Jose Luis Prado Los mastodontes de America del Sur In M T Alberdi G Leone amp E P Tonni Hrsg Evolucion biologica y climatica de la Region Pampeana durante los ultimos 5 millones de anos Un ensayo de correlacion con el Mediterraneo occidental Monografias Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales CSIC Spanien 1995 S 277 292 Marco P Ferretti A review of South American gomphotheres New Mexico Natural History and Science Museum Bulletin 44 2008 S 381 391 Spencer George Lucas Taxonomic nomenclature of Cuvieronius and Haplomastodon proboscideans from the Plio Pleistocene of the New World New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 44 2008 S 409 415 a b c d Spencer George Lucas amp Guillermo E Alvarado Fossil Proboscidea from the Upper Cenozoic of Central America Taxonomy evolutionary and paleobiogeographic significance Revista Geologica de America Central 42 2010 S 9 42 a b c Spencer George Lucas Ricardo H Aguilar amp Justina Spillmann Stegomastodon Mammalia Proboscidea from the Pliocene of Jalisco Mexico and the species level taxonomy of Stegomastodon New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 53 2011 S 517 553 Mothe Dimila Avilla Leonardo S Cozzuol Mario Winck Gisele R 25 October 2012 Taxonomic revision of the Quaternary gomphotheres Mammalia Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae from the South American lowlands Quaternary International 276 277 2 7 Bibcode 2012QuInt 276 2M doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 05 018 Dimila Mothe Leonardo S Avilla amp Mario A Cozzuol The South American Gomphotheres Mammalia Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae Taxonomy Phylogeny and Biogeography Journal of Mammalian Evolution 20 2013 S 23 32 a b c d e f g h Dimila Mothe amp Leonardo Avilla Mythbusting evolutionary issues on South American Gomphotheriidae Mammalia Proboscidea Quaternary Science Reviews 110 2015 S 23 35 a b c d e f g h i Mothe Dimila Ferretti Marco P Avilla Leonardo S 3 June 2017 Running Over the Same Old Ground Stegomastodon Never Roamed South America Journal of Mammalian Evolution 26 2 165 177 doi 10 1007 s10914 017 9392 y ISSN 1064 7554 S2CID 23041930 a b c d Lucas Spencer G Yuan Wang Min Liu 2013 01 01 The palaeobiogeography of South American gomphotheres PDF Journal of Palaeogeography 2 1 19 40 Bibcode 2013JPalG 2 19L doi 10 3724 SP J 1261 2013 00015 inactive 31 January 2024 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Labarca R Alberdi M T Prado J L Mansilla P Mourgues F A 18 April 2016 Nuevas evidencias acerca de la presencia de Stegomastodon platensis Ameghino 1888 Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae en el Pleistoceno tardio de Chile central New evidences on the presence of Stegomastodon platensis Ameghino 1888 Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae in the Late Pleistocene of Central Chile Estudios Geologicos 72 Maria T Alberdi amp Jose L Prado 2022 Diversity of the fossil gomphotheres from South America Historical Biology DOI 10 1080 08912963 2022 2067754 Kenneth E Campbell Jr Carl D Frailey amp Lidia Romero Pittman In defense of Amahuacatherium Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie amp Palaontologie Abhandlungen 252 1 2009 S 113 128 a b Maria Teresa Alberdi Madrid Jose Luis Prado amp Rodolfo Salas The Pleistocene Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea from Peru Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie amp Palaontologie Abhandlungen 231 3 2004 S 423 452 a b c d e Jose Luis Prado Maria Teresa Alberdi Beatriz Azanza Begonia Sanchez amp Daniel Frassinetti The Pleistocene Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea from South America Quaternary International 126 128 2005 S 21 30 Jeheskel Shoshani Robert C Walter Michael Abraha Seife Berhe Pascal Tassy William J Sander Gary H Marchant Yosief Libsekal Tesfalidet Ghirmai amp Dietmar Zinner A proboscidean from the late Oligocene of Eritrea a missing link between early Elephantiformes and Elephantimorpha