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PERFECT PECCARY
LOWER LEG BONE FROM THE PLEISTOCENE RANCHOLABREAN PERIOD
Citrus
County -
Florida, U.S.A.
MIDDLE
(RANCHOLABREAN AGE) TO LATE PLEISTOCENE PERIOD: 300,000 to 10,000 years
ago
This is a PERFECT AND
COMPLETE cannon bone (lower leg bone) from a
North American peccary, an extinct animal resembling a large wild boar
that lived in the southeastern United States during the last North
American Ice Age. The genera of
peccary this fossil came from is called Mylohyus. There is no repair
and no restoration on this fine
example of this uncommon fossil, especially in this condition.
The bone is far better than it appears in the photos and has the quality
of preservation that looks as if the animal lived just yesterday rather
than from the days of the famous La Brea tar pits! The surface
lacks any damage or pitting and the joints are like glass. An
unique fossil bone and perfect for the advanced collection of only the
best specimens.
Peccaries
are omnivores and members of the family Tayassuidae. They
originated in North America in the late Eocene with only a few species
surviving today in the southwestern United States and in Central and
South America. These animals are descendants of larger extinct
species that once inhabited the United States to a broader scale
including the lush environment of Florida.
There are two genera
of peccaries that have been identified as thriving in Florida from the
late Pliocene to the mysterious large extinction at the end of the
Pleistocene. These are PLATYGONUS and MYLOHYUS. Both had
longer limbs than do modern peccaries that survive today. Mylohyus
was a more streamlined peccary in comparison to Platygonus and survived
until the end of the Pleistocene in far greater numbers than
Platygonus. Earlier in the Pleistocene, Florida was much drier
with more open plains and scrub-type vegetation. The stouter denary
and skull of Platygonus was more adapted to chewing coarse
vegetation. As the climate changed and the Florida prairies were
transformed into dense woodlands, Mylohyus was better suited for
survival eating more succulent vegetation along with fruit, nuts and
berries.
The peccary has long,
triangular canines on the upper and lower jaw. The lower canines
extend in front of the uppers when the jaws are closed. Unlike
pigs, peccaries chew only in an up and down manner and as the jaws move
up and down, these canines abrade against each other keeping the tips
constantly sharp.
PERFECT COMPLETE SPECIMEN - FROM THE SAME PERIOD AS THE FAMOUS LA BREA
TAR PITS
3.5" in length
$155
LM14-006
INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX Actual
Item - One Only |