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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/119920499_mammoth_painting_havens_7.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350:Woolly Mammoth by James Havens]]
3
4----
5
6The following extinct animals, to quote Creator/LoreSjoberg, "are not, technically speaking, dinosaurs, but end up in the dinosaur section of the plush toy aisle nonetheless."
7
8This can get quite confusing, as no matter what your dictionary tells you, scientists have been waffling on the subject of dinosaurs for as long as there has been a name for them, although none of the iconic animals have ever been considered dinosaurs.
9
10[[foldercontrol]]
11
12----
13
14!Flying Reptiles
15
16[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterosauria Pterosaurs]] (usually called pterodactyls in media and in pop language) are often referred as the "flying dinosaurs". They were closely related to them, but were not true dinosaurs.
17
18[[folder:Pterosaurs in Media]]
19
20In RealLife, pterosaurs were the dominant large flying creatures in the Age of Dinosaurs. They coexisted with their land-dwelling relatives for 160 million years, and eventually went extinct together with the last nonbird dinosaurs. As with dinosaurs, there are many common mistakes when it comes to pterosaur portrayals in media -- and we're not just talking about simple AnachronismStew and MisplacedWildlife here.
21
22* In fiction, these reptiles usually act as [[GiantFlyer airborne terrors]] to menace humans and/or other animals, usually grabbing them with eagle-like feet and being strong enough to lift and carry their victims in flight, often giving them to their nestlings just like eagles. In RealLife, pterosaurs had very weak legs with non-opposable digits and caught their food with their mouths instead. And they didn't have any nestlings to feed: pterosaurs reproduced like sea turtles, burying and abandoning their soft eggs, until the hatchlings (termed "flaplings" by some paleontologists) emerged, strong-boned and ready to fly on their own.
23* Especially in older media, they are often portrayed with [[MixAndmatchCritter bat wings]], tying into the whole DinosaursAreDragons thing. Actually, their wing membranes were sustained by ''only one'' overly-long digit, the fourth one (not the fifth as sometimes shown), which was as robust as the rest of the forelimb. The first, second and third fingers were normal-sized and protruded from the anterior wing-edge like the first digit of modern bats. While most media nowadays have done away with the bat wings, more persistent is the depiction of the wings as loose, bat-like flaps of skin -- in RealLife, the wing membranes were thin but taut sheets of muscle, containing several distinct layers of complex muscle fibers that could be slacked and tightened for on-the-fly adjustments.
24* We don’t know at all what kind of sounds they emitted in RealLife, but expect to hear them [[NoisyNature screeching loudly and continuously]] (usually in a mixed crow-vulture-seagull manner), and also fanning their wings as noisily as possible.
25* They tend to be represented as ''always'' huge. In RealLife there were ''many'' types of pterosaurs (just like modern birds) and they were astonishingly diverse in size, ranging from the size of a crow up to a small airplane.
26* They weren't dinosaurs, nor were they birds. Furthermore, they were not even the ancestors of any modern flier[[note]]Dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds; synapsids (below), being the ancestors of ''all'' mammals, were the ancestors of modern bats, and invertebrates aren't even worth mentioning in this note[[/note]]: instead, they were only ''relatives'' of dinosaurs (and thus birds, of course).
27
28It's worth noting, however, that ScienceMarchesOn has been a crucial factor in pterosaur portrayals. Like dinosaurs, pterosaurs have undergone a sort of scientific "renaissance" since the 70s. Before that, they were considered cold-blooded creatures covered in scales and very unlike modern birds. Scientists used to think pterosaurs had weak wing muscles and fragile wing membranes; this would've meant pterosaurs were only awkward gliders -- contrasting with the popular view of them as powerful fliers. Since their "renaissance", paleontologists now believe pterosaurs were the first ever vertebrates to be able to fly properly, and nowadays it's clear they were active and efficient fliers with large brains, good eyesight, an excellent sense of balance, skin covered in down-like structures (just like the most bird-like theropods), and high metabolic rates. Due to the structure of their wings, pterosaurs would have been particularly adept at soaring (a bit like modern albatrosses), but they were also able to flap their wings.
29
30Most pterosaurs discovered thus far appear to have lived in marine, coastal, or other watery habitats, but more dry land-loving kinds surely existed as well: some of the smallest species were probably able to climb trees. They were mainly predators of small prey (insects, fish, small land vertebrates etc. according to the species), but some may have been fruit-eaters. Some (especially ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Pterodaustro]]'') were flamingo-like filter feeders. Like dinosaurs, we don't know what coloration they had, though different kinds of pterosaurs surely had different colors. Modern artists often depict them with motifs reminiscent of those of modern birds, but may also portray them with duller colors (as happens with dinosaurs). Pterosaur locomotion on land has long been a mystery; their footprints were only first discovered in the 1990s. Scientists now think most or all pterosaurs were quadrupedal. Despite all these discoveries and theories, even today the pterosaurs remain one of the most enigmatic groups of prehistoric beasts, as their fossil record has always been one of the scarcest.
31
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Stock Pterosaurs]]
35
36Very few pterosaurs have been portrayed in non-documentary media, despite their notable variety in RealLife. Among pterosaurs listed here, only four can be called pterodactyls (or more correctly, pterodactyloids) without being totally wrong: ''Pteranodon'', ''Quetzalcoatlus'', ''Hatzegopteryx'', and of course ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Pterodactylus]]''. The other three, ''Rhamphorhynchus'', ''Dimorphodon'', and ''Sordes'', were more primitive than the former and are usually called rhamphorhynchoids.
37
38Surprisingly, stock pterosaurs are ''not'' (necessarily) the biggest/coolest-looking ones -- four out of seven are no bigger than an eagle or a stork. Instead, four of them were among the very first scientifically-described species, in the 19th century.
39
40''Pterodactylus'', ''Rhamphorhynchus'', and ''Dimorphodon'' (all mid-sized) were discovered in Europe before the 1820s, the decade in which the first dinosaurs were named. The last two were initially classified as ''Pterodactylus'' and recognized as distinct only after the 1820s. Initially, scientists were doubtful if pterosaurs were really fliers: since no modern reptile (in the traditional sense) can fly, some thought they were ''swimmers'' using their membranes as flippers, while others believed they were terrestrial. And some, surprisingly, already postulated they were furry like mammals (even though most classical depictions show them scaly). The notion that they were covered with filamentous structures has re-emerged only in TheSeventies, thanks to new fossil finds of that period, such as ''Sordes''.
41
42With its 7m/24ft wingspan, ''Pteranodon'' was found in the USA in the last quarter of the 19th century, during the "Bone Wars."[[note]]Oddly, it too was initially classified as ''Pterodactylus''.[[/note]] Its sheer size ("Whoa the biggest flier ever!") and its crest soon made it the new iconic pterosaur, and it still holds that status today.
43
44Several interesting new pterosaurs were discovered in the second half of the 20th century: among them, ''Dsungaripterus'', ''Pterodaustro'', ''Tropeognathus'', ''Anhanguera'', ''Tapejara'', ''Eudimorphodon'', and the aforementioned "hairy" ''Sordes''; but only one managed to achieve some consideration in the media: ''Quetzalcoatlus'', because it was the only one clearly bigger than ''Pteranodon'', and the new "biggest flying animal ever." In the 2000s, ''Tropeognathus'' gained some popularity as well thanks to a memorable appearance in ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' (as "Ornithocheirus"), but only because it was (wrongly) described as the biggest flying animal that ever existed, but not enough to be listed here. In the 2010s, ''Hatzegopteryx'', found in year 2003 in Romania, also gained some fame thanks to its size, being possibly bigger than ''Quetzalcoatlus'' itself.
45
46!! Giant Flier, but not Toothy: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pteranodon Pteranodon]]'' ***
47
48''Pteranodon'' lived 86-84 million years ago on the shorelines of the inland sea that covers what is today Kansas, Nebraska, and other midwestern U.S. states. It had the typical traits of the most evolved pterosaurs, the pterodactyloids (aka literal pterodactyls). It had an elongated head, weak hindlimbs, only a hint of a tail, and very long wings with a huge "wing-finger," while the other digits were very small and may have been almost useless. It was one of the most specialized flying animals that ever lived, but very clumsy on land, where it walked slowly on all fours. With a wingspan of 6m/20ft, it was once considered the largest animal to ever fly, and the absolute limit for flying animal size.
49
50It was thought pteranodonts lived a bit like modern seashore birds, laying their eggs on cliffs and using ascendant winds to take off. However, the takeoff method is now known to have been wrong; rather, pteranodonts, like all pterosaurs, could vault from the ground with their wings, like bats do. Roosting on cliffs is not entirely unlikely, though. Like the modern albatross, they may have been vagrant or migratory. Contrary to what is sometimes said, ''Pteranodon'' probably didn’t survive enough to see the meteorite -- its fossil record ends a dozen million years before the mass extinction. Until 2018, only [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles azhdarchids]] were known from fossils as late as 66 mya; one of them was ''Quetzalcoatlus'' (see below). Findings early in 2018 revealed that pteranodontids and their smaller, more derived relatives, the nyctosaurids, also reached that point, though ''Pteranodon'' itself still hasn't left any fossils from that time.
51
52The [[https://youtu.be/pQJIVxzIUic backwards-pointing crest]] is the most striking feature of ''Pteranodon''. It was laterally flattened in RealLife, but in media expect to see it with a conical shape, often resembling a horn. The real purpose of this crest is still unclear. It is traditionally described as a sort of balancing pole to better balance the long head, or as a rudder to keep it stabilized during flight. However, this doesn’t explain why only males had such a big crest, while the females’ one was extremely shortened. It was once thought long- and short-crested individuals belonged to different species.[[note]]Astonishingly, short-crested pteranodonts are ''almost never'' shown even in documentary media![[/note]] This bony protrusion may have simply been a display device, as is also hypothesized for ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Stegosaurus]]''’ plates, ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Triceratops]]''’ horns and frill, ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Spinosaurus]]''’ "sail", and so on. This could explain why the males’ one was so big compared with the females.
53
54In popular portrayals, an ever-present mistake is to show ''Pteranodon'' as [[ToothyBird toothed]]. When present, these teeth usually resemble those of the other well-known pterosaur, ''Rhamphorhynchus'' (see below). The fact that the genus’ name ends in ''-odon'' (meaning tooth in Greek) may mislead people. Actually, ''-odon'' is preceded by the Greek "privative ''a-''" (becoming ''an-'' when followed by a vowel). Thus, ''anodon'' means ''toothless'' (see also ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Ludodactylus]]'').
55
56In RealLife, ''Pteranodon'' was basically a giant pelican in behavior. Its long toothless beak was useful for catching fish, and the shape of its lower jaws seem to show a sort of "pouch" to store fish in flight, though this is not certain. It was once thought that ''Pteranodon'' would snatch fish on the fly with its beak, but now it's believed that it would have dived into the water and swam for food (again, much like a brown pelican; the other species of pelicans don't dive). If alive today, ''Pteranodon'' wouldn't be the danger for humans that it usually is in media. Weighing only about 50kg/110 lbs and having bones even hollower than those of birds, it was too light to lift a 70kg man off the ground. And even if it could, it wouldn't have used its weak hindlimbs, but its mouth instead. Finally, since its beak was straight and smooth-edged, a child could easily have escaped it by wriggling.
57
58''Pteranodon''’s nifty crest, along with the fact that it held the size record for almost a century, has made it THE pterosaur in popular imagination. Its iconic status among pterosaurs could be partially justified. It’s not only one of the first-discovered pterosaurs, but perhaps also the most common in the fossil record. Hundreds of specimens are known, while most other pterosaur genera are much, much rarer, often known from a single individual. The vast majority of pteranodonts belong to the species everyone knows, ''Pteranodon longiceps'', the latter word meaning "long head" for its slender, pointy crest. The other species ''Pteranodon sternbergi'' had a somewhat more rectangular crest, which has lead some scientists to classify it as its own genus, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Geosternbergia]]''.
59
60# '''Entry Time:''' 1925
61# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Film/TheLostWorld'' (film)
62
63!! Smaller Flier, but Toothy: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhamphorhynchus Rhamphorhynchus]]'' **
64
65''Rhamphorhynchus longicaudus'' ("long-tailed sharp beak") was first found in Germany in the 19th century, and lived in the Late Jurassic in the same location as several other pterosaurs, as well as ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Archaeopteryx]]'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Compsognathus]]''. It was the second named pterosaur after the prototypical ''Pterodactylus'' (see below), and the first one known with a long tail. It’s the namesake of the primitive pterosaurs called rhamphorhynchoids. Like ''Archaeopteryx'', ''Rhamphorhynchus'' has left exquisite remains. Some specimens with prints of wing membranes have been known since the 19th century. It was just these ''Rhamphorhynchus'' that definitively showed pterosaurs were airborne critters, not water-dwelling as believed by some at the time.
66
67''Rhamphorhynchus'' had a wingspan of about 2m/6ft, relatively short wings, a narrow snout slightly pointing upwards[[note]]Even though classic portraits show it with a straight snout[[/note]], robust hindlimbs, and long tail. Two recognizable traits are the protruding teeth and the diamond-shaped "fin" set vertically on the tip of its tail. As ''Rhamphorhynchus'' lived in coastal lagoons, the teeth were probably apt to catch fish by swimming and diving, much like ''Pteranodon'' did. The typical tailfin was made of soft tissue (it’s known only thanks to prints in the rocks).
68
69''Rhamphorhynchus''’ tail has often been compared with a dragon’s or a devil’s, and the large teeth give it a deceptively "menacing" look (it wouldn’t be more dangerous than a gull if alive today). We also now know it was covered in hair-like structures, like its relative ''Sordes pilosus'' (which just means "hairy devil").
70
71Its striking look, the earliness of its discovery, and the completeness of many remains have contributed to making ''Rhamphorhynchus'' the second most commonly portrayed pterosaur in media -- especially older media. In particular, the ''Literature/{{Pellucidar}}'' series by Franchise/{{Tarzan}} creator Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs features the Mahars -- an evil, intelligent race of ''psychic'' ''Rhamphorhynchus''. And Creator/RayHarryhausen's movie ''Film/OneMillionYearsBC'' shows a huge, short-tailed (and tailfin-lacking) "rhampho" winning an aerial battle against an equally huge (but correctly toothless just for once) ''Pteranodon''. The species has become quite rare today -- pterosaurs shown in the most recent movies generally are ''Pteranodon'' or (more commonly) a fictional species.
72
73Like ''Pteranodon'', ''Rhamphorhynchus'' tends to be portrayed incorrectly in fiction, often as big as a ''Pteranodon'' or even bigger. Another classic mistake is to show the "rhampho" with a flexible tail (a bit like what happens to the "raptor" dinosaurs) and often ending with ''triangular, arrow-like fins'', like [[https://youtu.be/bENtOFR66YY here]]. In reality, their tail was stiffened by bony tendons and was a steering device during flight.[[note]]It's been suggested that only males had the "fin", butthis cannot be proven. But if this is true, then this thing could have been for display.[[/note]] Finally, a very [[UndeadHorseTrope Undead Horse]] subtrope is to apply the "dragonish" rhamphorhynchoid tail to [[RuleOfCool every other]] [[MixAndMatchCritter pterosaur]], especially ''Pteranodon''. Actually, pterodactyloid pterosaurs had stubby tails without distinction. Some specialized rhamphorhynchoids had also short tails, like the tiny ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Anurognathus]]''.
74
75# '''Entry Time:''' 1910s
76# '''TropeMaker:''' E. R. Burroughs' ''Literature/{{Pellucidar}}''
77
78!! Huge, Mythical Beast: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quetzalcoatlus Quetzalcoatlus]]'' **
79
80This has been considered the ultimate GiantFlyer among prehistoric animals. Living in North America at the very end of the Cretaceous, 68-66 mya (but some think its distribution was worldwide), ''Quetzalcoatlus northropi'' was discovered in the 1970s in Texas from incomplete remains. Its wingspan was estimated from 10m/35ft up to 16m/50ft, with the lower range being the most likely. [[RuleOfCool Of course]], pop-media has often followed the higher one. This "living airplane" took ''Pteranodon'''s reputation over as "the biggest flier ever" in those years. Its describer named it from an Aztec divinity, Quetzalcoatl, the "[[FeatheredDragons feathered snake]]" -- the animal itself is often called "the quetzalcoatl". Its name also recalls that of the modern [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quetzal Quetzal]], the long-tailed bird sacred to the Aztecs. In 2021, a second smaller-sized (6m/20ft wingspan) ''Quetzalcoatlus'' species, ''Quetzalcoatlus lawsoni'', was described.
81
82Weighing about 200 kg, ''Quetzalcoatlus'' was long described as similar to an upscaled ''Pteranodon'' (which weighed less than half that). Indeed, both animals had a long toothless beak and an atrophied tail. Some depictions show ''Quetzalcoatlus'' with a small cranial crest, others show it crestless. Compared to ''Pteranodon'', ''Quetzalcoatlus'' had much longer, stronger hindlimbs, a bigger body, a longer, stiffer neck, and shorter, wider wings with the "hands" closer to the wingtips than to the shoulders. Its diet has long been an enigma (Fish? Carrion?), but in the 2000s, scientists re-studied its anatomy, and today ''Quetzalcoatlus'' is thought to have been a mainly terrestrial animal, walking on its four long limbs, and eating small land critters like a stork. [[note]]It's worth noting that the terrestrial hypothesis was already postulated just after the first find, but initially not demonstrated.[[/note]]
83
84The astonishing thing is, in spite of being [[http://pterosaurs.wordpress.com/2008/05/16/azhdarchid-paleobiology-part-i/ as tall as a giraffe]] when on land, ''Quetzalcoatlus'' could still ''fly''. As absurd as this sounds, pterosaurs had two key traits that allowed them to grow massive without becoming flightless. The first is that for their body size, pterosaurs were even lighter than birds, having totally hollow bones like straws and air sacs in their wing membranes; ''Quetzalcoatlus'' itself was about the size of a giraffe yet was only a quarter of the weight. Secondly, the quadrupedal stance of pterosaurs allowed them to take off on all fours, starting with the wings -- a much more cost-efficient method of takeoff compared to the two-legged strategy used by birds. Given its size, it should have been an extremely powerful flier, capable of frequenting several habitats, and maybe even traveling worldwide.
