Revision Of The European Species Of Prosantorhinus Heissig, 1974 (Mammalia, Perissodactyla, Rhinocerotidae)
Author
Heissig, Kurt
text
Fossil Imprint
2017
2017-12-31
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/if-2017-0014
journal article
10.2478/iF-2017-0014
2533-4069
4586338
Prosantorhinus douvillei
(
OSBORN
, 1900)
N o t e. Alot of smaller collections cited from different localities have been omitted in the synonymy list because the limited amount of material does not allow a clear determination on the basis of the figures and the suggested classification is not different from any other.
1900 v
Diceratherium douvillei
,
sp. nov.
– Osborn, p. 239, fig. 6.
1907
Rh.
(
Diceratherium
) Douvillei
Osborn – Stehlin, pp. 527,
530 f.
1907
Rhinoceros
sp. III – Stehlin, pp. 527, 531.
1908 v
Diceratherium Douvillei
Osborn
– Mayet, p. 90 ff., fig. 25–27.
1908 v
non
Diceratherium Douvillei
Osborn
– Mayet, fig. 28.
1918
Ceratorhinus
sansaniensis
mut.
Harlei
nob. – Repelin, p. 68.
1925
Br. aurelianense
– Stehlin and Helbing, p. 113, footnote.
1925 “
Rhinoceros
turonensis
Bourgeois” – Stehlin and Helbing, p. 114.
1934
Rhinoceros
sp. – Roman and Viret, p. 65.
1948
Ceratorhinus
sansaniensis
mut.
Harlei
– Richard, p. 237.
1972a
Brachypodella douvillei
– Heissig, p. 70.
1979
Prosantorhinus douvillei
– Ginsburg and Antunes, p.
493 f.
1979
Gaindatherium
– Ginsburg and Antunes, p.
493 f.
1983
Gaindatherium
(
Iberotherium
)
rexmanueli
– Antunes and Ginsburg, p. 30 ff., text-figs 12–20, pl. 6, figs 1–8, 10–12, pl. 7, figs 1–4.
1983 non
Gaindatherium
(
Iberotherium
)
rexmanueli
– Antunes and Ginsburg, pl. 6, fig. 9, pl. 7, fig. 5.
1987
Gaindatherium
(
Iberotherium
)
rexmanueli
– Ginsburg et al., p. 306.
1996
Prosantorhinus douvillei
(
Osborn, 1900
)
– Cerdeño, p. 112 ff.
1997 v
Prosantorhinus germanicus
– Antoine, pp. 400, 412.
1997 v
Prosantorhinus germanicus
– Antoine and Duranthon, pp. 202, 211.
1998 v
Prosantorhinus
cf.
douvillei
– Wermelinger, pp. 1–246, figs 5–8, pls 1–40.
2002
Prosantorhinus douvillei
(
Osborn, 1900
)
– Antoine, p. 37.
H o l o t y p e. Left maxilla fragment with P2 – M2,
MNHN, Tav82 (
Osborn 1900: 239
, fig. 6).
T y p e l o c a l i t y. Beaugency-Tavers,
France
.
S t r a t u m t y p i c u m. Middle Miocene (MN 5).
O c c u r r e n c e. Early to Middle Miocene (MN 3b –
MN 5),
France
, Southern
Germany
.
D i a g n o s i s. Medium sized species of the genus
Prosantorhinus
with subterminal, slightly swollen horn base and partly fused nasals with a rough finger like rostrally directed prolongation of the nasals in front of the horn base. Postcranials robust, relatively large compared with tooth size. Manus variably tetra- or tridactyl.
D e s c r i p t i o n. The most comprehensive material is from Montréal-du-Gers (MN 4b), also known as Béon, the best almost undistorted skull is from Langenau near Ulm (MN 4b). On the basis of this specimen and the more or less distorted skulls from Montréal-du-Gers, the dental and skull characters can be described as follows. The general shape is broad and short with flaring zygomatic arches. The occiput is generally broad but the temporal lines unite to form a sagittal crest at least in males. The widest part of the occiput lies at the mastoid processes. The nasofrontal surface is concave in profile and convex transversally, more convex at the nasal base than over the frontals. The horn base is very similar in all primitive
Teleoceratini
, but more robust than in
Diaceratherium
. It forms a slightly swollen, rough thickening of the nasals, which is subterminal. In front of this structure each nasal bone terminates in a narrow, finger like, rough process. The nasal bones arise frontally and are fused below the horn base in old animals. They are rather short, narrowing rostrally from the broad frontals and tapering at the end. The nasal incision is of medium depth and widely open rostrally.
The angle between the two halves of the mandibles is wide, similar as in
Prosantorhinus germanicus
. The lower margin of the corpus is curved and the branches are comparatively low. The symphysis is massive, broad and slightly upturned with a short diastema. The large incisors are close to one another. There is no twist on the incisor crowns which are less strongly curved than in the
type
species.
The limb bones are robust and large compared to the tooth size. Their length ratio corresponds to the graviportal
type
. Carpal and tarsal bones are broad and short, metacarpals and metatarsals less robust than in the
type
species. In the Montréal-du-Gers (Béon) collection the fifth metacarpal is generally reduced to a knob, but there is one specimen of a less reduced
MC
V
with an articular facet for the ground phalanx. Unfortunately the most lateral metacarpal is not known from earlier horizons. Size and proportions can be seen best in the comparative diagrams
.
There seems to be a problem with the remains from
Portugal
which have been named as
Gaindatherium
(
Iberotherium
)
rexmanueli
(
Antunes and Ginsburg 1983: 30
)
. The measurements of the upper molars would better fit the species
P. aurelianensis
, but the morphology, especially of the last molars, is identical with
P. douvillei
. Possibly the rather large size of these teeth, according to the literature, is due to different measuring methods.