and biogeographic implications PNAS 103 46 2006 S 17296 17301 a b Jeheskel Shoshani amp Pascal Tassy Advances in proboscidean taxonomy amp classification anatomy amp physiology and ecology amp behavior Quaternary International 126 128 2005 S 5 20 Malcolm C McKenna amp Susan K Bell Classification of mammals above the species level Columbia University Press New York 1997 S 1 631 S 497 504 William J Sanders Emmanuel Gheerbrant John M Harris Haruo Saegusa amp Cyrille Delmer Proboscidea In Lars Werdelin amp William Joseph Sanders Hrsg Cenozoic Mammals of Africa University of California Press Berkeley London New York 2010 S 161 251 Jan van der Made The evolution of the elephants and their relatives in the context of a changing climate and geography In Harald Meller Hrsg Elefantenreich Eine Fossilwelt in Europa Halle Saale 2010 S 340 360 Jose Luis Prado amp Maria Teresa Alberdi A cladistic analysis among trilophodont gomphotheres Mammalia Proboscidea with special attention to the South American genera Palaeontology 51 4 2008 S 903 915 a b Maria Teresa Alberdi amp Jose Luis Prado Fossil Gomphotheriidae from Argentina In F L Agnolin G L Lio F Brisson Egli N R Chimento amp F E Novas Hrsg Historia Evolutiva y Paleobiogeogr afica de los Vertebrados de Am erica del Sur Contribuciones del MACN 6 Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales Bernardino Rivadavia Buenos AiSpenceres Argentina 2016 S 275 283 a b Mothe Dimila Ferretti Marco P Avilla Leonardo S 12 January 2016 The Dance of Tusks Rediscovery of Lower Incisors in the Pan American Proboscidean Cuvieronius hyodon Revises Incisor Evolution in Elephantimorpha PLOS ONE 11 1 e0147009 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1147009M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0147009 PMC 4710528 PMID 26756209 Wang Yuan Jin Chang Zhu Deng Cheng Long Wei Guang Biao amp Yan Ya Ling The first Sinomastodon Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea skull from the Quaternary in China Chinese Science Bulletin 57 36 2012 S 4726 4734 Nadin Rohland Anna Sapfo Malaspinas Joshua L Pollack Montgomery Slatkin Paul Matheus amp Michael Hofreiter Proboscidean Mitogenomics Chronology and Mode of Elephant Evolution Using Mastodon as Outgroup PLoS Biology 5 8 2007 S 1663 1671 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0050207 M Buckley N Larkin amp M Collins Mammoth and Mastodon collagen sequences survival and utility Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75 2011 S 2007 2016 Matthias Meyer Eleftheria Palkopoulou Sina Baleka Mathias Stiller Kirsty E H Penkman Kurt W Alt Yasuko Ishida Dietrich Mania Swapan Mallick Tom Meijer Harald Meller Sarah Nagel Birgit Nickel Sven Ostritz Nadin Rohland Karol Schauer Tim Schuler Alfred L Roca David Reich Beth Shapiro Michael Hofreiter Palaeogenomes of Eurasian straight tusked elephants challenge the current view of elephant evolution eLife Sciences 6 2017 S e25413 doi 10 7554 eLife 25413 Buckley Michael Recabarren Omar P Lawless Craig Garcia Nuria Pino Mario November 2019 A molecular phylogeny of the extinct South American gomphothere through collagen sequence analysis Quaternary Science Reviews 224 105882 Bibcode 2019QSRv 22405882B doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2019 105882 Baleka Sina Varela Luciano Tambusso P Sebastian Paijmans Johanna L A Mothe Dimila Stafford Thomas W Farina Richard A Hofreiter Michael December 2021 Revisiting proboscidean phylogeny and evolution through total evidence and palaeogenetic analyses including Notiomastodon ancient DNA iScience 25 1 103559 Bibcode 2022iSci 25j3559B doi 10 1016 j isci 2021 103559 PMC 8693454 PMID 34988402 Webb S D 1991 Ecogeography and the Great American Interchange Paleobiology 17 266 280 Cione A L Gasparini G M Soibelzon E Soibelzon L H Tonni E P 2015 The Great American Biotic Interchange in Southern South America Land Mammal Biostratigraphy Climatic Evolution and Faunal Integration Springer Briefs in Earth System Sciences Springer New