85
86Despite its impressiveness, ''Quetzalcoatlus'' has only received great attention in dino-books and documentaries, with being rare in films and dino-stories. This is especially unusual given that with its size, diet, and terrestrial habits, it would have been the ''only'' of the classic five stock pterosaurs capable of killing and eating humans if alive today. However, ''Quetzalcoatlus'' still has some notable pop-culture appearances under its belt, such as being one of the central characters of ''Literature/{{Dinoverse}}'' and being regularly ridden by the characters in ''Literature/{{Dinotopia}}'', where they are known as "skybaxes" -- it even appeared in the ''Literature/CaptainUnderpants'' series as the {{Kid Hero}}es' TeamPet in the later books! The "quetz" wouldn't make its Hollywood debut however until 2022's ''Film/JurassicWorldDominion'', being one of the most accurate designs in the franchise and possibly its first pop-media depiction as a dangerous creature rather than the GentleGiant of the abovementioned literary appearances. A downsized ''Quetzalcoatlus'' flying robot capable of flapping its wing was built in the 1990s, although it did not have the proportions that the animal is now known to have had (a case of ScienceMarchesOn). Another less-complex flying robot built in the same years represented ''Pteranodon''.
87
88# '''Entry Time:''' 1990s
89# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/{{Dinotopia}}'' books
90
91!! The first-named Reptile of the Mesozoic: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterodactylus Pterodactylus]]'' **
92
93Rarely will you see any other pterosaur in fiction, but if you do, it will either be ''Pterodactylus'' or ''Dimorphodon''. In the original novel ''Literature/{{The Lost World|1912}}'', the two scientists argue if the pterosaurs they meet are one of the two. Whatever kind they were, they are enormously oversized -- even bigger than a ''Pteranodon''. In RealLife both were not bigger than a large seagull. In recent stories, ''Pterodactylus'' and ''Dimorphodon'' are rarely portrayed, but have traditionally been common in documentary media due to their historical relevance.
94
95Discovered in 1784, ''Pterodactylus'' was not only the first pterosaur ever found, but the second Mesozoic reptile known to science (the first being the sea reptile ''Mosasaurus''; see below) and the first fossil animal to be recognized as being like nothing alive today (well before the first dinosaurs) -- and this was back when concepts like "extinct" and "antediluvian" (the word "prehistoric" came later) were still highly controversial. Obviously, ''Pterodactylus'' was the very first flying reptile ever found, and even early paleontologists tended to refer to the whole group as 'pterodactyls' long before the word "pterosaur" was coined; this explains why 'pterodactyl' has become the stock name of pterosaurs.
96
97Over 50 ''Pterodactylus'' species were recognized in the past, but most are now under different genera (some of which actually lived alongside it), including ''Rhamphorhynchus'', ''Dimorphodon'', ''Pteranodon'', ''Dsungaripterus'', ''Germanodactylus'', ''Aerodactylus''[[note]]yes, this one is named after that pterosaur Franchise/{{Pokemon}}[[/note]], ''Gnathosaurus'', ''Campylognathoides'', ''Lonchodraco'', ''Ardeadactylus'', ''Dorygnathus'', ''Scaphognathus'', and ''Ctenochasma''. Today, only one (the original) has remained valid, ''Pterodactylus antiquus'' ("ancient winged finger"), about the same size of a ''Rhamphorhynchus''. Some alleged ''Pterodactylus'' species were described from individuals no bigger than a sparrow: this led the genus to be described as "one of the tiniest pterosaurs ever." [[ScienceMarchesOn Recent research]] suggests these specimens were actually newborns, which deceptively resemble miniaturized adults. The fact that newborn pterosaurs were virtually identical to adults is a very recent discovery (made in the 2000s) that astonished scientists: none of the extant fliers shows powered flight soon after its birth. This tells us that pterosaurs were fully independent at birth, and thus did not care for their young.
98
99''Pterodactylus'' was one of the first pterodactyloid pterosaurs to appear (Late Jurassic Europe), and shared its habitat with the more archaic ''Rhamphorhynchus''. Its body shape was more similar to a miniaturized pteranodont than to a rhamphorhynch, with long, thin jaws, elongated wings, weak hindlimbs, small "wing-hands," and a stubby tail. Usually depicted as a generic-as-it-gets pterosaur, the latest findings show it had a small crest made of skin on the back of its head. Moreover, its apparently generic teeth could have been specialized for something -- traditionally described as a fish- or insect-hunter, ''Pterodactylus'' could have been a filter feeder in coastal lagoons (though not so specialized as its cousin, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Pterodaustro]]'') or perhaps a wader/prober like a shorebird.
100
101# '''Entry Time:''' 1854
102# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park
103
104!! Primitive Bighead: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimorphodon Dimorphodon]]'' **
105
106''Dimorphodon'' was a rhamphorhynchoid that lived in Early Jurassic, 195-190 mya -- the most ancient of the stock pterosaurs. Found in England, it shared with ''Rhamphorhynchus'' the elongated stiffened tail, but we don't know if it had a "fin." Its most striking trait was its oversized skull, even bigger than the body itself! Despite appearances, the head of ''Dimorphodon'' was lightened by wide openings in the skull, and the animal couldn’t have had trouble lifting it, a bit like modern toucans and hornbills with their beaks.
107
108Its name, "two-shaped teeth," recalls that of the famous ''Dimetrodon'' ("two-measured teeth"). It had [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin two kinds of teeth]] (while most pterosaurs had only one or none). Some teeth were bigger and sparse among the smaller ones. With this kind of dentition, the feeding habits of ''Dimorphodon'' have always been matter of speculation. It could have been a fisher, a hunter of small land animals, or an insectivore. Newer evidence reveals that the latter two were more likely, however, as it has few to no adaptations for fishing, but many for terrestrial hunting and leaf-litter grubbing.
109
110''Dimorphodon'' is often depicted as a frequent flyer (the ''Literature/{{Dinotopia}}'' books even portray it as an InstantMessengerPigeon!), but later research suggests that it was quite the opposite. While ''Dimorphodon'' could fly, it was also rather heavy for such a small animal, making flight rather strenuous for it. It's believed that, like similarly loaded birds, ''Dimorphodon'' would have only flown in times of emergency. Interestingly, this is ''not'' an illustration of ''Dimorphodon's'' primitiveness, as many pterosaurs before it were excellent flyers. This likely means that ''Dimorphodon's'' poor flight ability was actually an evolutionary adaptation for chasing bugs, lizards, and small mammals through the undergrowth.
111
112More archaic than ''Rhamphorhynchus'', ''Dimorphodon'' shows several primitive traits which betray how dinosaurs and pterosaurs were closely related. The three free wing-fingers were strong and large-clawed, not unlike those of a feathered theropod (indeed, its species name, ''macronyx'', means "large claw"), and the hindlegs were long and powerful. Its stocky skull was more similar to a theropod dinosaur than to a pterosaur, with nasal openings on the tip of the nose (most pterosaurs had nostrils just in front of the eyes). A strange anatomical feature is one elongated digit in each hindfoot, which could have been attached to the wing membrane. If so, the dimorphodont could have used it to better control its flight, like modern bats do with their feet. More evolved pterosaurs lost this super-toe altogether. Despite its primitive anatomy, ''Dimorphodon'' was a true pterosaur with all the pterosaurian traits (see also ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Eudimorphodon]]'').
113
114''Dimorphodon'' was discovered in 1828 by the famed Mary Anning, who also found the first plesiosaurs and icthyosaurs (see below). These same rocks, found along the coast of southwest England in Dorset, also produced ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Scelidosaurus]]'' and are today a World Heritage Site known as the Jurassic Coast. Despite its historical significance, it doesn't typically appear in the media beyond dinosaur books. However, this might be due for a change with the release of ''Film/JurassicWorld'', which had ''Dimorphodon'' as a featured creature (naturally in the [[DeathFromAbove "winged menace"]] role).
115
116# '''Entry Time:''' 1912
117# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/{{The Lost World|1912}}''
118
119!! Giant Among Dinosaurs: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatzegopteryx Hatzegopteryx]]'' *
120
121''Quetzalcoatlus'' was not the only gigantic azhdarchid. Since the 90s, others have been discovered with a similar estimated wingspan, e.g. ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arambourgiania Arambourgiania]]''. But at an estimated 250 kg, ''Hatzegopteryx thambema'' was the heaviest of them, and quite possibly the [[GiantFlyer biggest pterosaur]] (and flying animal in general) of all time, a real "Badassodactylus".
122
123''Hatzegopteryx'' lived on and was named after the Late Cretaceous "Hateg Island", which existed in what is today [[{{Dracula}} Transylvania, Romania]].
124
125Here, dinosaurs a fraction of the size of their mainland cousins lived: cow-sized sauropods (''Magyarosaurus''), human-sized hadrosaurs (''Telmatosaurus''), sheep-sized ankylosaurs (''Struthiosaurus''), and dog-sized iguanodontians (''Zalmoxes''), but no big predatory dinosaurs. ''Hatzegopteryx'' was a peculiar creature for many reasons; while the island was home to dinosaurs that were subject to island dwarfism, ''Hatzegopteryx'' went the opposite direction and was subject to island gigantism, being as tall as a giraffe. This would have put ''Hatzegopteryx'' on the top of the island's food chain. Additionally, unlike most other azhdarchids, ''Hatzegopteryx'' likely had an extremely thick and muscular build and a relatively short neck. This implies that ''Hatzegopteryx'' hunted significantly larger prey than other azhdarchids (potentially up to the size of ''a cow''). It could have swallowed a whole ''Struthiosaurus'', armor and all, or speared a ''Magyarosaurus'' with its huge beak. Even though the ''Hatzegopteryx'''s wingspan was probably not wider than that of ''Quetzalcoatlus'', its skull was much bulkier, and was probably as massive and long as the skull of a large theropod or ceratopsid dinosaur, and thus one of the biggest skulls among non-marine animals that has ever existed.
126
127''Hatzegopteryx'' is the most recent pterosaur to attain "stock" status, at least as far as nonfiction works are concerned (hence the one star above). First described in 2002, it made its media debut in the 2011 documentary ''Series/PlanetDinosaur'', which was unfortunately made [[ScienceMarchesOn before the species' robust body plan was known]]. It has since appeared in ''VideoGame/TheIsle'', as an unlockable creature in ''Jurassic World: The Game'', and in ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet''.
128
129# '''Entry Time''': 2011
130# '''TropeMaker''' ''Series/PlanetDinosaur'' (documentary)
131
132!! Revolutionary Hairs: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sordes Sordes]]'' *
133
134Among the numerous pterosaurs outside the classic five -- ''Pteranodon'', ''Rhamphorhynchus'', ''Quetzalcoatlus'', ''Pterodactylus'', ''Dimorphodon'' -- we might also mention the very short-named ''Sordes pilosus''. Even though its name is usually translated into "hairy devil", but technically "sordes" is Latin for "filth" or "scum" ''and'' is a feminine word under the Latin rules of grammar, meaning its species name should be rewritten as ''pilosa'' (Latin feminine of hairy) according to some.
135
136Very similar to ''Rhamphorhynchus'', this small (2 ft of wingspan) Late Jurassic rhamphorhynchoid from Kazakhstan, in the former U.S.S.R., has nonetheless had an enormous relevance in ptero-science; it was the first pterosaur ever discovered with ''fur-like covering'' (20 years before the description of the first feathered non-bird dinosaur), and thus led the start to the "[[ScienceMarchesOn Pterosaur Renaissance]]" briefly described above. Today, many scientists believe all ornithodirans (dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and their common ancestors) were originally covered in filamentous skin structures -- feathers and proto-feathers in the case of dinosaurs, "pycnofibres" in the case of pterosaurs. Both dinosaurs and pterosaurs could have inherited this trait from their earliest Triassic ancestors like ''Lagosuchus'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Scleromochlus]]''. The other main archosaurian lineage, the pseudosuchians (crocs and their extinct relatives) never developed these filamentous elements on their skin during their evolution.
137
138In paleoart ''Sordes'' can be either shown with or without the classic ''Rhamphorhynchus'' fin on its tail, but it is the ''only'' one among the pterosaurs found before the TurnOfTheMillennium that has always been shown "furred" and not naked or scaled like all the others (see also ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Avimimus]]'' for its non-bird-dinosaur equivalent).
139
140# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
141# '''TropeMaker:''' its status as the "first-known furred pterosaur"
142
143!! Other pterosaurs
144Sorry, these ones aren't here. If you're looking for ''Dsungaripterus'', ''Nyctosaurus'', ''Pterodaustro'', ''Tropeognathus'', ''Cearadactylus'', ''Anhanguera'', ''Tupandactylus'', ''Anurognathus'', ''Eudimorphodon'', ''Harpactognathus'', ''Preondactylus'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles here.]]
145[[/folder]]
146
147----
148
149!Marine Reptiles
150
151Similarly, these animals are often collectively referred to as "marine dinosaurs," but this time, they were ''not'' close relatives of true dinosaurs; most of them were not even related to each other. There ''were'' semiaquatic dinosaurs (''Spinosaurus'', for one), not to mention modern-day diving birds such as penguins, but none of them were completely marine in the way that these reptiles were.
152
153[[folder:Sea Reptiles in Media]]
154
155Four main groups of sea reptiles can be recognized in media: plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, and pliosaurs. In RealLife, there were other sea-going reptiles in the Mesozoic, but being less impressive than the above, they don’t gain much attention (except for the giant turtle ''Archelon'', which shows up occasionally). As with most prehistoric animals, only the largest will be mentioned from each group, with the exception of the ichthyosaurs. Ichthyosaurs will be represented only by ''Ichthyosaurus'', which was actually small for the group, though that won't stop writers from making it bigger. However, in old media, ''Plesiosaurus'' is frequent as well, even though it, too, was a very small member of its group (although it is regularly shown oversized as well).
156
157Interestingly, unlike dinosaurs, marine reptiles were already well-known to science at the beginning of the 19th century. Their fossil record is overall wealthier and better-preserved than that of the dinosaurs. Significantly, the very ''first'' "antediluvian" reptiles to enter into narrative media were not dinosaurs, but the ichthyosaur and the plesiosaur, which battle each other in the novel ''Literature/JourneyToTheCenterOfTheEarth'' written by Creator/JulesVerne in 1864. Both animals were enormously oversized and depicted in a ''very'' fanciful way: more like MixAndMatchCritter-type [[SeaMonster sea monsters]] than their RealLife counterparts. The "ichthyosaur" is similar to a mix-up of whales, crocodiles, dragons and snakes, and doesn't have the familiar fish-like shape of a real ''Ichthyosaurus''. The plesiosaur is a bit more realistic, but has a serpentine neck and the shell of a sea turtle. However, some of these errors are due to ScienceMarchesOn, as we’ll see in the individual sections below.
158
159Possibly thanks to Verne, the battle between prehistoric marine reptiles has become [[BehemothBattle stock]] in paleo-art and pop culture, just like its land-based equivalent of the carnivorous vs. herbivorous dinosaur. One of the opponents is always a long-necked plesiosaur, while the other may alternate between a mosasaur (known plesiosaur predators), an oversized ''Ichthyosaurus'' (other ichthyosaurs were plesiosaur predators, but not this one), or a pliosaur (graphic RealLife evidence exists in the form of a decapitated plesiosaur). In these portrayals, ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, and pliosaurs tend to be used indifferently, often confused each other and portrayed as generic giant swimmers.
160
161Another long-standing cliché makes sea reptiles the pterosaurs' archenemies. You've probably already seen the scene of a prehistoric leviathan emerging abruptly from the surface of the sea, grabbing a giant flying reptile with its jaws (the victim is usually ''Pteranodon''), and dragging it underwater to eat it[[note]]Creator/DougalDixon once speculated that long-necked plesiosaurs would be specialist seabird/pterosaur hunters if they survived to the present[[/note]]. A good example of this is in Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Fantasia}}'', but the cliché itself is much older -- [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duria_Antiquior an 1830 painting]] depicts a plesiosaur reaching its neck out of the water to seize a pterosaur. In RealLife, this would be possible only for the biggest mosasaurs and pliosaurs, and even then, we don't have any evidence that either of these preyed on pterosaurs; in fact, we have more evidence that large fish, predatory dinosaurs, and marine crocodiles would have fancied a leathery-winged snack. Giant ichthyosaurs did roam the seas, but in their time, pterosaurs were still ''very'' small. Even though giant plesiosaurs like ''Elasmosaurus'' could have interacted with giant pterosaurs, their small mouths were unable to swallow [[GiantFlyer Giant Fliers]] like ''Pteranodon''. Fossils of a juvenile ''Pteranodon'' have been discovered in the belly of a plesiosaur fossil, but given what is known about plesiosaur ecology, they were probably scavenged.
162
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:Stock Sea Reptiles]]
166
167!! Flippered Brontosaurs: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasmosaurus Elasmosaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plesiosaurus Plesiosaurus]]'' ***
168
169[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plesiosaur Plesiosaurs]] (more correctly, plesiosauroids) are among the most distinctive marine reptiles, and lived worldwide throughout the Mesozoic, 203-66 mya. With their long necks, massive bodies, short tails, small heads, and four paddle-like limbs, their appearance may recall that of a flippered brontosaur, but they were actually very different from sauropod dinosaurs.[[note]]Some plesiosauroids, such as the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polycotylidae polycotylids]], did not have long necks, instead resembling pliosaurs[[/note]] They were carnivorous, like all known marine reptiles. Their small mouths combined with fossilized stomach contents tell us that they ate only small prey, like fish and squid (although some species might have been specialized to different diets). Their hunting techniques are still a matter of discussion -- active hunting, ambush predation, bottom-feeding or even partial filter-feeding are all possible. They had pointed teeth which protruded from their jaws, but whether they had lips is a matter of question; crocodiles don't have lips, as their teeth are lubricated by their watery environment, so it might have been the same with plesiosaurs. [[RuleOfCool For obvious reasons]], most go with lipless reconstructions, although the teeth are often oversized and more protruding than in RealLife, resembling the fangs of boa or python snakes.
