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Vishnufelis

Genus of mammals (fossil) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vishnufelis is a fossil genus of feline (cat) containing only a single species, Vishnufelis laticeps. It was described by Guy Ellcock Pilgrim in 1932, based on the first cranial material of a cat found in Asia: a fragmented skull found in the Chinji Formation, which dates back to the middle Miocene.[1][2]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Vishnufelis
Temporal range: Miocene
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Felinae
Genus: Vishnufelis
Pilgrim, 1932
Type species
Vishnufelis laticeps
Pilgrim, 1932
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History and naming

The holotype and only specimen, a fragmentary skull, was collected by K. Aiyengar from the Chinji Formation, some 2.75 miles (4.43 km) east of Paridarwaza in Jhelum, India. The fossils were placed in the collection in Calcutta of the Geological Survey of India, listed as GSI-D 266. In 1932, paleontologist Guy Ellcock Pilgrim described the fossils as the new genus and species Vishnufelis laticeps.[1]

No etymology for the generic or specific names was given by Pilgrim,[1] but the specific name laticeps, meaning "wide-headed" in Latin, is a common taxonomic epithet.[3]

In 1978, additional fossils of Vishnufelis sp. were reported, though not described, from the upper Lower Siwaliks in the Ramnagar basin.[4]

Description

Pilgrim described it as a primitive feline of medium size with a low, elongated skull. The nasals are short and narrow, while the zygomatic arches are broad. The second premolar was very small and situated halfway between the canine and third premolar. The third premolar was likewise reduced. At least three incisors and the fourth premolar are preserved in the fossil. He considered it most similar to the clouded leopard among extant cats.[1] Colbert, in his 1935 summary of Siwalik fossils, described it as small.[5]

Classification

Pilgrim in his original description considered Vishnufelis laticeps a very primitive member of the subfamily Felinae.[1]

Paleobiology

Vishnufelis had sharp teeth and probably preyed on smaller animals.[6]

Paleoenvironment

The Lower Siwaliks of Ramnagar were likely a half-closed, half-open woodlands ecosystem with grassy areas, riddled with waterways and floodplain channels and ponds.[7]

A 2020 analysis of carnivoran species considered it part of a Middle Miocene paleobiogeographic province in southern Asia.[8]

References

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