York London M A Reguero A M Candela amp R N Alonso Biochronology and biostratigraphy of the Uqui a Formation Pliocene early Pleistocene NW Argentina and its significance in the Great American Biotic Interchange Journal of South American Earth Sciences 23 2007 S 1 16 a b Renato Pereira Lopes Luiz Carlos Oliveira Ana Maria Graciano Figueiredo Angela Kinoshita Oswaldo Baffa amp Francisco Sekiguchi Buchmann ESR dating of pleistocene mammal teeth and its implications for the biostratigraphy and geological evolution of the coastal plain Rio Grande do Sul southern Brazil Quaternary International 212 2010 S 213 222 a b c D Frassinetti amp Maria Teresa Alberdi Presencia del genero Stegomastodon entre los restos fosiles de mastodontes de Chile Gomphotheriidae Pleistoceno Superior Estudios Geologicos 61 1 2 2005 S 101 107 a b c d Rafael Labarca Encina amp Maria Teresa Alberdi An updated taxonomic view on the family Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea in the final Pleistocene of south central Chile Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie amp Palaontologie Abhandlungen 262 1 2011 S 43 57 Larramendi A 2016 Shoulder height body mass and shape of proboscideans PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61 doi 10 4202 app 00136 2014 S2CID 2092950 Richard A Farina Sergio F Vizcaino amp Maria S Bargo Body mass estimations in Lujanian Late Pleistocene Early Holocene of South America mammal megafauna Mastozoologia Neotropical 5 2 1998 S 87 108 Per Christiansen Body size in proboscideans with notes on elephant metabolism Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 140 2004 S 523 549 a b Rodriguez Florez Carlos David Rodriguez Florez Ernesto Leon Rodriguez Carlos Armando 2009 Revision of PleistocenicGomphotheriidaefauna in Colombia and case report in the department of Valle del Cauca PDF Scientific Bulletin Vol 13 Museum Center Natural History Museum pp 78 85 Archived from the original PDF on 4 July 2011 Retrieved 9 November 2010 a b c d Alberdi M T Cerdeno E Prado J L 2008 Stegomastodon platensis Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae from Pleistocene levels of Santiago Del Estero Argentina Ameghiniana v 45 p 257 272 2008 George Gaylord Simpson and Carlos de Paula Couto The mastodons of Brazil Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 112 1957 S 131 189 Gadens Marcon Gabrielli Teresa 2007 Contribuicao ao estudo dos Proboscidea Mammalia Gomphotheriidae do Quaternario do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul Brasil 2007 115p cita pag p 14 Dissertacao Mestrado em Geociencias Programa de Posgraduacao em Geociencias Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre a b c d Asevedo Lidiane Winck Gisele R Mothe Dimila Avilla Leonardo S 2012 Ancient diet of the Pleistocene gomphothere Notiomastodon platensis Mammalia Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae from lowland mid latitudes of South America Stereomicrowear and tooth calculus analyses combined Quaternary International 255 42 52 Bibcode 2012QuInt 255 42A doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 08 037 ISSN 1040 6182 Jose Luis Prado Maria Teresa Alberdi B Azanza Begona Sanchez amp D Frassinetti The Pleistocene Gomphotheres Proboscidea from South America diversity habitats and feeding ecology In G Cavarretta P Gioia M Mussi amp M R Palombo Hrsg The World of Elephants International Congress Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Rom 2001 S 337 340 Sanchez Begona Prado Jose Luis Alberdi Maria Teresa 1 January 2004 Feeding ecology dispersal and extinction of South American Pleistocene gomphotheres Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea Paleobiology 30 1 146 161 doi 10 1666 0094 8373 2004 030 lt 0146 FEDAEO gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0094 8373 Retrieved 19 April 2024 via GeoScienceWorld Asevedo Lidiane Pansani Thais Rabito Cordeiro Victor Menezes Silva Caminha Silane Aparecida Ferreira Paixao Jesus da S Cozzuol Mario Alberto Dantas