170
171The association with snakes and turtles seems a constant when describing plesiosaurs. Even scientists used to describe these animals as "[[MixAndMatchCritter a turtle in a snake’s body]]" or "[[MixAndMatchCritter a snake in a turtle’s body]]." Their bodies were actually shaped somewhat like sea turtles' (though lacking a shell, of course), and their necks had a huge number of vertebrae (76 in ''Elasmosaurus''!). Classic depictions show plesiosaurs with extremely flexible necks capable of coiling and darting like a snake. ScienceMarchesOn however, and it was discovered in the 2000s (thanks to simulations in CGI) that their necks were much more rigid than previously thought, a bit like what has happened to sauropod dinosaurs. Unlike ichthyosaurs (see below) their skin still seemingly preserved small scales, but we don't know how they were colored.
172
173These animals are traditionally described as slow swimmers, using their four flippers as oars and awkwardly propelling their bulk through the water. In classic art, plesiosaurs are usually portrayed in a swan-like posture when surfacing, and often use their necks as periscopes when swimming underwater. According to biomechanical studies, they'd have kept their neck straight to better plough the water, and used their flippers to literally "fly" underwater, alternating movement of the front and back flippers to generate extra lift. Plesiosaurs may have been among the most skilled swimming animals of all time. Like whales compared to dolphins, larger species may have been less agile than smaller ones. There is also evidence of plesiosaurs having a fluke on their tail that acted as a rudder.
174
175The most commonly shown species in recent media is ''Elasmosaurus platyurus'', while ''Plesiosaurus dolichodeirus'' is more common in older works. ''Elasmosaurus'' was one of the largest plesiosauroids, 40ft/13m long (about as long as a grey whale), but since only a small portion of its length was the body, it weighed "only" 8-10 tons (about as heavy as a large killer whale). The 20ft/7m long neck made more than half the entire length, and was actually longer than the body. Living during the Late Cretaceous in the inland Western Interior Seaway of North America, ''Elasmosaurus'' was discovered in the USA shortly before the famous Bone Wars. Its describer, Edward Cope, made an astounding mistake in his first attempt to rebuild its skeleton by putting the head at the end of the tail, and this explains why the animal in the oldest paleo-art [[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Laelaps-cope.jpg has a short neck and an extremely long tail]]. The prototypical ''Plesiosaurus'' was the first described plesiosaur (1821), before even the earliest-discovered dinosaurs, ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Megalosaurus]]'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Iguanodon]]''. First found in Dorset, England by Mary Anning, it was much smaller (16ft long), lived earlier (at beginning of the Jurassic) and was proportionally shorter-necked and longer-headed than ''Elasmosaurus'' -- though popular portrayals sometimes show it as a miniature elasmosaur, with a longer neck and smaller head than in RealLife.
176
177Possibly thanks to their dinosaurian look and the association with snakes, plesiosaurs have been the most iconic and depicted sea reptiles in media. Like dinosaurs and pterosaurs, expect to see them as [[PrehistoricMonster scary monsters]] with a [[EverythingTryingToKillYou killing attitude]]. If alive today, even the biggest ''Elasmosaurus'' wouldn't be more aggressive than most whales (although they could unintentionally overturn your tiny boat or raft). Needless to say, almost every time a plesiosaur shows up, ''someone'' will bring up the [[StockNessMonster Loch Ness Monster]] (which, if it exists, is extremely unlikely to be a plesiosaur).
178
179# '''Entry Time:''' 1854 (''Plesiosaurus''); 1933 (''Elasmosaurus'')
180# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park (''Plesiosaurus''); ''Film/TheSonOfKong'' (''Elasmosaurus'')
181
182!! Flippered Tyrannosaurs: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kronosaurus Kronosaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liopleurodon Liopleurodon]]'' **
183
184The long-necked plesiosauroids belong to the Sauropterygia supergroup, which also includes the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosaur Pliosaurs]] (or pliosauroids, so-called from their traditionally obscure namesake, ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosaurus Pliosaurus]]''; see below) and other lesser-known groups of sea reptiles, like [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles the nothosaurs and placodonts]]. Together, plesiosauroids and pliosauroids make the group Plesiosauria, a.k.a. "plesiosaurs" in broader sense, originating from the same common ancestor in the Triassic seas. The relationship of sauropterygians to modern reptiles has long been unclear. Once, they were placed with the ichthyosaurs in their own group, and were not believed to be related to any still-living reptilian group. Today, plesiosaurs ''sensu lato'' (pliosaurs included) are not thought to be closely related to ichthyosaurs. Instead, they seem distantly related to modern turtles (which actually doesn't help matters that much since turtles themselves are of equally unclear relationship to the other modern reptile lineages).
185
186Pliosauroids first appeared around the same time as plesiosauroids, but did not last as long, going extinct about 95 mya (about 30 mya before the asteroid). Regardless, both subgroups shared the same body plan, with rigid bodies, short tails, and two pairs of powerful flippers -- perhaps moved alternately to produce a typical "double-wing" swimming effect (as seen in ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs''). The difference was in front of their shoulders. Pliosauroids had very short, stocky necks, and their heads were far bigger than that of an ''Elasmosaurus''.[[note]]The earliest pliosauroids still had long necks though, making them strongly resemble plesiosauroids[[/note]] Their teeth were less numerous, but much longer and stronger: like elasmosaurs, expect to see them visible when the mouth is closed. Despite the differences in proportion, the head anatomy of plesiosaurs and pliosaurs was the same. Both had eyes and nostrils placed above to see out of water when the rest of the head was submerged. Both also shared a singular trait: each nostril had two chambers like fish, possibly giving them a directional sense of smell. We don’t know if they passed more time near the surface or in the deeps, but some think pliosaurs were more deep-sea creatures than plesiosaurs.
187
188Pliosaurs were variably-sized, some were no bigger than dolphins, but the biggest ones are candidates for the title of largest sea reptile ever -- though their size has often been exaggerated. Among the latter, ''Liopleurodon ferox'' and ''Kronosaurus queenslandicus'' were some of the top predators of the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous oceans respectively. First found in Australia in 1924 and once estimated at 16m/52ft long (10m/33ft is more likely), ''Kronosaurus'' is named for Cronus, a Greek Titan who [[ImAHumanitarian devoured his own offspring]] (most of the Olympians among them). ''Liopleurodon'' was found in Europe in the late 19th century and was very similar to the former, but more primitive, slightly longer-necked, and with less teeth. As is usual with marine superpredators, both are usually depicted as [[PrehistoricMonster merciless, ever-hungry killing machines]]. For some reason, unlike dinosaurs and pterosaurs, marine reptiles are usually shown with dull colors, even in modern portrayals. However, some of them might have been very colorful, like modern tropical seagoing animals.
189
190Despite this, pliosaurs have been the least-portrayed group of sea reptiles, and still remain mainly creatures of non-fiction. ''Kronosaurus'' was long the most commonly-shown pliosaur in books and documentaries until 1999, when a memorable appearance of an [[RuleOfCool extraordinarily oversized]][[note]]The fictional length 80ft/25m was based on misidentified bone fragments; in reality, the species maxed out at 25ft/7m long.[[/note]] ''Liopleurodon'' on ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' rapidly made it the new iconic member of the family. In the show, an old male ''Liopleurodon'' was described weighing 150 tons (a bit less than the blue whale) and the biggest predator of all time. In particular, the scene in which he chomps an ichthyosaur to pieces [[NightmareFuel disturbed many viewers]], though the sad final scene where he’s stranded like a whale and slowly dies is shown in a [[TearJerker very heartbreaking way]]. To give an idea about how the animal remained impressed in pop consciousness: [[FollowTheLeader all successive depictions]] have shown ''Liopleurodon''s with the WWD mottled blue-and-white color pattern. Another species that is starting to rise in popularity is ''Pliosaurus funkei'', known in popular culture as "Predator X". At an estimated 10m/33ft and 25 tons in weight (originally it was 15m/49ft and 45 tons but ScienceMarchesOn), it's likely that it was the largest of this group, and this was coupled with a bite that was estimated to be four times that of ''T. rex''. "Predator X" was featured on 2011's ''Series/PlanetDinosaur'', about a year before it was given its official name by science, making ''Pliosaurus'' much more visible in the popular consciousness nearly 200 years after it was first described. And the validity of ''Kronosaurus'' falling into question in 2021 (due to the fragmentary nature of the original remains and several specimens being reassigned to new genera, like ''Monquirasaurus'' and ''Eiectus''), it is likely ''Pliosaurus funkei'' will continue to rise in popularity.
191
192# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined (''Kronosaurus''); 1999 (''Liopleurodon'')
193# '''TropeMaker:''' Paleo-art (''Kronosaurus''); ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' (''Liopleurodon'')
194
195!! Fish, Dolphin, or Lizard? ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichthyosaurus Ichthyosaurus]]'' **
196
197[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichthyosaur Ichthyosaurs]] have the very evocative name of "fish-lizards": they really resembled large fish in shape and swimming style, but recall modern dolphins as well, thanks to their flippers and their long snouts. Like fishes and unlike dolphins, they had ''four'' flippers (their foreflippers were usually bigger) and an ''upright'' tail fin.
198
199As a group, ichthyosaurs were the most ancient marine reptiles, and were widespread from the Early Triassic until the Late Cretaceous, 245-90 mya, but went extinct 25 million years before theCtreaceous Extinction for unclear reasons. Once, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs and pliosaurs were put together in their own group, the "euryapsids", unified by having a single pair of fenestrae on the top of the skull. Today, "euryapsids" are firmly put in the diapsid group (which also included dinosaurs, pterosaurs and all living reptiles). Ichthyosaurs were among the very first diapsids to have evolved: since they are not related to any modern animal group (thus preventing good comparisons), they still remain quite mysterious critters.
200
201Descended from a still-unknown land-dwelling ancestor (remember, ''every'' lineage of marine reptiles descended from four-limbed terrestrial reptiles), ichthyosaurs were the most marine of all marine reptiles and never came onto land, not even to lay eggs. In fact, their young were born alive just like modern dolphins, as we can see in some fossils of mothers dead with their offspring ''just getting out of their body''. We now know that plesiosaurs also reproduced in the same way and probably never left the water either -- even though the scene of a long-necked plesiosaur which crawls on the seashore like a sea lion is a [[ScienceMarchesOn staple in artwork]]. But whereas ichthyoaurs gave birth to multiple tiny young, plesiosaurs only had a single massive baby (up to ''a third'' of the mother's size), suggesting the latter took care of their young, like whales do. Ichthyosaurs are extremely abundant in the fossil record: several individuals are preserved with soft tissue and, sometimes, ''even the imprint of the whole body''. Thanks to the latter, we know they had a dorsal fin, a crescent-shaped caudal fin, and four paired "flippers". A strange thing is the backbone curved ''downwards'' at the tail level, and filled the lower lobe of the caudal fin, not the upper one -- the exact opposite of modern sharks.
202
203Their eyes were notably large for good vision; most portrayals show ichthyosaurs with round pupils and no eyelids, like a typical fish. The skull nasal openings were just in front of the eyes, but the nostrils might have been on top of the head like modern whales (though this is totally speculative). Their skin was smooth and hydrodynamic like a dolphin, as shown in fossil prints: they were perhaps the ''only'' reptiles ever whose skin was totally scaleless, convergently with cetaceans. The mouth was usually filled with acute teeth: most ichthyosaurs ate fish, but ammonites and squid were also on their menu. We don't know what percent of time they passed underwater; they may have been able to extract some oxygen directly from the water like modern sea turtles, but they certainly did breathe air like every reptile.
204
205The resemblance to dolphins has classically led artists to show ichthyosaurs jumping out of water in a dolphin-ish style, but this is not proven. Unusually for extinct reptiles, "fish-lizards" often escape the fate of being portrayed as "{{Sea Monster}}s"... at least in modern documentaries. [[ScienceMarchesOn Originally]], ichthyosaurs were depicted as more crocodile- or mosasaur-like, with no caudal or dorsal fins. The famous ichthyosaur in ''Literature/JourneyToTheCentreOfTheEarth'' is based on this early interpretation. Several other fictional ichthyosaurs [[FollowTheLeader have then been inspired by the original]].
206
207Today, more updated ichthyosaurs are a regular sight in dino-books. They’re very useful for showing evolutionary mechanisms, providing a classic example of convergent evolution with fish and cetaceans. On the other hand, they're rarely seen in recent stories, much less than the long-necked plesiosaurs. Maybe they're not that exotic-looking, or just not impressive enough to attract writers’ interest. The species shown is always the Early Jurassic ''Ichthyosaurus communis'', because it was the first discovered, back in 1814, before the first known dinosaurs. Like ''Plesiosaurus'' and the pterosaur ''Dimorphodon'', it was found in Dorset, England by Mary Anning along what is today known as the Jurassic Coast, the rocks of which date back to the very start of the Jurassic. While it was only 8-10ft long in RealLife, expect to see it oversized (which actually makes it more like its contemporary, the 33ft long apex predator ''Temnodontosaurus''). If shown to proper scale, expect to see its resemblance to dolphins played up heavily; it's likely that its dolphin-like appearance is precisely why ''Ichthyosaurus'' maintained "stock" status instead of being displaced by bigger, less dolphinish ichthyosaurs that more closely resemble the leviathan of Creator/JulesVerne's story. Some of them, like ''Cymbospondylus'' and ''Shonisaurus'', were over 50ft long, and may be the biggest sea reptiles ever, dwarfing even than the much-hyped pliosaurs and mosasaurs.
208
209# '''Entry Time:''' 1854
210# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park
211
212!! Giant Sea-Serpents?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tylosaurus Tylosaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosasaurus Mosasaurus]]'' **
213
214The most recent group of Mesozoic sea reptiles, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosasaur mosasaurs]], more properly the Mosasaurids, lived worldwide in the Late Cretaceous, at the end of the Age of Dinosaurs. They replaced ichthyosaurs and pliosaurs in their ecological niches and coexisted with the last plesiosaurs. While ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs were not closely related to any modern reptile, mosasaurs are the only group of Mesozoic reptiles that literally deserve the title of "giant lizards". They belong to the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squamata Squamates]] (lit. "the scaly ones"), the clade containing modern lizards and snakes[[note]]Never forget, snakes ''are'' legless lizards, just as birds are flying dinosaurs[[/note]], and were closely related to modern snakes and monitor lizards. Indeed, due to their elongated shape, they have often been compared with SeaSerpents, and are often depicted with [[https://alphynix.tumblr.com/post/678278035878903808/retro-vs-modern-07-mosasaurus-hoffmannii-the a speculative dragon-like crest running along their back]] in old art.
215
216Descended from amphibious monitor-like lizards, mosasaurs often reached gigantic sizes, but exaggerations tend to be common. Some sources speak of 20m long animals, though most giant mosasaurs were probably no more than 14m long. With their slender bodies, they were also less heavy than the robust plesiosaurs and pliosaurs. To be more hydrodynamic, they may have lost the original lizard scales and developed a smooth skin texture (like ichthyosaurs but unlike plesiosaurs), but some skin prints seemingly show they preserved scales on their bodies. Their tails were long and laterally-flattened: like sharks and ichthyosaurs and unlike plesiosaurs, they swam by swinging their tails side-to-side. It's been confirmed that at least some were ovoviviparous (that is, producing eggs that hatch inside the mother’s body). Thus, they would have had no need to come ashore to reproduce, and could live entirely in water. Their fin-like limbs may be further proof. All marine reptiles described here obtained their flipper-like limbs in the same way as modern cetaceans, embedding their original digits in one single fleshy mass, and enormously multiplying the number of phalanges (ichthyosaurs took this to an extreme).
217
218Mosasaur heads were similar to those of modern lizards, but with longer snouts. Like all living lizards and snakes, they'd have had fleshy lips. Like modern snakes, their mouths had notably loose hinges between the jaws; this allowed mosasaurs to swallow large prey without tearing them into pieces (not that they weren't capable of doing so). The teeth were conical or specialized for crushing smaller species and serrated on the three largest species (the 40+-foot giants that are most often depicted), the upper ones placed in two rows on each half-jaw, again like modern snakes and monitors. According to stomach contents, mosasaurs were very generalist feeders: fish, sharks, squids, pterosaurs, early birds like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Hesperornis]]'' and even smaller mosasaurs have been found.[[note]]This ''doesn’t necessarily mean'' they were cannibals, though: the preyed-upon mosasaurs might've been from different species than their predators. After all, modern orcas eat smaller dolphins.[[/note]] We don’t know if mosasaurs had a forked tongue and eyes that didn't close, like many modern squamates, nor if they had heat-sensors like some boas and rattlesnakes; these things usually don't preserve in fossils. Older depictions of mosasaurs usually gave them a rather crocodilian profile, with sword-shaped tails, but reevaluations of the body shape together with the discovery of a shark-like tail fluke on some exquisitely preserved specimens have led to newer reconstructions being more whale-like or ichthyosaurian in appearance, with a more massive upper torso and neck.
219
220Like pliosaurs and ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs are a staple in documentaries, but are not so common in fiction. Most giant leviathans with huge jaws seen in fiction tend to be generic monsters a la Verne, rather than exact species of sea reptiles. ''Tylosaurus'' and the clade's namesake ''Mosasaurus'' are the stock members of the mosasaur family; needless to say, they're among the largest, up to 10-15m long. The former was first found during the Bone Wars in the USA. The latter has a much more fascinating story. Found in the Netherlands near the Meuse river in 1764 (hence its name), ''Mosasaurus'' was the ''first'' fossil recognized by science as belonging to a Mesozoic reptile (the second being the pterosaur ''Pterodactylus''). Initially assumed to be a whale or a crocodile, it was eventually recognized as being an extinct lizard unlike any alive today -- in fact, it was this animal, along with ''Pterodactylus'', that lead scientists to first propose the concept of "extinction".
221
222In 2015, a (slightly oversized) ''Mosasaurus'' received top billing alongside a pack of trained ''Velociraptors'', the already-iconic ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' [[MyFriendsAndZoidberg and]] Creator/ChrisPratt in the hit film ''Film/JurassicWorld''. The image of her leaping out of the water to be fed [[TheWorfEffect a shark]] was the second major marketing image used for the film (the first being Chris Pratt riding a motorcycle alongside the raptors), and it's been suspected that this film might help contribute to the species becoming more popular among a whole new generation of paleontology geeks. It was also regarded as the most accurate animal in the film despite being slightly oversized, which is quite an achievement in a film that openly acknowledged its own lack of scientific accuracy.
223
224# '''Entry Time:''' 1854 (''Mosasaurus''); 1940 (''Tylosaurus'')
225# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park (''Mosasaurus''); ''WesternAnimation/{{Fantasia}}'' (''Tylosaurus'')
226
227!! The Biggest Sea-Reptiles?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shonisaurus Shonisaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shastasaurus Shastasaurus]]'' *
228
229Among the rarely-seen marine reptiles in Fictionland, the giant ichthyosaur ''Shonisaurus'' deserves special mention because it's been frequently depicted in popular dinosaur books since its relatively recent discover.
230
231In a sense, ''Shonisaurus'' ("Shoshone lizard") could be considered the ichthyosaurian equivalent of the giant pterosaur ''Quetzalcoatlus''. Both were discovered in TheSeventies in the central USA, but their geological epochs were ''widely'' different: ''Quetzalcoatlus'' lived at the end of the Dinosaur Age, ''Shonisaurus'' at the start of it, in the Late Triassic.
232
233''Shonisaurus popularis'' was commonly accepted to have been the biggest ichthyosaur ever, and also the largest animal of the Triassic period -- up to 15m/50ft in length and 30 tons in weight, comparable to a humpback whale or a medium-sized sauropod. But in 2004, a new Triassic ichthyosaur entered the fray, ''Shastasaurus sikanniensis'' (a species of the traditionally smaller (7m/23ft) ichthyosaur ''Shastasaurus''), a 21m/69ft long leviathan and the new biggest sea-reptile known to science. However, ''Shastasaurus sikanniensis'' was originally considered a species of ''Shonisaurus'', and some still argue that it should be considered so; if true, ''Shonisaurus'' would detain the record of "Largest Ichthyosaur". However, this could be blown out of the water if and when a more complete specimen of the 2018 "Lilstock ichthyosaur" is found; the current fragmentary remains were estimated via comparison to ''Shastasaurus'' to possibly result in a length of 26m/80ft, which if correct puts it within the size range of the blue whale, and thus the second largest animal to ever live.
234
235''Shonisaurus'' and its relatives together comprise the shastasaurians, an early lineage of basal ichthyosaurs that went extinct in the mass extinction at the end of the Triassic, along with numerous non-dinosaur reptiles and mammal ancestors. Shastasaurians had the typical ichthyosaurian fishy or dolphinish shape, but with a more primitive tail rather similar to that of the mosasaurs, longer hind flippers than most ichthyosaurs, few or no teeth in their mouths, and no dorsal fin. ''Shonisaurus popularis'' had small teeth only in the front mouth, ''Shastasaurus sikanniensis'' totally lacked them. Their lifestyle is uncertain: they may have been to smaller ichthyosaurs as sperm whales are to dolphins and orcas, which is to say slow-swimming hunters of small or medium-sized fish and cephalopods. Some even suspect they could have also been partially filter-feeders, like modern baleen whales.
236
237# '''Entry Time:''' 1980s
238# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media
239
240!! Other sea reptiles
241Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Stenopterygius'', ''Eurhinosaurus'', ''Opthalmosaurus'', ''Cryptoclidus'', ''Muraenosaurus'', ''Peloneustes'', ''Macroplata'', ''Plotosaurus'', ''Clidastes'', ''Globidens'', ''Opetiosaurus'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles here.]]
242
243[[/folder]]
244
245----
246
247!Other Extinct Reptiles
248
249Extinct relatives of modern reptilians are not as common as the above, but some have gained attention in the media. Ancestral extinct reptiles are even rarer sights, but many of them are very interesting and peculiar.
250
251[[folder:Extant Reptiles in Media]]
252
253!! Ancient Colossal Turtle: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archelon Archelon]]'' **
254
255''Archelon ischyros'' lived in the Late Cretaceous inland shallow sea that once covered the Great Plains of the US. Discovered at the start of the 20th century, it shared its habitat with ''Elasmosaurus'', ''Tylosaurus'', and the flying ''Pteranodon''. Its size and armor made adults virtually immune to most predators.
256
257Not all Mesozoic reptiles were exotic by modern standards; ''Archelon'' was simply a sea turtle. But it perfectly fits the subtrope that everything was huge in dinosaur times: it's among the largest known fossil turtles -- 4m/13ft long and weighing several tons, ''Archelon'' was two to three times bigger than the biggest modern turtle, the leatherback sea turtle). However, it was not the ancestor of modern sea turtles: it belonged to a different lineage, the Protostegids, which went extinct alongside the other giant reptiles at the end of the Cretaceous. Its name is a {{Portmanteau}} of ''arche-'' (primeval) and ''-chelon'' (turtle).
258
259As turtles and tortoises have remained virtually unchanged since their first appearance in the Triassic, ''Archelon'' had the same traits seen in modern chelonians: beaked jaws, forelimbs transformed into strong flippers (with multiple phalanges, as usual for sea reptiles), weaker hind flippers and a short tail. However, its armor was lighter than most modern turtles, and the shell may have been leathery instead of horny. The modern turtle which mostly resembles ''Archelon'' might just be the aforementioned leatherback. As modern species of sea turtles eat very different items (some eat shellfish, others seaweed, and some jellyfish), we don’t know what ''Archelon''’s preferences were. Almost certainly, it came ashore to lay its eggs like its relatives.
260
261Among ''Archelon''’s appearances in fiction, the most remembered is in Creator/Harryhausen's ''Film/OneMillionYearsBC'', although upsized to be as big as a house. Surprisingly, many viewers think it was [[{{Slurpasaur}} live-acted by a Real Life turtle]], but it too is stop-motion like most other animals here. An ''Archelon'' named [[ALizardNamedLiz Archie]] also appears in ''WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime'' film series, in the usual role of the old wise counselor typical for fictional talking turtles. Two fossil Franchise/{{Pokemon}} based on ''Archelon'' made their debut in ''VideoGame/PokemonBlackAndWhite''; interestingly, said Pokémon, Tirtouga and its evolved form Carracosta, are actually ''smaller'' than their real-world inspiration (4ft tall and 178lbs for Carracosta).
262
263# '''Entry Time:''' 1966
264# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Film/OneMillionYearsBC''
265
266!! The Super Crocs of the Mesozoic: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinosuchus Deinosuchus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcosuchus Sarcosuchus]]'' **
267
268''Deinosuchus'' ("[[NeverSmileAtACrocodile terrible crocodile]]", also called ''Phobosuchus'' "[[NeverSmileAtACrocodile fearsome crocodile]]") was part of the order that contains modern crocodilians. This gigantic alligator (thus more correctly called "Super Gator" than "Super Croc") lived in the Late Cretaceous, but had the same anatomy we see today. Like modern gators, ''Deinosuchus''' skull had wide strong jaws and relatively blunt teeth, contrasting with the narrower jaws and more acute teeth of true crocs and gharials. Its head was as long as a full-grown man, but the length of its body is unknown because little more than the skull has thus far been found. By comparison with modern American alligators, ''Deinosuchus'' may have reached 12m in length and weighed up to 8 tons.
269
270Its home was freshwater basins in Late Cretaceous North America, but it could also have frequented the inland sea that divided the continent at the time. Since its fossils date to around 82-73 mya, ''Deinosuchus'' probably didn't live long enough to meet ''T. rex'' in RealLife, but only the latter's smaller, earlier relatives, like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Gorgosaurus]]'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Daspletosaurus]]''. It is usually shown in docu-media ambushing giant dinosaurs like a Nile Croc does with zebras, especially hadrosaurs like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Parasaurolophus]]'' or ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Corythosaurus]]'', which is supported by hadrosaur fossils with bite marks from it, but it was likely opportunistic enough to feed on other water creatures, including large fish and turtles (numerous turtle specimens from the time possess ''Deinosuchus'' bite marks on their shells). Its reproductive methods are unknown, but it probably built nests on riverbanks for its eggs like modern crocodilians.
271
272''Sarcosuchus imperator'' ("Emperor meat-eating croc") lived earlier than ''Deinosuchus'', in the Early Cretaceous. It was found originally in Brazil and named "''Crocodylus''" ''hartii'' (the genus that includes most modern crocodiles) in 1869, but it was only recognized as a new genus from remains found a century later in Niger, where it lived alongside dinosaurs like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Ouranosaurus]]'' that could have been its prey. It was a much more primitive animal than modern crocs and not part of the living order of crocodilians, but it resembled today's crocs in shape: with its long thin jaws, it closely recalled the modern gharial of India. It was about the same size of ''Deinosuchus'' but slenderer. Its diet is a bit of a mystery -- it might have been a generalist, hunting both large fish and dinosaurs (despite appearances, its snout is broader than that of fish-specialist crocodilians, like the previously mentioned gharial).
273
274For [[RuleOfCool obvious reasons]], ''Deinosuchus'' and ''Sarcosuchus'' are popular crocodilian choices in the world of DinosaurMedia, though they're not quite as common in mainstream works as they are in educational ones. Naturally, their size and abilities will usually be exaggerated, though curiously, they tend to avoid PrehistoricMonster territory due to the fact that they were essentially scaled-up alligators/gharials, and we have plenty of them in the modern day to use as points of reference[[note]]Interestingly, sufficiently giant American alligators exist even today -- the largest on record was a whopping 15 feet in length and reportedly another one was caught that was around 19 feet -- though none of them are as massive as ''Deinosuchus''. Also, some gharials are said to reach similar sizes to the former gators, but never the level of ''Sarcosuchus''.[[/note]]. One noteworthy appearance of ''Deinosuchus'' was the fourth ''WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime'' film, in which a cantankerous ''Deinosuchus'' appears as one of the two main villains (partnered with an equally disagreeable proto-bird, ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Ichthyornis]]''), while another was the focus animal of the last episode of ''Series/PrehistoricPark'', wherein Nigel brings one back to the present for his dinosaur zoo -- and is considered by him the hardest animal to catch in the whole series, even more than the ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' of the first episode. ''Sarcosuchus'' appeared in the 2003 miniseries ''Series/ChasedByDinosaurs'', with a rather minor role in the story and incorrectly living alongside ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Giganotosaurus]]'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Argentinosaurus]]'' -- basically, its only purpose was an excuse for the programmers was to add another giant reptile for Nigel to meet. Both ''Deinosuchus'' and ''Sarcosuchus'' reappear in ''Series/PlanetDinosaur'', both with minor roles (and the latter erroneously living alongside ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Spinosaurus]]'', which actually appeared 10 mya after it went extinct) -- useless to say, dinosaurs are the main characters as usual.
275
276# '''Entry Time:''' the 1990s/2000s
277# '''TropeMaker:''' The ''Franchise/WalkingWith'' franchise and ''WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime'' sequels
278
279!! Titan Snake and Mega Lizard: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanoboa Titanoboa]]'' & [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalania Megalania]] *
280
281It's not common to see snakes in prehistory media, even documentaries; but in recent years, ''Titanoboa cerrejonensis'' ("Cerrejon's [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin titanic boa]]") has been gaining in popularity.
282
283This huge snake was found only in 2009, and lived in the swamps of Paleocene Colombia just a few million years after the extinction of the nonbird dinosaurs. It was one of the top predators of its world (unlike the famous bird ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Gastornis]]'', which recent research indicates was a herbivore), hunting huge fish and crocodiles. Although it was ''not'' as big as sometimes reported ("only" one or two meters longer than the biggest green anacondas or reticulated pythons), ''Titanoboa'' was more heavily-built, and may have weighed an impressive 1 ton; green anacondas reach 200 kg at the most, reticulated pythons slightly less so. Despite the early period at which it lived, ''Titanoboa'' was part of the same family as modern boa constrictors and anacondas, and like them, it probably preserved vestigial hindlimbs in the form of small "spurs". As a constrictor, it was not venomous, and it probably gave birth to live offspring as all boas and anacondas do (pythons lay eggs and take care of them by coiling around them).
284
285Megalania ("big tearer") has been known far longer; it was described by Richard Owen (the dinosaurs' TropeNamer) in the 19th century. It was a type of monitor lizard, extremely closely related to modern goannas and Komodo dragons, to the point that in 2004, it was put in the same genus as modern monitors, ''Varanus'', after spending nearly a century-and-a-half as its own genus, "''Megalania''" ''prisca'' (and thus renamed ''Varanus priscus''[[note]]the change to the species name was to comply to the Latin rules of grammar, as ''Varanus'' is masculine and "Megalania" is feminine[[/note]]); Megalania still remains in use as a common informal name for it though. It was one of the top predators of Ice Age Australia, in competition with the marsupial lion ''Thylacoleo'' (see below) and some land-dwelling crocodilians (the [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Mekosuchines]]). Megalania is the largest-known fully terrestrial lizard of all time, but due to the lack of complete or near-complete skeletons, its exact size is controversial (estimates range between 10-25 feet long; pop-media tends to exaggerate it). Its behavior was arguably similar to that of modern goannas, and like them, it had a snake-like forked tongue to detect odors from the soil, laid eggs, and was likely an intelligent animal with complex behavior. We don't know, however, if it was venomous like the Komodo dragon, but if it was, it would have been ''the largest venomous animal ever''. Megalania went extinct only a few thousand years ago, along with most of the Australian megafauna, at about the same time as the extinction of the mammoths and sabertooths; it may have been killed at least indirectly by the fires created by the first prehistoric human colonizers of the LandDownUnder.
286
287#'''Entry Time:''' the 2000s for Megalania and 2010s for ''Titanoboa''
288#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/MonstersWeMet'' (Megalania), ''Series/PrimevalNewWorld'' (''Titanoboa'')
289
290!! Other extinct modern reptiles
291
292Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Protosuchus'', ''Goniopholis'', ''Kaprosuchus'', ''Colossochelys'', ''Meiolania'', ''Homoeosaurus'', ''Bavarisaurus'', ''Gigantophis'', ''Dinilysia'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles here]].
293
294[[/folder]]
295
296[[folder:Primitive Reptiles in Media]]
297
298!! Crocodiles or Dinosaurs?: the "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thecodontia Thecodonts]]" **
299
300"Thecodont" ("teeth in sockets") is a now-abandoned term (at least in cladistics) for basal archosaurs and their close relatives that were neither dinosaurs, nor pterosaurs, nor crocodilians. They were all from the Triassic, and were the real dominant reptiles of this geological period, to the point that dinosaurs are often quoted as their natural successors in the following Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. However, at least initially, they were in competition with Triassic mammal-ancestors. Many "thecodonts" went extinct at the mass extinction at the end of the Triassic: the latest ones lived alongside the first dinosaurs like ''Coelophysis'' and ''Plateosaurus'', but others went extinct earlier.
301
302The most striking ones were perhaps the [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles giant rauisuchians]][[note]]who may not be a natural grouping, but a miscellany of similar-looking reptiles[[/note]] of the Late Triassic, because they were theropod-like predators, top carnivores lording over the first carnivorous dinosaurs. ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' popularized one of them, the North American ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postosuchus Postosuchus]]'' ("Post's crocodile", after a town in Texas), which shared its environment with ''Coelophysis''; depicted as a quadruped in that show, it's now believed to have been bipedal. Another noted group were the herbivorous, heavily armored aetosaurs, with the North American ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmatosuchus Desmatosuchus]]'' being the most famous, due to its impressive shoulder spikes. There's also the aquatic and extremely crocodile-like phytosaurs, who are most easily distinguished from modern crocodiles by how their nostrils are positioned just in front of their eyes, like a whale's blowhole; the most-often portrayed phytosaur is ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rutiodon Rutiodon]]''. Both the aetosaurs and phytosaurs were also often of large size and lived in the Late Triassic (''Desmatosuchus' was in fact a contemporary of ''Postosuchus'' and ''Coelophysis'', but sadly missed out on appearing in WWD). Rauisuchians and aetosaurs were more closely related to crocodilians than to dinosaurs and pterosaurs, together forming with the crocodilians one of the two main lineages of the archosaur family tree, Pseudosuchia (the other is Ornithodira, which contains birds and nonbird dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and their ancestors). Phytosaurs, on the other hand, were long believed to be direct crocodile ancestors, but are much more basal ("primitive") animals just outside of the true archosaurs. All of them are sometimes wrongly presented as true crocodiles in media.
303
304The start of the Triassic presented a wholly different set of "theocodonts" in the form of the protersouchids, and later the erythrosuchids. The former group, named after their archetypal and most famous member ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proterosuchus Proterosuchus]]'' (also known as ''Chasmatosaurus''), had uncinated upper jaws like some dinosaurs like ''Dilophosaurus'' or ''Spinosaurus''; the first large predators to emerge after the Permian Mass Extinction, they are traditionally thought of as semi-aquatic ambush predators, but may have been terrestrial. Meanwhile, the erythrosuchids, who replaced the proterosuchids as top predators a few million years later, are distinguished by their disproportionately huge heads and their forward-pointing eyes; the namesake of this group was the South African ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erythrosuchus Erythrosuchus]]''. Many of these early carnivorous "thecodonts" were as large as many modern crocodilians. Both of these groups were extremely primitive relatives of the true archosaurs -- quasi-archosaurs, if you will.