Mario Andre Trindade 1 December 2021 Diversity of Pleistocene megamammals from southern Amazon Mato Grosso state Brazil Journal of South American Earth Sciences 112 103552 Bibcode 2021JSAES 11203552A doi 10 1016 j jsames 2021 103552 ISSN 0895 9811 S2CID 240585542 Retrieved 19 December 2023 Neves Gisele Aparecida dos Santos Ghilardi Aline Marcele Felizmino de Araujo Francisco Tiberio Cherkinsky Alexander Dantas Mario Andre Trindade November 2023 Annual isotopic diet d13C d18O of Notiomastodon platensis in the Brazilian Intertropical region during the Last Glacial Maximum Journal of South American Earth Sciences 131 104592 doi 10 1016 j jsames 2023 104592 Retrieved 19 April 2024 via Elsevier Science Direct Begona Sanchez Jose Luis Prado amp Maria Teresa Alberdi Feeding ecology dispersal and extinction of South American Pleistocene gomphotheres Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea Paleobiology 30 1 2004 S 146 161 Zorro Lujan Catalina Maria Noe Leslie F Gomez Perez Marcela Grouard Sandrine Chaparro Andres Torres Saul 25 October 2022 Vertebral lesions in Notiomastodon platensis Gomphotheriidae from Anolaima Colombia Quaternary Research 112 78 92 doi 10 1017 qua 2022 49 ISSN 0033 5894 Retrieved 31 March 2024 via Cambridge Core Barbosa Fernando Henrique de Souza Araujo Junior Herminio Ismael de Mothe Dimila Avilla Leonardo dos Santos 2 July 2017 Osteological diseases in an extinct Notiomastodon Mammalia Proboscidea population from the Late Pleistocene of Brazil Quaternary International 443 228 232 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2016 08 019 Retrieved 18 April 2024 via Elsevier Science Direct a b c Mothe Dimila Avilla Leonardo S Winck Gisele R 26 November 2010 Population structure of the gomphothere Stegomastodon waringi Mammalia Proboscidea Gomphotheriidae from the Pleistocene of Brazil PDF Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 82 4 983 996 doi 10 1590 S0001 37652010005000001 ISSN 0001 3765 PMID 21152772 S2CID 31936632 Archived from the original PDF on 20 February 2020 Fernando Henrique de Souza Barbosa Kleberson de Oliveira Porpino Ana Bernadete Lima Fragoso amp Maria de Fatima Cavalcante Ferreira dos Santos Osteomyelitis in Quaternary mammal from the Rio Grande do Norte State Brazil Quaternary International 299 2013 S 90 93 Fernando Henrique de Souza Barbosa Herminio Ismael de Araujo Junior Dimila Mothe amp Leonardo dos Santos Avilla Osteological diseases in an extinctNotiomastodon Mammalia Proboscidea population from the Late Pleistocene of Brazil Quaternary International 443 2017 S 228 232 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2016 08 019 Victor Hugo Dominato Dimila Mothe Leonardo dos Santos Avilla amp Cristina Bertoni Machado Acao de insetos em vertebras cervicaisStegomastodon waringi Gomphotheriidae Mammalia do Pleistoceno de Aguas de Araxa Minas Gerais Brasil Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia 12 1 2009 S 77 82 Victor Hugo Dominato Dimila Mothe Rafael Costa da Silva amp Leonardo dos Santos Avilla Evidence of scavenging on remains of the gomphothereHaplomastodon waringi Proboscidea Mammalia from the Pleistocene of Brazil Taphonomic and paleoecological remarks Journal of South American Earth Sciences 31 2011 S 171 177 Rafael Labarca Omar Patricio Recabarren Patricia Canales Brellenthin amp Mario Pino The gomphotheres proboscidea Gomphotheriidae from Pilauco site Scavenging evidence in the Late Pleistocene of the Chilean Patagonia Quaternary International 352 2014 S 75 84 Joseph J El Adli Daniel C Fisher Michael D Cherney Rafael Labarca amp Frederic Lacombat First analysis of life history and season of death of a South American gomphothere Quaternary International 443 2017 S 180 188 Silvia A Aramayo Teresa Manera de Bianco Nerea V Bastianelli amp Ricardo N Melchor Pehuen Co Updated taxonomic review of a late Pleistocene ichnological site in Argentina Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 439 2015 S 144 165 Jose Luis Prado Maria Teresa Alberdi