305
306Perhaps the most common "thecodont" in popular dinosaur books and documentaries has been ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euparkeria Euparkeria]]'', often wrongly cited as an ancestor of the dinosaurs because of its partially bipedal shape (in reality, it was a much more primitive animal, much like the phytosaurs, proterosuchuids, and erythrosuchids). Just 3ft long, this small reptile lived in the Early Triassic of South Africa alongside the aforementioned ''Erythrosuchus'', as well as other much larger "theocodonts", mammal-ancestors, and giant amphibians (some of whom likely ate ''Euparkeria'' for breakfast).
307
308The even smaller ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagosuchus Lagosuchus]]'', only one foot long, and thus called "rabbit-croc", was an actual ancestor of dinosaurs, but it lived in Middle Triassic Argentina. In fact, some sources have even wrongly classified it as "the first dinosaur" when it actually lived ''just'' before the appearance of the first true dinosaurs. It may have had some feather-like or hair-like structures in its body, like the related pterosaurs and dinosaurs, but this cannot be proven at the moment. Some slightly larger specimens of ''Lagosuchus'' have been classified as their own animal called ''Marasuchus'', but the validity of the latter has been debated.
309
310Before the discovery of ''Lagosuchus'' in the 1970s, other "thecodonts" were considered the direct ancestors of dinosaurs, especially the European ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saltoposuchus Saltoposuchus]]'' and to a lesser degree ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scleromochlus Scleromochlus]]''[[note]]The latter could be an ancestor of pterosaurs, though.[[/note]] -- and some were often even considered early proper dinosaurs (more precisely, early theropods), notably the 12ft long ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornithosuchus Ornithosuchus]]'', the 2ft long ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saltopus Saltopus]]'', and the 20ft long ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teratosaurus Teratosaurus]]''. It is now understood however that ''Ornithosuchus'', ''Teratosaurus'' and ''Saltoposuchus'' were Pseudosuchians; ''Teratosaurus'' was in fact a rauisuchian like ''Postosuchus'' above -- ''Saltopus'' meanwhile was an Ornithodiran just like ''Lagosuchus'', a dino-ancestor but still not a true dinosaur.
311
312
313#'''Entry Time:''' undetermined
314#'''TropeMaker:''' Popular dinosaur books and other media
315
316!! Giant Neck and Scissor Beak: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanystropheus Tanystropheus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperodapedon Hyperodapedon]]'' *
317
318These guys were among the oddest and most specialized reptiles ever, despite their smaller size compared to many other reptiles of the Mesozoic. They were primitive archosaur-relatives, just like ''Euparkeria'', ''Rutiodon'', ''Proterosuchus'', and ''Erythrosuchus'', but unlike them, they have never been considered "thecodonts", not even in the past. Both lived in the Late Triassic around the same time the first dinosaurs appeared.
319
320''Tanystropheus'' was 6m long and notable for its enormously long neck compared with its shorter body and tail, to the point that it could be mistaken for a plesiosaur at a glance. Its neck was proportionally even longer than a classic plesiosaur or a typical sauropod (the neck alone made up half of the animal's entire length!), and was made by a few extremely long vertebrae that made it stiff. Once, the neck and the rest of the body were believed from two distinct animals! But the ''Tanystropheus'' had true legs (with longer hind legs than front legs), not flippers like the plesiosaurs, making it looking like a lizard with a giraffy neck. It was probably amphibious and a hunter of small aquatic prey, but its hunting style is unknown; some think it swam in the ocean after fish, others think it stayed on land to snatch food from the shoreline with its extraordinary neck. Once considered a plesiosaur ancestor, ''Tanystropheus'' actually belonged to its own group of archosaur-relatives called the protorosaurs. ''Tanystropheus'' had a notable appearance in ''Series/SeaMonsters'', where it is shown losing its tail like many modern lizards do, after Nigel Marven grabbed it by the tail. This was based on a theory suggested by one scientist who pointed to certain fractures on the tail similar to those seen in lizards that do this. However, no other studies have found support for this idea, putting it entirely in the realm of fiction.
321
322''Hyperodapedon'' was very different: it was an herbivorous land reptile belonging to a highly successful group of archosaur-relatives known as rhynchosaurs. Curiously, the rhynchosaurs were [[ScienceMarchesOn once considered]] relatives of the modern tuatara, which is in fact a cousin of snakes and lizards. ''Hyperodapedon'' (also called ''Scaphonyx'' or ''Paradapedon'') is the most frequently portrayed of its group in paleo-art because of its strange owl-like face: it had eyes pointing forwards just like an owl, and most notably, an uncinated beak with a split in its upper half that the lower half fitted into when the mouth was closed ("rhynchosaur" means "beak lizard"). This reptile and its fellow rhynchosaurs have usually been described as sluggish critters unable to flee the faster predators of the time like the rauisuchians and the first meat-eating dinosaurs, but this might not be true: the rhynchosaurs' short, splayed limbs and bulky body don't mean they were slow and harmless, and their parrot-like bill was powerful enough to deliver nasty bites to its attackers, like the beak of a modern macaw or snapping turtle.
323
324#'''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
325#'''TropeMaker:''' Popular dinosaur books and other media
326
327!! Gliding Lizards: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuehneosaurus Kuehneosaurus]]'', ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coelurosauravus Coelurosauravus]]'', & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longisquama Longisquama]]'' *
328
329''Kuehneosaurus latus'' from Late Triassic Europe, and ''Coelurosauravus elivensis'' (also called Daedalosaurus'') from Late Permian Madagascar were much smaller than the two reptiles above, just a few feet long, but both deserve the popular nickname of "gliding lizards" -- the former was even a distant cousin of lizards, the second a basal diapsid.
330
331''Kuehneosaurus'' had elongated, protruding ribs that pointed sideways from the body, while ''Coelurosauravus'' had rod-like projections growing out from the sides of its body. In both animals, these strange bones were connected by skin like the famous ''Dimetrodon'' sail, forming wings for gliding from one tree to another. Today, a modern true lizard has convergently evolved a similar gliding mechanism, the so-called "flying dragon" of southeast Asia, although its "wings" are made from enlarged ribs. ''Kuehneosaurus'' had a contemporary relative in North America called ''Icarosaurus'', while ''Coelurosauravus'' had a contemporary European relative called ''Weigeltisaurus'', which was once considered the same animal. Both ''Coelurosauravus'' and ''Weigeltisaurus'' also had tiny frills like those of ''Triceratops'' (minus the horns). A ''Coelurosauravus'' named Rex appears in the TV series ''Series/{{Primeval}}'' as the chaacters' TeamPet, although the animal is slightly oversized from its real-life counterpart, can actually fly rather than just glide, and has a fleshy crest in place of a bony frill.
332
333The Middle Triassic ''Longisquama'' means "long scale": its classification has long been a headache for paleontologists, flip-flopping between a relative of ''Kuehneosaurus'', an archosaur-relative, and an extremely basal diapsid. Also a few feet long like ''Kuehneosaurus'' but found in the former USSR in TheSeventies (in modern Kyrgyzstan), its most famous quality is its eponymous "long scales" -- a single row of tall, hockey stick-shaped appendages growing from its back. These crazy scales have utterly baffled scientists from their discovery, to the point that some think they're just plant fronds that fossilized with the animal when it died. It was once believed ''Longisquama'' had two rows of these growths on its back, leading some to suggest it was a gliding creature, using the "long scales" to cross the air like a modern flying squirrel; nowadays, we think it used the singular row of weird scales for display, but even this is not certain. Because its huge protrusions resemble feathers a bit, it was even believed to be an ancestor of ''birds'' in the past. Another "gliding lizard", the only one known with bat-like skin-membranes, was ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Sharovipteryx]]'' ("Sharov's wing"), which lived in the same time and place as ''Longisquama''. This one was hypothesized in the past to have been the ancestor of pterosaurs, but astonishingly, was actually most closely related to ''Tanystropheus''. ''Longisquama'' appears in Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Dinosaur}}'' as a sort of flying chameleon using its scale-things as the feathers of actual wings (clearly drawing inspiration from some of the outdated hypotheses mentioned above).
334
335#'''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
336#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/{{Primeval}}'' (''Coelurosauravus''), ''WesternAnimation/{{Dinosaur}}'' (''Longisquama'')
337
338!! Swimming Reptiles: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nothosaurus Nothosaurus]]'', ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placodus Placodus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champsosaurus Champsosaurus]]'' *
339
340These reptiles are mostly unified by the fact that were aquatic but less specialized than the classic marine reptiles within the main folder above. They were also usually smaller-sized than them.
341
342Hailing from the Late Triassic, ''Nothosaurus'' ("false lizard") looked a bit like ''Tanystropheus'', but its neck wasn't as excessively long, and it was actually related to the ancestors of plesiosaurs and pliosaurs. Like the long-necked plesiosaurians, ''Nothosaurus'' had needle-like teeth set in elongated but weak jaws; unlike plesiosaurs, it had a well-developed tail for swimming by undulating like a mosasaur, and short, splayed true legs with palmated feet. Because of the latter feature, it and the other nothosaurs have often been portrayed as sort of like seals or sea otters of the Triassic, coming onto land to lay their eggs but feeding with agility in the water on fish and shellfish. Another marine reptile, the Middle Triassic ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Askeptosaurus]]'' was outwardly similar to a nothosaur, but belonged to a more archaic group: the Thalattosaurs (lit. "sea lizards"), whose relationships with other reptiles are uncertain (they've been various placed as relatives of ichthyosaurs, archosaurs, lizards/snakes, and plesiosaurs/pliosaurs/nothosaurs).
343
344Hailing from the Early Triassic, ''Placodus'' was the namesake of the Placodonts, a highly unusual group of marine reptiles related to the nothosaurs, plesiosaurs, and pliosaurs. ''Placodus'' looked a bit like a marine iguana, but was much more massively-built, with dense bones for clinging onto the seabed and powerful short jaws with flat crushing teeth for eating shellfish. If ''Nothosaurus'' was the seal of the Triassic, then ''Placodus'' was the walrus of its day. Like ''Nothosaurus'', it probably came onto land to lay eggs and swam using its strong tail and webbed feet. ''Placodus'' ("plate-tooth") also had light armor consisting of a line of bony plates running along its whole backbone. In the most derived placodonts like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Henodus]]'', said armor had developed into literal shells, making them very turtle-like (a classic case of convergent evolution).
345
346''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixosaurus Mixosaurus]]'' was one of the most primitive ichthyosaurs, also from the Early Triassic. It had already the classic head, neck and body of the more known/derived ''Ichthyosaurus'', but its tail fin was still small, because the vertebrae of its tail don't show the downward bend of the derived ichthyosaurs. Smaller than ''Ichthyosaurus'' (some individuals were only 1m long), ''Mixosaurus'' might recall an ichthyosaur with a mosasaurian tail, or even a tiny mosasaur that looked like a dolphin.
347
348''Champsosaurus'' lived much later than the above reptiles in the Late Cretaceous, and unlike them, it was a freshwater animal. It belonged to a particular lineage of archaic reptiles known as the Choristoderes, whose exact relationships with other reptiles are uncertain. ''Champsosaurus'' lived in North America, first appearing about 76 mya and making it the end of the Cretaceous to see ''T. rex'' and ''Triceratops'' 66 mya. Unlike them, ''Champsosaurus'' ''survived'' the great dinosaur extinction, and went on to see the rise of the mammals, only to go extinct shortly afterwards during the Paleocene. ''Champsosaurus'' greatly resembled a true crocodilian (its name means "croc-lizard"), with Cretaceous specimens being about 1.5m long and Paleocene ones being up to 3m. It is sometimes is wrongly portrayed in documentary media as a true crocodilian, but it would have lacked the armor seen in real crocs. Its slender snout tell us it was a fish-specialist, leaving larger prey to the true crocs it often shared its environment with.
349
350''True'' crocodiles (not quite; see later), on the other hand, were the Late Jurassic ''Metriorhynchus'', ''Geosaurus'', and ''Teleosaurus'', which are here for comparison, but should more correctly be put together with ''Deinosuchus'' and ''Sarcosuchus'' above. Unlike the mostly freshwater modern alligators and kin, they adapted to a fully marine lifestyle, hence their proper name, the Thalattosuchians ("marine-crocs" or "sea-crocs"). Unlike ''Deinosuchus'', but like ''Sarcosuchus'', they were too primitive to be considered part of the modern order of crocodilians and should technically be considered crocodile-relatives or crocodiles in only the broadest sense of the term. ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metriorhynchus Metriorhynchus]]'' ("moderated snout" because of its thin jaws) and the very similar ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geosaurus Geosaurus]]'' are both known from Europe: they have lost their armor altogether, developed a caudal fin very similar to an ichthyosaur's, and have limbs similar to paddles, though still not proper flippers like those of a plesiosaur or sea turtle. At 3 meters, neither is the largest of their group; some of their relatives could reach over 6 meters. The thalattosuchians first appeared in the Early Jurassic about 190 mya, but became extinct in the Early Cretaceous, 125 mya. Another thalattosuchian was the Middle Jurassic European ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleosaurus Teleosaurus]]'' a more archaic sea-crocodile, resembling a small gharial in shape: it still had a light body armor, weak but still land-adapted legs, and a regular crocodilian tail. Some sculptures of it are portrayed in the Crystal Palace Park of London together with other more famous Mesozoic reptiles -- unusually, still accurate today.
351
352#'''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
353#'''TropeMaker:''' Popular dinosaur books and other media
354
355!! Early Reptiles?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scutosaurus Scutosaurus]]'', ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesosaurus Mesosaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hylonomus Hylonomus]]'' *
356
357When discussing the origin of amniotes, the clade consisting of true reptiles, birds, true mammals, and mammal-ancestors, the first amniotes to appear on Earth are usually and traditionally called "reptiles". But the animals in this section, according to many experts today, cannot be classified among either the diapsids (all modern reptiles, dinosaurs, and birds) or the snyapsids (mammals and their ancestors). The first two are placed in a group called the parareptilians -- traditionally called anapsids -- because they were within the reptile class, but were the sister group of the diapsids, and thus not related to any modern reptiles. It's worth noting that for a long time, turtles were considered parareptilians as well, but today are believed to be diapsids, possibly related to plesiosaurs or even archosaurs.
358
359''Scutosaurus'' means "shield lizard", and was [[ScienceMarchesOn once]] considered an ancestor of turtles. It was one of the biggest and most heavily-armored parareptilians ever, weighing 1 ton (comparable to a bison) and covered with armor on its back -- recalling more an ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Ankylosaurus]]'' than a tortoise. Like the armored dinosaurs, it was a vegetarian; it had a thickened skull and blunt teeth all similar to each other; its limbs were semi-erect and stocky; and the tail was very short. It belonged to a group of parareptilians called the pareiasaurs, named after their archetypal member ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareiasaurus Pareiasaurus]]'', which was similar but without the armor. Both lived in the Late Permian in Russia and South Africa, respectively, and were among the animals wiped out by the gigantic mass extinction that separated the Permian from the Triassic -- the worst to have happened since multicellular organisms evolved, even more destructive than the one that ended non-avian dinosaurs.
360
361The much smaller (2ft long) ''Mesosaurus'' has a deceptive name: it was not related at all with the much more famous ''Mosasaurus'' -- the former name means "middle-lizard", the latter "lizard from the Meuse River" (in the Netherlands). Despite this, ''Mesosaurus'' did somewhat resemble in shape the old classic illustrations of mosasaurs, being elongated, with long toothed jaws, and a powerful sideward-undulating tail for swimming. But its legs were apt for walking, like modern crocs and unlike the paddle limbs of its almost-namesakes mosasaurians (the mesosaur's limbs were palmated-footed at the most). This makes ''Mesosaurus'' actually more similar to ''Nothosaurus'' or ''Champsosaurus'' than to a mosasaurid. Like ''Champsosaurus'', it's sometimes mislabeled in paleo-media as a crocodile-ancestor, or worse, a true crocodilian. In reality, ''Meosaurus'' lived in the Early Permian, disappearing long before the ancestors of crocodiles evolved. Adapted for freshwater or estuarine/coastal life, ''Mesosaurus'' was one of the first vertebrates to re-evolve an aquatic lifestyle and return to the water. ''Mesosaurus''' numerous tiny, needle-like teeth were adept at catching small fish, but it was too small and ill-adapted for life in the open ocean. But because its fossils are known from both Africa and South America, it was one of the main fossils used as evidence for the existence of Pangea (alongside the mammal-ancestors ''Cynognathus'' and ''Lystrosaurus'' (see below) and the plant ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossopteris Glossopteris]]'').
362
363''Hylonomus'', similar to a 1-foot-long lizard, is still today considered the first undisputable reptile, hailing from the Late Carboniferous of Canada about 312 mya. ''Hylonomus'' was long considered a parareptilian, but today is mostly classified as a diapsid relative, thus belonging to a different lineage than ''Scutosaurus'' and ''Mesosaurus'' above. It's also famous because many skeletons of it have ben found in hollowed-out petrified stumps: it could have fallen into them and gotten trapped (or drowned if they were full of water). Two competitors for the "first reptile" title popped up in the 1990s. The first, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Westlothiana]]'' (from the Early Carboniferous of Scotland, 338 mya), seemed to take the record over from ''Hylonomus'' (earning it the nickname "Lizzie" in the media), but is now mostly considered a very reptile-like "amphibian" (sensu lato). The other, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Casineria]]'' (about the same age as "Lizzie" and also Scottish), is much more heavily contested as its sole, fragmentary fossil shows affinities with amphibians and may in fact represent a transitional form between reptiles and their ancestors.
364
365#'''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
366#'''TropeMaker:''' Popular dinosaur books and other media,
367
368!!Other primitive reptiles
369
370Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Trilophosaurus'', ''Drepanosaurus'', ''Megalancosaurus'', ''Helveticosaurus'', ''Hupehsuchus'', ''Shringasaurus'', ''Claudiosaurus'', ''Procolophon'', ''Elginia'', ''Milleretta'', ''Captorhinus'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles here]].
371
372[[/folder]]
373
374----
375
376!Mammal-Ancestors
377
378At least pterosaurs and the above-mentioned seagoing and terrestrial animals are mainly from the same time period, the Mesozoic. Don't even get us started on how non-mammalian synapsids (the "mammal-like reptiles") are sometimes labeled dinosaurs, even though the most famous of them lived far earlier, in the Late Paleozoic.
379
380[[folder:Mammal-Ancestors in Media]]
381
382Most non-mammalian synapsids lived well before the appearance of the first dinosaur during the Permian period (just before the Triassic); indeed, non-mammalian synapsids were the very first large land vertebrates and diversified much during their time on Earth, until most of them were wiped out in the huge Permian mass extinction. In the new world that followed, the few surviving species were progressively outcompeted by archosaurs, the group containing dinosaurs, pterosaurs and crocodilians. The last kinds were depleted at the end of the Triassic in another mass extinction, with their true mammalian descendants continuing their legacy. They are traditionally divided into the more derived therapsids and the more basal "pelycosaurs", with mammals technically being members of the former group in the same way birds are theropod dinosaurs. Although popularly called "mammal-like reptiles", they're not related to any reptiles living or extinct and should be more properly called proto-mammals or mammal-ancestors.
383
384Anyway, all these creatures have extraordinary relevance to the history of evolution because they were the ancestors of true mammals and thus of ''mankind'', and yet they've usually never had the popularity of the dinosaurs, probably because of their relatively small size compared to dinos like ''T. rex'' or the sauropods.
385
386[[/folder]]
387
388[[folder:Stock Mammal-Ancestors]]
389
390!! Sail-Backed Lizard or Sail-Backed Mammal?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimetrodon Dimetrodon]]'' ***
391
392''Dimetrodon'' lived in North America 280 million years ago, in the Early Permian. It is the only proto-mammal whose popularity matches that of the stock dinosaurs, thanks to the mohawk-esque crest (named "sail" because of its shape) on its back. Its iconic status among proto-mammals is partially justified by its fossil abundance -- dozens of specimens are known, juveniles included. As one might expect at this point, it was discovered [[OverlyLongGag in North America during the Bone Wars in the second half of the 19th century]].
393
394The most classical of its numerous known species is, needless to say, one of the biggest and first discovered, ''Dimetrodon limbatus'', 3-4m/10-12ft long and weighing about 300 kg, like a small gator or a large deer. Other species were much smaller, some only 2 feet long. Being a very early mammal-ancestor, it was not a proper therapsid, but rather one of the so-called "pelycosaurs". It still had a lizardy shape, with a long tail, a long body, splayed legs, and a skull with a small braincase. Fossil prints show a lizard-like gait. Other traits, on the other hand, were quite mammalian: a laterally-flattened trunk, not wider-than-taller like most modern reptiles; a solid skull with one single pair of temporal openings placed near the maxillary hinge (the so-called "synapsid" condition also seen in mammals, humans included); and differently-shaped teeth -- ''Dimetrodon'' just means "teeth of two lengths." Even though all its teeth were conical, the anterior ones were small and crammed together like incisors, while the longest teeth were in the place mammals have usually their canines. Behind them, the posterior teeth were small and not apt for chewing food unlike our molars, but are somewhat analogous to those seen in primitive insectivorous mammals. More derived mammal-ancestors like ''Cynognathus'' or ''Thrinaxodon'' achieved a clearly mammalian anatomy, with more erect limbs, shorter tails, larger brains, and teeth very similar to mammals.
395
396Its "sail", sustained by elongated vertebral spines, has always been a headache for scientists. The classic theory considers it a thermoregulating device. Turned to face the solar rays, it could have captured heat like a solar panel; turned parallel to them, it would have been more like a radiator, dispersing heat. Other theories are mating or threat display, inter-specific identification, and so on. It may have been that the sail served all these purposes. Among external features, ''Dimetrodon'' is sometimes depicted as having fur, external ears, or even milk glands, but given its primitiveness, these are extremely unlikely. The coloration is totally speculative -- its sail could have been vividly colored and/or able to change colors for display purposes. Some scientists believe skin might not have covered the sail that extensively, leaving the bony tips jutting out. No eggs or nests are known from ''Dimetrodon''; we don’t even know if it was oviparous (an egg-layer), or viviparous like modern mammals (though if the latter, it evolved viviparity independently, as monotremes like the platypus and echidnas being oviparous suggests viviparity in the mammal lineage is posterior to the first true mammals).
397
398''Dimetrodon'' was probably the top predator of its time and one of the first large terrestrial predatory vertebrates, shown in paleo-art hunting early amphibians like ''Eryops'', ''Diplocaulus'', and ''Seymouria''; fish; and what could be called its Non-Identical Twin, '' Edaphosaurus'' (see below). Its crest, its deceptively reptilian appearance, and the fact that it was a large carnivore make ''Dimetrodon'' a predestined victim of DinosaursAreDragons and PrehistoricMonster both in fiction and in docu-media. However, if you put it next to other famous prehistoric animals, ''Dimetrodon'' would appear rather [[{{Narm}} narmy]]. If we imagine a battle against a ''Tyrannosaurus'', ''Deinosuchus'', ''Smilodon'' or ''Mosasaurus'', the primitive and relatively small dimetrodont would always be the loser -- this might also be true if it were pitted against modern predators (lions, tigers, Kodiak bears, polar bears, Nile crocodiles, great whites sharks, killer and sperm whales, etc.), as well as most ancient and modern giant herbivores, like the multi-ton sauropods, elephants, mammoths, trikes, stegos, rhinos, hippos etc. Its weakest point, other than the primitive gait, would be its blood-vessels-rich membranous sail, bleeding copiously to death if ripped off by its animal adversary. But in the Early Permian swamps it called home, ''Dimetrodon'' was still the fiercest and most powerful carnivore of its time, definitively debunking the {{Narm}} thing.
399
400Although ''Dimetrodon'' is more closely related to ''you'' than to any dinosaur, and predated the first dinosaur by at least a country mile of geologic time, it is often mixed with dinosaurs in toy collections just because it [[RuleOfCool looks cool]]. In movies and comics, it may even show up living with [[FrazettaMan cavemen]]. Expect it to look like a giant iguana with ''scaly'' skin. Actually, scales are strictly a reptilian and avian thing, and ''Dimetrodon'' hide was probably naked like modern hairless mammals, with some [[ScienceMarchesOn hardened fish-like belly scales left over from its amphibian ancestry]]. Its shape makes ''Dimetrodon'' the most abused animal within the {{Slurpasaur}} trope. For example, in the 1970 film version of ''Literature/JourneyToTheCenterOfTheEarth'' some Caribbean iguanas with ridiculous crests on their backs live-act ''Dimetrodon''s, which of course attack the humans.
401
402# '''Entry Time:''' 1940s
403# '''TropeMaker:''' ''WesternAnimation/{{Fantasia}}'', ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Age_of_Reptiles The Age of Reptiles]]'' and in turn the [[https://toytales.ca/prehistoric-dinosaur-playset-4208-from-marx-1978/ Prehistoric Dinosaur Playset]] from Louis Marx and Company
404
405!! The Dimetrodon's Vegan Cousin: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edaphosaurus Edaphosaurus]]'' *
406
407After ''Dimetrodon'', ''Edaphosaurus'' is the only "pelycosaur" which has some chance of appearing in non-documentary media -- at least indirectly: sometimes ''Dimetrodon''s with a sail more similar to ''Edaphosaurus'' are seen in fictional works, ex. in ''WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime''.
408
409Described by Cope during the Bone Wars from the Early Permian Red Beds of Texas (''Dimetrodon'' was also first described by Cope from the same geological terrains), ''Edaphosaurus'' means "pavement lizard" in reference to its teeth, which are packed together like the tiles of a floor. Like ''Dimetrodon'', several species are known, from less than a foot to over 11 feet in length . ''Edaphosaurus'' was bulkier-bodied and smaller-headed than the very similar ''Dimetrodon'', sharing its carnivorous cousin's back sail, long tail and splayed legs. Its sail was more complex however: it had a more rounded shape and regularly-placed tubercles of uncertain purpose. Contrasting the pointier, more varied teeth of ''Dimetrodon'', ''Edaphosaurus'' had round, peg-like teeth all of the same shape and length. Its dentition, along with its large gut, tells us that it was a plant-eater -- in fact, it was one of the first large terrestrial vertebrate herbivores to evolve. It's also hypothesized to have eaten shellfish as a dietary supplement.
410
411Living alongside ''Dimetrodon'' in the swamps of Early Permian North America, it probably used its "sail" the same way as the former (whatever way that was), but obviously this cannot be known for certain. ''Edaphosaurus'' is sometimes shown in paleo-art, books, and programs like ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' as one of ''Dimetrodon'''s possible prey. This might be plausible (''Edaphosaurus'' was arguably a slower runner), though if so, ''Dimetrodon'' almost certainly hunted young ''Edaphosaurus'' more often than the massive adults.
412
413# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
414# '''TropeMaker:''' its resemblance with ''Dimetrodon'
415
416!! More Dogs than Reptiles: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynognathus Cynognathus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrinaxodon Thrinaxodon]]'' **
417
418If you've seen ''Cynognathus'' in an illustration, you probably thought at least once "Oh, this thing looks like a [[AngryGuardDog big]] [[AllAnimalsAreDogs dog]]!" ''Cynognathus'' ("dog jaws"), unlike ''Dimetrodon'', was a true therapsid, belonging to the therapsid subgroup called the cynodonts ("dog teeth"). These were the most advanced and mammal-like of all the mammal-ancestors, with a very mammalian look, certainly at least some hair and quasi-mammalian dentition. They were also among the smallest therapsids, being mostly cat-sized; even ''Cynognathus'', the largest known, was still no bigger than a German Shepherd.
419
420Found in South Africa at the end of the 19th century, ''Cynognathus crateronotus'' (its only known species) has traditionally been considered the archetypal cynodont and, more generally, the archetypal therapsid in documentary media. It has been cited as one of the unofficial symbols of evolution, as one of the "missing links" between reptiles and mammals (just like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Archaeopteryx]]'', the "missing link" between reptiles and birds), even though it wasn't really a reptile. As its fossils are also known from Argentina and Antarctica, it was also one of the key fossils used to argue for the Pangea hypothesis.
421
422Despite this, ''Cynognathus'' has not received much attention outside non-fictional works, maybe due to being not so impressive-looking compared with ''Dimetrodon'' or, naturally, dinosaurs. However, it is very common in popular prehistory-related media as the most classic example of a particularly mammalian-looking therapsid, typically described as "dog-like" and/or "wolf-like", in contrast with the primitive "lizard-like" ''Dimetrodon'' (which more often tends to be considered a dinosaur because of this). ''Cynognathus'' is also often portrayed as an excellent predator, and in RealLife, it may have been as powerful as ''Dimetrodon'' in spite of its smaller size (it was about half the length of ''D. limbatus''), possibly even capable of killing therapsids bigger than itself, like the herbivorous '''di'''cynodonts -- don't confuse them with cynodonts: they were two distinct lineages of therapsids, and dicynodonts were less close to mammals than cynodonts. We don't know if ''Dimetrodon''s and ''Cynognathus''es were pack hunters or solitary hunters, nor if they were ambush-killers or active pursuers. But unlike ''Dimetrodon'', ''Cynognathus'' was not the apex predator of its day; in Early Triassic South Africa, it lived alongside the huge predatory archosaur-relative ''Erythrosuchus''.
423
424Even though it was almost certainly hairy, ''Cynognathus''' fur would have been less dense than modern mammals. Unlike ''Dimetrodon'', ''Cynognathus'' has never been portrayed with scaly hide; at most, it's given just naked skin. We don’t know if ''Cynognathus'' and other cynodonts had external ears or mammary glands (two distinctive mammalian traits), but the odds they had them were obviously far greater than the primitive ''Dimetrodon''. Like the latter, we have no idea how ''Cynognathus'' was colored. Media tend to depict cynodonts like it and ''Thrinaxodon'' (and other carnivorous therapsids like the apparently-similar but more primitive gorgonopsians) with a [[RealIsBrown brown color scheme]], but this might not have been the case in RealLife. The usually-bland coloration typical of mammals is thought to be an adaptation for darkness -- according to scientists, every modern mammal (even diurnal ones, like us humans) descend from night-dwellers. Nocturnal habits, however, developed within the synapsid lineage only in the Triassic, to avoid competition with dinosaurs (or at least, that’s what most scientists say). If true, this would mean non-mammalian therapsids like ''Cynognathus'' could have been very colorful, like many modern reptiles and birds.
425
426After ''Cynognathus'', the most represented among the Cynodonts is the cat-sized ''Thrinaxodon liorhinus'': it was the basis for the unidentified cynodont species that appeared in the first episode of ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs''. Also found in South Africa at the end of the 19th century like the cynognath, ''Thrinaxodon'' ("trident tooth") has sometimes been cited as "the most mammal-like among mammal-like reptiles": but recent research indicates it was actually [[ScienceMarchesOn one of the most basal cynodonts]], even more basal than ''Cynognathus'' itself. With its small size, compact body, short but robust legs and short tail, it probably lived in self-dug burrows like a modern badger, and could have been a hunter of small animals, again much like a badger. It lived just after the Permian mass extinction at the very start of the Triassic and just before ''Cynognathus'' showed up; it's likely its burrowing habits helped its ancestors survive the Permian extinction. Careful analysis of its skull shows the thrinaxodont was definitely covered in fur and also had sensitive whiskers, just like modern mammals. Given that ''Cynognathus'' was even closer to mammals than ''Thrinaxodon'' was, the former too should have had thus fur and whiskers.
427
428# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined (''Cynognathus''), 1999 (''Thrinaxodon'')
429# '''TropeMaker:''' Popular prehistory media (''Cynognathus''), Being the basis of the cynodont from ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' (''Thrinaxodon''),
430
431!! Only Two Teeth: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lystrosaurus Lystrosaurus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placerias Placerias]]'' *
432
433Dicynodonts ("two dog-like teeth") were the most diverse group of mammal-ancestors, living from the Late Permian up to the very end of the Triassic (an alleged Early Cretaceous fossil turned out to be a misdated and misidentified Pleistocene marsupial). They were very varied in size and shape, but all were herbivorous and shared very specialized dentition: they had only ''two'' teeth in their upper jaw and ''no teeth'' in the lower one, coupled with a tortoise-like beak in front of the teeth. We don't know if they had some hair or were still totally naked.
434
435The most iconic dicynodont is probably ''Lystrosaurus'' ("shovel lizard"). Others include the classic ''Dicynodon'' (see below), the small burrowing ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diictodon Diictodon]]'' of Late Permian Africa, the large kannemeyeriiforms like ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kannemeyeria Kannemeyeria]]'' of Early Triassic Africa and ''Placerias'', and the most spectacular of them all, the elephant-sized ''Lisowicia'' found only in 2019 -- the latest one is currently the biggest known therapsid by far (again, see below).
436
437One of the first animals to have recuperated after the Permian-Triassic extinction event, ''Lystrosaurus'' was one of the most successful animals of all time; '''95%'' of all land vertebrates alive at the start of the Triassic were ''Lystrosaurus''. Its remains have been discovered everywhere in southern continents, even Antarctica (don't forget that this continent began to freeze only a few million years ago). Thanks to this, ''Lystrosaurus'' is one of the classic fossils used to prove the Pangaea supercontinent hypothesis, like ''Mesosaurus'', ''Cynognathus'', and the plant ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossopteris Glossopteris]]''. The size of a medium pig and thus bit bigger than ''Cynognathus'', ''Lystrosaurus'' has the typical dicynodontian shape: bulky, stubby-tailed, with strong semi-erect limbs, and the typical dentition made up of only the two upper tusk-like "canines". Formerly, [[ScienceMarchesOn it was depicted as a freshwater dweller like a hippo]], but now is mostly believed to have been a grazing land animal. In paleo-art, it is often shown as the favourite prey of ''Cynognathus'', but in reality, ''Cynognathus'' lived slightly later than ''Lystrosaurus'' -- ''Cynognathus'' instead lived alongside the aforementioned ''Kanneyemeria'', while ''Lystrosaurus'' coexisted with ''Thrinaxodon''.
438
439In ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'', ''Lystrosaurus'' is shown as very similar in behavior to modern wildebeest, living in immense [[NoisyNature noisy]] herds, crossing a river in a mass, and dying by drowning or being killed by ''Proterosuchus'' (under its old name of ''Chasmatosaurus'' and depicted as a semiaquatic crocodile-like hunter rather than the terrestrial animal many believe it is today). ''Lystrosaurus'' also appeared in ''Film/JurassicWorldDominion'', along with ''Dimetrodon'', making them the first proto-mammals to appear in the franchise.
440
441''Placerias hesternus'' was from the same habitat of ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Coelophysis]]'', ''Postosuchus'', and ''Desmatosuchus'' in Late Triassic southern USA. It was bigger and more evolved than ''Lystrosaurus'', weighing 1 ton and with a body-shape rather similar to the herbivorous dinocephalians like ''Moschops'' (see below) or pareiasaurs like ''Scutosaurus''. Its very large head was typical of a dicynodont however, with only two upper teeth and a round tortoise-like beak. Its most striking feature is the shape of its teeth: instead of protruding downwards like most other dicynodonts, they pointed forwards like short tusks. Its time and place were depicted in the first episode of in ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'', with ''Placerias'' appearing as a prey animal to ''Postosuchus''. In the show, it and ''Postosuchus'' are represented as particularly slow animals, but experts think they were much nimbler in reality. Its tusks also would have been probably powerful weapons against hungry ''Postosuchus''; in WWD, the female ''Postosuchus'' that hunts them is wounded by their tusks, crippling it and ultimately leading to its demise by starvation.