Begona Sanchez amp Beatriz Azanza Diversity of the Pleistocene Gomphotheres Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea from South America Deinsea 9 2003 S 347 363 Mothe Dimila Jaramillo Carlos Krigsfeld Shuster Gheny Oikawa Nychollas Escobar Florez Sebastian 2022 12 23 Ain t no mountain high enough New records of Notiomastodon platensis Mammalia Proboscidea from Colombia and the Quaternary dry corridor of the Cauca valley Historical Biology 36 2 241 252 doi 10 1080 08912963 2022 2155955 ISSN 0891 2963 S2CID 255092592 Maria Teresa Alberdi amp Jose Luis Prado Presencia de Stegomastodon Gomphotheriidae Proboscidea en el Pleistoceno Superior de la zona costera de Santa Clara del Mar Argentina Estudios Geologicos 64 2 2008 S 175 185 Dimila Mothe Willer Flores Aguanta Sabrina Larissa Belatto amp Leonardo Avilla First record of Notiomastodon platensis Mammalia Proboscidea from Bolivia Revista brasileira de Paleontologia 20 1 2017 S 149 152 Recabarren Omar P 2020 Pino Mario Astorga Giselle A eds The Proboscidean Gomphotheres Mammalia Gomphotheriidae from Southernmost South America Pilauco A Late Pleistocene Archaeo paleontological Site The Latin American Studies Book Series Cham Springer International Publishing pp 55 68 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 23918 3 4 ISBN 978 3 030 23917 6 S2CID 201317200 retrieved 2023 06 18 Varela Luciano Clavijo 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Pleistocene megafaunal tar seep locality from southwest Ecuador Journal of South American Earth Sciences 57 2015 S 61 82 Emily L Lindsay amp Kevin L Seymour Tar pits of the Western Neotropics Paleoecology Taphonomy and Mammalian Biogeography Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Science Series 42 2015 S 111 123 Keeley J E amp Rundel P W 2003 Evolution of CAM and C4 carbon concentrating mechanisms International journal of plant sciences 164 S3 S55 S77 Omena Erica Cavalcante Silva Jorge Luiz Lopes da Sial Alcides Nobrega Cherkinsky Alexander Dantas Mario Andre Trindade 2021 10 03 Late Pleistocene meso megaherbivores from Brazilian Intertropical Region isotopic diet d13C niche differentiation guilds and paleoenvironmental reconstruction d13C d18O Historical Biology 33 10 2299 2304 Bibcode 2021HBio 33 2299O doi 10 1080 08912963 2020 1789977 ISSN 0891 2963 S2CID 225543776 a b c Cartelle Castor Hartwig W C 1996 A new extinct primate among the Pleistocene megafauna of Bahia Brazil 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artifact embedded in an extinct proboscidean sheds new light on human megafaunal interactions in the Quaternary of South America Quaternary Science Reviews 229 106125 Bibcode 2020QSRv 22906125M doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2019 106125 S2CID 214274776 Mauro Coltorti Jacopo Della Fazia Freddy Paredes Rios amp Giuseppe Tito Nuagapua Chaco Bolivia Evidence for the latest occurrence of megafauna in association with human remains in South America Journal of South American Earth Sciences 33 2012 S 56 67 Jose Luis Prado Joaquin Arroyo Cabrales Eileen Johnson Maria Teresa Alberdi amp Oscar J Polaco New World proboscidean extinctions comparisons between North and South America Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 7 2015 S 277 288 doi 10 1007 s12520 012 0094 3 Iriarte Jose Ziegler Michael J Outram Alan K Robinson Mark Roberts Patrick Aceituno Francisco J Morcote Rios Gaspar Keesey T Michael 2022 04 25 Ice Age megafauna rock art in the Colombian Amazon Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 377 1849 doi 10 1098 rstb 2020 0496 ISSN 0962 8436 PMC 8899627 PMID 35249392 Araujo T Machado H Mothe D amp dos Santos Avilla L 2021 Species distribution modeling reveals the ecological niche of extinct megafauna from South America Quaternary Research 104 151 158 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Notiomastodon amp oldid 1219840272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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