442
443
444# '''Entry Time:''' 2000s (both)
445# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Franchise/WalkingWith'' (both)
446
447!! Hulky Beasts: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moschops Moschops]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisowicia Lisowicia]]'' *
448
449''Moschops'' ("calf's face") is the most famous member of a peculiar subgroup of basal therapsids known as the Dinocephalians, "terrible heads". These quadrupeds were much more primitive than the cynodonts and dicynodonts, but were extremely varied in lifestyle, including both herbivores and carnivores -- all of them were the among largest land animals of their day. ''Moschops'' itself was actually one of the biggest among all mammal-ancestors (9ft long, the size of a small rhino), making even the biggest ''Dimetrodon'' species small in comparison -- but it was still much smaller than the most popular dinosaurs. Its carnivorous cousin and contemporary ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Anteosaurus]]'' was even more massive at 16ft, possibly the largest of all Permian land animals and likely the biggest proto-mammal until ''Lisowicia'' (see below) appeared/was discovered.
450
451''Moschops capensis'' (the name of the classic species) was characterized by powerful front legs longer than its hind legs: this, combined with its massive chest and short but muscular neck, gave to it a rather [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk-like frame]]. It also had partially splayed front limbs, more erect hind limbs, and a short but well-developed tail. Although not very visible in a mount or painting, the most specialized trait of ''Moschops'' was its thickened skull roof, a bit like that of a giraffe but without the "horns" of the latter (its relative ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Estemmenosuchus]]'' had some horn-like protrusions). Studies indicate the purpose of its hard head was most likely for headbutting rivals or predators, making it sort of an earlier version of the true dinosaur ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Pachycephalosaurus]]''.
452
453''Moschops''' teeth were small and blunt, and all rather similar to each other, unlike most other synapsids (''Dimetrodon'' included), but they were enough for taking vegetation of the harsh landscapes it inhabited. It lived in Middle Permian South Africa (hence the species name ''capensis''); some portrayals wrongly show it living alongside ''Dimetrodon'' or ''Cynognathus'', but it actually lived in a time period between the two, later than the former and earlier than the latter. Old sources often wrongly depicted ''Moschops'' with reptilian scales (a common error with most mammal-ancestors), and even with an erroneous line of reptilian tubercles along its neck, back and tail (a bit like an iguana crest but blunter). We don't know if it had some hair on its body like ''Cynognathus'' above or was naked-skinned like a modern rhinoceros. Like the tuatara, it had a "third eye" at the top of its skull; in actuality, a tiny bunch of light-sensitive cells properly called the "pineal eye".
454
455While mostly relegated to prehistory books, ''Moschops'' was the star of a British stop-motion animated kids show also called ''Moschops''. The title character was best friends with an ''Allosaurus'' named [[ALizardNamedLiz Ally]] and lived with his Grandfather Diplodocus and Uncle Rex; neighbors included Mr. Icthyosaurus and Mrs. Kerry the ''Triceratops''. As you can tell, it was not the most scientifically vigorous show by any stretch of the imagination, even for a cartoon. Moschops himself didn't even look anything like a real ''Moschops''!. Somewhat more accurate versions of ''Moschops'' appear in the video games ''Videogame/{{Carnivores}}'' and ''VideoGame/ArkSurvivalEvolved'', although both depict it as an extremely skittish omnivore that will run away from pretty much anything.
456
457Described only in 2019 (at the end of TheNewTens), ''Lisowicia bojani'' was found in Europe, precisely in Poland near the town of Lisowice -- hence the name. It's not only the last confirmed dicynodont known, living at the very end of the Triassic (even later than the former record-holder, ''Placerias''), but also the biggest known proto-mammal ever, reaching the size of a ''modern elephant''. It would have been as heavy as the biggest contemporaneous "prosauropods" like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Riojasaurus]]'' but it was still half the length and height of them because of the absence of the typically long neck and tail of the sauropods and their relatives.
458
459Marking its similarity with an elephant even more, ''Lisowicia'' also had erect pillar-like limbs convergent with those of a proper dinosaur or elephant, not splayed like most other mammal-ancestors. It had elephantine feet, and unusually for a mammal-ancestor also almost-lacked external tail, resembling several true mammals in this regard. ''Lisowicia'' is destined to gain attention, possibly becoming as common in paleo-books as other more traditional therapsids.
460
461# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
462# '''TropeMaker:''' Popular prehistory media
463
464!! Proto-Sabertooth?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inostrancevia Inostrancevia]]'' *
465
466The gorgonopsians ("monstrous faces"; sometimes called gorgonopsids) were the top predators of the Late Permian, but they were killed off by the huge mass extinction that divides the Paleozoic from the Mesozoic. More slender and usually smaller than the earlier dinocephalians, they are nicknamed "sabertooths" just like [[PantheraAwesome their mammalian namesakes]]; however, their upper canines, though longer than most therapsids, were far less developed than those of a saber-toothed cat. They include the group namesake ''Gorgonops'', the wolf-sized ''Lycaenops'' ("wolf face") and ''Sauroctonus'' ("lizard-killer") -- the first two were African, the last was Russian. The perhaps most famous and often portrayed has been [[RuleOfCool (of course)]] the largest genus, the tiger-sized ''Inostrancevia alexandri'' of Russia, named in 1922 after Russian geologist Alexander Inostrantsev.
467
468''Inostrancevia'', ''Cynognathus'', and other carnivorous therapsids are often described as [[AllAnimalsAreDogs looking like dogs]]; indeed, in modern depictions, this resemblance is even more evident than in the older, more reptilian portraits. As usual for proto-mammals, whether or not the gorgonopsids laid eggs and/or had mammary glands is still unknown. We're also not certain if gorgonopsians had fur; like the dinocephalians and dicynodonts, they might have been too basal to develop hair.
469
470The gorgonopsians' history in pop culture is convoluted. The famous Czech paleoartist Zdenek Burian first depicted a ''Sauroctonus'' interacting with some ''Scutosaurus'' [[https://i.pinimg.com/originals/45/38/30/45383040e2067086741fd593d84c48e7.jpg in one of his old paintings]], and they have appeared seldomly in educational books. The second ''VideoGame/DinoCrisis'' game included ''Inostrancevia'', inaccurately showing it as an armored monster living in volcanoes alongside Jurassic and Cretaceous dinosaurs. The 2007 TV show ''{{Series/Primeval}}'' made them famous by having ''Inostrancevia'' appear as the show's first MonsterOfTheWeek and then having it fight and kill a future-evolved flightless, predatory bat in the first season finale. The ''Walking with...'' series' 2005 entry ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' also included a gorgonopsian that went unidentified in the show but has been confirmed in other material to be ''Gorgonops'' (although its size and coexistence with ''Scutosaurus'' make it more like ''Inostrancevia'').
471
472# '''Entry Time:''' 2000s
473# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/{{Primeval}}'' and ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters''
474
475!! The First Known Mammal-Ancestor: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicynodon Dicynodon]]'' *
476
477The first mammal-ancestor ever described was ''Dicynodon lacerticeps'' ("lizard-headed two dog-like teeth") in the middle of the 19th century, the time in which Darwin popularized his revolutionary concept of evolution. It was named by Richard Owen, the same guy who coined the word "dinosaur". ''Dicynodon'' was the very first mammal-ancestor known to science, but at the time, its mammalian traits were dismissed as a case of convergent evolution and it was instead considered an unusual reptile.
478
479At that time, Darwin's pupil Thomas Huxley (nicknamed "[[AngryGuardDog Darwin’s Mastiff]]") proposed a surprisingly modern hypothesis: that land vertebrates should be divided into ''two'' branches instead of the then-traditional Linnaean tripartition of mammals-birds-reptiles. Huxley's proposed lineages were the ther'''o'''psids ("beast-looking", not to confound with ther'''a'''psids) and the sauropsids ("lizard-looking"). The former were basically the mammals; the latter were the reptiles (including dinosaurs ''and'' birds; over a century before feathered non-avian dinosaurs were known). Since ''Dicynodon'' was not thought to be related to mammals at tdhe time, Huxley put it in the "sauropsid" branch. It is for this reason that the proto-mammals were formerly classified/called "mammal-like reptiles" and depicted with reptilian traits. It was not until the start of the 20th century were the so-called "mammal-like reptiles" finally recognized as mammal-ancestors, thanks to the work of noted South African paleontologist Robert Broom. However, the term "mammal-like reptile" continued to stick until the early 21st century when the term "proto-mammal" was coined as a new term for these animals.
480
481''Dicynodon'' lived in Late Permian South Africa, and is the official namesake of the dicynodonts. It was a relatively small animal about the size of a dog, but it had the usual two-toothed dentition of the group. Due to the earliness of its discovery it is also the only mammal-ancestor portrayed in the Crystal Palace Park of London -- with oversized upper "canines" and a totally erroneous turtle-shell.
482
483# '''Entry Time:''' 1856
484# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park
485
486! Other synapsids
487Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Ophiacodon'', ''Sphenacodon'', ''Cotylorhynchus'', ''Tapinocephalus'', ''Anteosaurus'', ''Titanosuchus'', ''Robertia'', ''Kannemeyeria'', ''Diictodon'', ''Sauroctonus'', ''Lycaenops'', ''Lycosuchus'', ''Bauria'', ''Ericiolacerta'', ''Traversodon'', ''Massetognathus'', ''Oligokyphus'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles here.]]
488[[/folder]]
489
490----
491
492!Extinct Mammals
493
494Even prehistoric ''mammals'' are sometimes mislabeled dinosaurs. Colloquially, this is also often true of prehistoric amphibians, fish, and invertebrates, as well as existing critters that are considered "living fossils" (coelacanth, tuatara, horseshoe crab, nautilus, etc.). Only birds, whether they went extinct before recorded history or afterward, are ''not'' mislabeled when called dinosaurs.
495
496[[folder:Mammals in Media]]
497
498Among mammals, those living during the Late Pleistocene Ice Age have classically been the most portrayed, because they lived alongside the most iconic hominids ([[AllCavemenWereNeanderthals Neanderthals]] and Cro-Magnons). But mammals from before that time occasionally appear, usually -- needless to say -- the [[RuleOfCool coolest-looking]] among them. It's not uncommon to see pre-Ice Age mammals erroneously depicted as living alongside the Pleistocene ones however.
499
500Portrayals of [[https://youtu.be/AtVGwHPzyNc prehistoric mammals]] have usually been more accurate than those of prehistoric reptiles since large extinct mammals have left more numerous remains and are easier to "bring to life" correctly in media, since we can just compare them with their modern relatives -- though this doesn't entirely prevent inaccurate reconstructions. A good percentage of them received an increase in popularity just after the TurnOfTheMillennium, thanks to ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' and [[WesternAnimation/IceAge a certain series of CGI cartoon movies]], but others (especially the Ice Age ones) have been popular since long before then. They are nicknamed "megafauna" by some, but the term is not specific to mammals (nor extinct animals, for that matter), and there were plenty of prehistoric mammals similar in size to or smaller than their modern counterparts.
501
502[[/folder]]
503
504[[folder:Stock Ice Age Mammals]]
505
506NOTE: A few animals in this folder lived partially or totally before the Ice Age, but are here for comparison.
507
508!! The Icon of the Ice Age: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_mammoth Woolly Mammoth]] & the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastodon American Mastodon]] ***
509
510Mammoths and mastodons often show up in anything dealing with prehistory: you can even see them living [[https://youtu.be/bENtOFR66YY in tropical volcano-filled worlds alongside dinosaurs]], but thankfully, mammoths are usually [[MammothsMeanIceAge associated with the Ice Age]]. It's hard to imagine a prehistoric icy landscape without a curly-tusked mammoth wandering in.
511
512The most commonly portrayed species of mammoth is by far ''Mammuthus primigenius'' (lit. "primeval mammoth"), better known as the woolly mammoth, or THE mammoth ''par excellence''. It is probably the most iconic non-dino prehistoric animal of all, thanks to its resemblance to an elephant with huge curly tusks and dense hair, but also to the countless, extraordinarily well-preserved specimens with soft tissues found in northern Eurasia and northern Alaska and Canada. These findings have long made it one of the most accurately-portrayed of all prehistoric animals, and one of the very rare extinct animals almost as scientifically well-known as a still-living animal. However, the real cause of its extinction [[WildMassGuessing remains unclear]], as is [[WildMassGuessing the precise meaning]] of the word "mammoth", which is of Russian origin. The most common theory is that it derives from a Native Siberian word for "earth", as frozen carcasses emerging from the permafrost were mistaken for huge burrowing beasts. "Mammoth" as an adjective derives from the extinct animal -- the first person to use it that way was UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson (for a wheel of cheese, no less!), who had a major interest in paleontology.
513
514Despite its familiarity, even this animal is not spared misconceptions and mistakes in its portrayals. The most common error is thinking the woolly mammoth was ''larger'' than modern elephants. Actually, the "woolly" was the same size as its tropical, 21st-century cousins -- perhaps this is due to the confusion with other mammoth species that ''were'' a bit larger, like the Columbian, or Imperial, mammoth (''Mammuthus columbi''). Also note that only males had the typical huge, curled tusks; the females' tusks were not that different from those of modern elephants. As preserved fossil hair is often rich reddish-brown, some depictions show woollies with this color; actually, this is due to a chemical change in the hair during the intervening thousands of years. When alive, their hair could be black or dark brown, as seen in both ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' and ''Series/PrehistoricPark'', or more rarely, pale "ginger" or even blond. The last notion comes from a genetic analysis made in 2006 on a sample. Woolly mammoths also had smaller ears and smaller tails to preserve heat, as well as humped shoulders and a dome of fat on their head that made their backs slope downwards.
515
516It's worth noting that mammoths, scientifically speaking, were just another genus of elephant, since they belonged to the same family, Elephantidae. The Asian elephant (''Elephas maximus'') is slightly more closely related to mammoths (''Mammuthus'') than to its more distant modern African relatives (''Loxodonta africana'' and ''Loxodonta cyclotis'') -- thus mammoths (and mastodons) ''weren't'' the direct ancestors of elephants as is sometimes claimed. Also within Elephantidae was ''Palaeoloxodon'', the "straight-tusked elephant"; the best-known species of which is ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeoloxodon_antiquus Palaeoloxodon antiquus]]'' of Mediterranean Europe and West Asia. Formerly believed to be related to Asian elephants, its now considered to be closer to African elephants. It also lived during the Ice Age, but it preferred warmer climates and was bigger than the woolly mammoth at about the same size as the Columbian mammoth. Other recently-extinct elephantids underwent a high degree of insular dwarfism, some becoming as small as an average sheep or pig.
517
518On the other hand, the proper mastodons (whose common name curiously means "breast-tooth" for their blunt, cone-shaped teeth) were ''not'' true elephants, but just distant relatives of both mammoths and surviving elephants, and were much more primitive within the phylogenetic tree than Elephantidae (instead being in the family Mammutidae). The scientific name of the commonly-known species of mastodon, ''Mammut americanum'' (the American mastodon), is partially misleading: it was American indeed, but not a mammoth. The two are often confused with each other in pop-culture, but [[https://cdn.britannica.com/99/94699-050-818041BF/Mastodons-mammoths-animals-Paleo-Indians-size-elephants-African.jpg there are some key differences]] -- mastodons lacked the sloping backs of mammoths, were slightly shorter, had straighter tusks, and had differently shaped teeth adapted to eat leaves and branches instead of grass (the aforementioned "breast teeth"; mammoth teeth look like those of modern elephants). The last trait tells us mastodons were mainly forest animals, whereas mammoths preferred grasslands.
519
520Like the woolly mammoth, the American mastodon has left exquisite remains (such as those in the Californian tarpits) -- many complete skeletons, but no frozen specimens. It lived during the Ice Ages, but in warmer climates than ''Mammuthus primigenius'', and was neighbor and possible prey of the sabertooth cat ''Smilodon fatalis''. Interestingly, in some languages the adjective "mastodontic" or "mastodonic" has become a synonym of "huge" or "enormous", like the usage of "mammoth" as an adjective, although but the animal wasn't actually that big compared with other extinct proboscideans. Also worthy of note is that in the earliest days of palaeontology during the late 1700s, "mammoth" and "mastodon" interchangeably -- which some people still do today. Other extinct elephant relatives are called "mastodons" or "mastodonts" in classic paleozoology, ex. ''Platybelodon'', the "shovel-toothed mastodon", and ''Anancus'', the "European mastodon", but they were not strictly related to the genus ''Mammut'' or even in the same taxonomic family.
521
522#'''Entry Time:''' N/A for the woolly mammoth, which has been a cultural icon since prehistory. 1864 for the American mastodon.
523#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/JourneyToTheCenterOfTheEarth'' (American mastodon)
524
525!! Knife-Toothed Felines: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smilodon Smilodon]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machairodus Machairodus]]'', aka the "Saber-Toothed Tigers" ***
526
527Saber-toothed (or sabertooth) cats, with their distinctive fangs, are just as iconic in pop culture as the woolly mammoths, and the only other mammals worthy of three stars here. Mammoths and sabertooths (sabretooths in UK) have traditionally competed for the title of most iconic Ice Age mammal -- just like ''Brontosaurus'' and ''Tyrannosaurus'' for title of most iconic dinosaur.
528
529There were many species of saber- or sabre-toothed felines, but the ones you'll most likely see are the North American ''Smilodon fatalis'' ("fatal knife-tooth") and the South American ''Smilodon populator'' ("devastator knife-tooth"), which was larger but whose name [[RuleOfCool sounds less cool when said out loud]] (even if its specific ''definition'' is awesome). The Old-World genus ''Machairodus'' ("sword-tooth"), often spelled "''Macherodus''" in old sources, has also been quite common, at least in non-fiction works, but lived slightly before the Ice Age, unlike ''Smilodon''. Estimated at around a thousand pounds in maximum weight, ''S. populator'' was one of the largest cats to have ever lived, the same size as the extinct American lion and Eurasian cave lion, and was probably a descendant of ''S. fatalis'', which was closer in size and weight to a bulky modern lion.
530
531Although sabertooths belong to the cat family, Felidae, they are in a separate branch of that clade from modern felines, the [[TheUnpronounceable hard-to-pronounce]] Machairodontines, or more simply the Machairodonts, named after ''Machairodus''; thus, the name "saber-toothed tiger" (much more rarely, "saber-toothed lion") popularly applied to these creatures is not correct at all. The "tiger" thing has led to them being shown roaring with the same sound as an actual tiger or a lion, though only the big cats of the genus ''[[PantheraAwesome Panthera]]'' (that is, lions, tigers, jaguars and leopards) can produce such a roar, thanks to the structure of their larynxes, which is unique to this genus. Although the structure of the hyoid bones in sabertooths' throats were set up for roaring, it's uncertain if these roars were identical to those of modern big cats.
532
533In media, ''Smilodon''s will also probably use their sabers for every conceivable task, most prominently slaying herbivores the size of mastodons or ''Megatherium'' with a single stab. However, most real sabertooths (as well as their relatives, the [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals scimitar-tooths and dirk-tooths]]) had relatively delicate fangs that could not safely be used for stabbing. Instead, they probably used them to deliver a killing blow to the throats of their prey after disabling them. They would have preferred smaller prey too, such as juvenile mastodons and the smaller forms of ground sloth, as well as horses, deer, tapirs, bison, camels, giant armadillos, peccaries, and South America's unique native ungulates. They may be depicted as striped or spotted, just like a ''literal'' tiger or other big cats, which isn't completely impossible, but there isn't concrete proof of this: soft tissue of skin has not been preserved in the La Brea Tar Pits, where ''S. fatalis'' has been found in large numbers (over ''2000'' individuals).
534
535Expect to see ''Smilodon'', ''Machairodus'', etc. frequently interacting with humans, as our ancestors' main predators; in RealLife, other carnivores such as the aforementioned prehistoric lions were probably more common predators of early humans. And expect to see them [[SnowySabertooths living in icy lands alongside woolly mammoths]] as well. Even though they were contemporaries, their habitats in RealLife were largely different, with ''Smilodon'' preferring warmer climates. However, ''S. fatalis'' would have experienced snowy winters, considering its region's climate at the time, and did live alongside mastodons and Columbian mammoths; ''S. populator'' lived in tropical grassland alongside elephant-relatives called gomphotheres, like ''Notiomastodon'' and ''Cuvieronius''. Neither species of ''Smilodon'' lived at the far northern latitudes where woolly mammoths were found, though another saber-toothed cat, ''Homotherium'', did. And, in less serious works, don't rule out seeing saber-toothed cats somehow living alongside dinosaurs, and in the most extreme scenarios, [[CoolVsAwesome fighting against a]] ''[[CoolVsAwesome T. rex]]''.
536
537In RealLife, ''Smilodon'' was an animal exclusive to the Americas (the New World), filling the niche the other sabertooths, ''Machairodus'' for example, were occupying in the Old World (Europe, Asia, Africa). ''Smilodon'' was among the most specialized members of the Carnivoran order of mammals. Its hindlegs were shorter than its forelegs, like hyenas and some bears, and it had a stubby tail; it was powerful but quite slow-moving, and agile only in a straight line: in other words, a sort of MightyGlacier. The lower jaws were more gracile than modern big cats', and had a loose hinge that allowed them to open incredibly wide convergently with hippos, but were not apt for delivering powerful crushing bites, similar to snakes' jaws (venomous snakes often have upper fangs surprisingly similar to a sabertooth's). ''Smilodon'' had the biggest/longest fangs among all saber-toothed cats; this, together with its body size, might explain why it's become the most famous member of the group (and often cited as THE sabertooth ''par excellence''). Only the earlier, distantly-related pseudo-cat ''Eusmilus'' had fangs of comparable size.
538
539The "sabers" of ''Smilodon'' were arguably used only for slashing the throats of prey that had already been subdued with its bodybuilder-like forearms; the molars and lower canines were smaller than those of modern cats but the incisors were bigger, and more apt than the canines for tearing off flesh from its prey's body. ''Smilodon'' is often portrayed living in wolf- or lion-like groups with both sexes actively hunting, though this is considered controversial by some scientists as there is not enough actual evidence to support it. Some artists have even depicted smilodonts with a totally speculative [[PantheraAwesome lion mane]], linking it with the social behavior that is practiced by lions but unusual for other modern felines. The modern feline with the longest fangs today in respect to the body is the smallish [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clouded_leopard clouded leopard]] of Asia (''Neofelis''); the one with the bulkiest body-frame is the larger jaguar (''Panthera onca'') of the Americas. The overall biggest modern feline is ''Panthera tigris altaica'', the Siberian Tiger, with some individuals getting as big as extinct cave lions or American lions.
540
541''Smilodon'' went extinct roughly 10,000 years ago, around the time the Ice Age ended. Like the mammoths, [[WildMassGuessing theories have been raised]] as to how they died off, such as climate change at the end of the Ice Age, the lack of big prey for them to hunt, or humans changing their habitat by setting fires and killing off their food supply. Anyway, it's certain that they didn't evolve into modern cats, because as mentioned above, they were from a distinct cat lineage from modern felines.
542
543#'''Entry Time:''' 1903 (''Smilodon fatalis''); 2001 (''Smilodon populator'')
544#'''TropeMaker:''' The paintings of Charles R. Knight (''Smilodon fatalis''); ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' (''Smilodon populator'')
545
546!! Big Upright Beasts: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megatherium Megatherium]]'' & the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_sloth Ground Sloths]] **
547
548One of the largest and most spectacular land mammals that ever lived, ''Megatherium americanum'' was the same size as an elephant or a ''T. rex'': it reached 5m tall when standing fully erect, like a giraffe but much heavier. Indeed, the name "''Megatherium''" means... well... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "big beast"]].
549
550This is probably the most famous extinct mammal that doesn't really look like an ancient version of its still-living cousins, and is probably also the most famous one whose name ends in ''-therium''. While mammoths and mastodons could be regarded as the "brontosaurs" of their time and sabertooths the "tyrannosaurs", the megathere (but also the woolly rhinos and glyptodonts below, and to some extent, also the cave bear) can be considered the "Ice Age ''Triceratops''es and/or ''Stegosaurus''es": that is, the Giant Herbivorous Tanks of their time.
551
552In old reconstructions, ''Megatherium'' was shown with a horse-like head and sometimes a giraffe-like tongue to reach foliage on the tree tops. The horse head and giraffe tongue are probably mere fantasies, but the high-browsing habits aren't; indeed, the robustness of its body allowed it to stand on only its hind feet -- which, curiously, had only one claw each, and were not flat on the ground but facing to each other like an orangutan's feet -- and on its robust tail like a tripod, while the three-clawed, bear-like forefeet were used to pull down branches, like what is thought about the large, convergently-shaped [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs therizinosaur dinosaurs]]. When quadruped, ''Megatherium'' probably knuckle-walked with its forelimbs like a modern giant anteater, as its claws were too big to be placed flat on the ground.
553
554Actually, our "big beast" was neither a horse nor a giraffe relative, nor was it a giant bear... it was a ''sloth''. More precisely, the stock animal within the group called ground sloths, which are not only related to modern sloths, but also to anteaters and armadillos, and ''not'' to ungulates or carnivorans. The most famous pictures of ''Megatherium'' show it with fur, like a modern sloth, and to some extent this has been validated by fossilized hair imprints from other ground sloth species. However, there is also speculation that due to its sheer size, ''Megatherium'' was hairless, much like an elephant or rhinoceros. It probably gave birth to one offspring per time and carried the babies on its back, like modern sloths and anteaters do, but the length of its gestation can only be guessed.
555
556An extremely controversial idea is that ground sloths might have supplemented their diet with ''meat'' that they scavenged from predators such as sabertooths by chasing them away from their kill. There isn't much to support this theory other than RuleOfCool, though. It is entirely possible that they ate ''a little'' meat every now and then, since modern herbivores like deer do the same thing for a protein supplement. However, this would not be a standard part of their diet, and they would more likely prefer plants. This didn't stop ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' from depicting ''Megatherium'' chasing some ''Smilodon''s away from their kill and eating it, and since then, it has been forever cemented as an omnivore in video games such as ''VideoGame/ZooTycoon'' and ''VideoGame/ArkSurvivalEvolved''. In the former game, it will eat any meat placed in its enclosure, but otherwise does not kill and eat other animals sharing its habitat; the latter goes for a more realistic interpretation by depicting it as an insectivore, like anteaters and armadillos, hunting giant insects and arachnids. Some portrayals take this idea up to eleven by having it be an ''active hunter'', knocking over animals like the tank-like glyptodonts to tear open their soft bellies with its claws, almost like a mammalian ''Tyrannosaurus rex''.
557
558''Megatherium'' is the most well-known species of ground sloth, due to [[BiggerIsBetter being the largest]], hence its popular name, the giant ground sloth. The only similarly sized ground sloth alive at the same time was the Central American ''Eremotherium laurillardi'', the Panamerican ground sloth. Like ''Smilodon'', it's commonly depicted [[MisplacedWildlife alongside mammoths]], despite being strictly South American (mammoths never reached this continent). The proboscideans that ''did'' reach South America, such as ''Cuvieronius'' and ''Notiomastodon'', are classified as gomphotheres, a primitive family more closely related to elephants and mammoths than mastodons were. Different sloth species that reached North America, such as ''Nothrotheriops'' and ''Megalonyx'', would've been the ones contemporary with mammoths and the American mastodon.
559
560''Megalonyx jeffersoni'', or Jefferson's ground sloth, was the ground sloth species most common in Ice Age North America, but it was about half the size of its more famous cousin. It was first described in 1797, believe it or not, by UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson! Naming it based only on some claw bones, he tentatively classified it as being a huge lion (it was properly identified as a sloth in 1799, though the not-yet President did acknowledge similarities to the then-new ''Megatherium'' in his original description). Since the existence of prehistoric life was still controversial at the time, he believed ''Megalonyx'', as well as mammoths and mastodons, could have still been existing in the American wilds -- he even asked Lewis and Clark to find him live specimens on their expedition! Two other similarly-sized North American Ice Age grounds sloths are ''Paramylodon harlani'' (Harlan's ground sloth) and ''Nothrotheriops shastensis'' (the Shasta ground sloth); contrasting with the forest-dwelling ''Megalonyx'', the former was a grasslands animal commonly found in the La Brea Tar Pits, while the latter preferred deserts. Among the "small" ground sloths of South America, the most notable is ''Mylodon darwini'', the first fossils of which were ''Mylodon'' were found by Charles Darwin during his voyage on ''HMS Beagle'', earning it the common name of Darwin's ground sloth. The Caribbean also supported many dwarf ground sloths that survived until 5000 years ago when humans colonized the islands, long after their huge mainland kin went extinct.
561
562The most famous ground sloth in fiction is Sid from the ''WesternAnimation/IceAge'' franchise, who is only about the size of a human, and resembles ''no'' ground sloth in real life, much less ''Megatherium''. He looks more like a modern tree sloth, which the animators did indeed model him off of, but with bizarre protruding eyes. In prehistoric terms, he seems to be closest to the Shasta ground sloth at least in terms of appearance. The most improbable portrayal of these critters would have to be in the 1948 BMovie ''Film/UnknownIsland'', where a ground sloth was depicted as a strange, roaring predator resembling [[MixAndMatchCritter a cross between a gorilla and a bear]].
563
564#'''Entry Time:''' 1854
565#'''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park
566
567!! Hairy Nordic Rhinos: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_rhinoceros Woolly Rhinoceros]] & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasmotherium Elasmotherium]]'' **
568
569Mammoths weren't the only "woolly" creatures that lived in the Ice Age. Special mention should be given to the slightly less famous but still notable woolly rhinos, the "ceratopsids" of their time, and possibly subject to RhinoRampage.
570
571''Elasmotherium sibiricum'' ("Siberian thin-plate beast"), also known as the Siberian unicorn, is probably the biggest true rhinoceros known: it's often confused with the proper woolly rhino (''Coelodonta antiquitatis'', "hollow tooth of antiquity") because of their similar appearance. However, the woolly rhino was no larger than modern white rhinos and had ''two'' horns as well; it was closely related to the modern [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumatran_rhinoceros Sumatran Rhinoceros]], the smallest extant rhino species (and the only one with some hair on its body). ''Elasmotherium'', on the other hand, was much larger (5 tons, like a modern bush elephant) and with a single horn... on its ''forehead'' rather than its nose; hence [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin the "unicorn" label]]. Unlike the "woolly", the Siberian unicorn was not closely related to any of the five modern rhinoceros species, though it still belonged to the rhino family, Rhinocerotidae.
572
573Both rhinos lived in the Ice Age in cold climates alongside the other, more popular woolly ([[MammothsMeanIceAge guess what]]). But whereas the elasmothere was restricted to Eastern Europe and Central Asia, ''Coelodonta'' ranged as far as Spain (there is, however, a cave painting that might stretch ''Elasmotherium'''s range as far as France). Like the elephantine "woolly", the rhinocerotine one (we're always talking about ''Coelodonta'') has left behind soft parts of its body, hair and horns included, in the form of frozen corpses. We also know from cave art that it had brown fur, with a darker band in the middle of its body.
574
575It's important to note that rhino's horns are ''not'' made of bone like the horns of cattle and deer, but of ''hardened hair'', and don't usually preserve as fossils. The anterior curved horn of the proper woolly rhinoceros was laterally flattened, and some have speculated it used it to free the terrain from snow to reach the vegetation below, like modern caribous do with their hooves and antlers (and like woolly mammoths may have done with their tusks). The coelodont also had a hump on its shoulders like a bison. Its teeth tell us it was a grazer like white rhinos
576
577Unlike the woolly rhino, we don't know what size and shape the elasmothere's horn actually was, because it has never found. Traditionally, it's been believed that it was enormous, as long as a man is tall and possibly the longest horn in the animal kingdom. More recently though, it's been suggested that the elasmothere's horn was actually short and blunt, something along the lines of the modern-day [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javan_rhinoceros Javan rhinoceros]] -- in which case ''Elasmotherium'' might not quite have been the "prehistoric unicorn" it is often imagined to be. Both the woolly rhino and Siberian unicorn had three toes for each foot like the modern ones, and probably reproduced in the same manner, giving birth to one (hornless) calf after a very long gestation, like modern rhinoceroses but unlike hippopotamuses, whose pregnancy is rather short for their size (8 months vs. a rhino's 18). Both rhinoceroses went extinct without leaving descendants. Like with many of the Ice Age megafauna, it appears the combined pressures of human hunting and climate change did these creatures in.
578
579The elasmothere is often thought to have been the inspiration for the {{Unicorn}} myths found all over Eurasia in one form or another when still alive, but this is mere speculation. There's a chance it might have lived into historic times, but the anecdotes and depictions of these creatures might just as well refer to Indian rhinos, one-horned bulls, or animals frozen in the permafrost like mammoths are known to have been.
580
581#'''Entry Time:''' 1918 (''Coelodonta''), 2006 (''Elasmotherium'')
582#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/TheLandThatTimeForgot'' (''Coelodonta''), ''Series/PrehistoricPark'' (''Elasmotherium'')
583
584!! Giant True Bears: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cave_bear Cave Bear]] & the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-faced_bear Short-Faced Bear]] **
585
586Among the prehistoric mammals of the order Carnivora, the most famous after the saber-toothed cats are the giant bears, again from the Pleistocene Ice Age.
587
588The most well-known is the cave bear (''Ursus spelaeus'', meaning [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "cave bear"]] in Latin), so-called because its remains are extremely abundant in European caves, more than those of other "cave mammals" (see below). These "cave" beasts are probably at the origin of the subtrope to putting "cave" before the name of fictional extinct animals, falling under WhateverSaurus.
589
590Quite similar to a modern Kodiak bear in shape and size, but with a bigger hump on its shoulder and a more prominent skull, the cave bear was perhaps the closest relative of brown bears (''Ursus arctos''), and usually depicted with the same brownish color of the latter, as cave paintings suggest. It was also related to the polar bear, an animal that recently evolved from brown bears living by the icy seas of the North Pole, together with the [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Great Auk]], a [[PolarBearsAndPenguins penguin-like]] bird recently extinct in 1800. In 2020, the first frozen mummy of a cave bear was been found in Siberia.
591
592The cave bear was probably a mainly peaceful creature that cared its tiny offspring in its warm rocky homes; but it had also classically been described as [[BearsAreBadNews the archenemy of Neanderthals and Cro-Magnon humans]], because both humans and bears lived in the same places (Pleistocene Europe) and were forced to share the same caves to protect themselves from the frigid Ice Age winters. But it's more probable that Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons were actually the worst enemies of cave bears, and some think they could even have contributed to the bear's extinction. Studies show the cave bear to have been to an almost pure herbivore, like the living giant panda, living on a strict diet of berries and shrubs (though, like pandas, it may have supplemented its diet with meat every now and then). In fact, the inflexibility of its diet may also have contributed to its extinction.
593
594The North American short-faced bear (''Arctodus simus'', lit. "short-muzzled bear-tooth"), in contrast to its stockier cousin, had long limbs, a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin bulldog-like snout]], and a more carnivorous diet. At first glance, it seems like it would be an agile and fast runner, and a very powerful hunter. However, [[ScienceMarchesOn more recent studies]] show that its limbs were too gracile to wrestle large prey to the ground, and too fragile for sharp turns, the latter of which are required for a fast-running hunter. Thus, these studies proposed it was purely carnivorous like a polar bear and a scavenging "kleptoparasite" that stole prey from other predators by scaring them away with its large size. However, very few animals can live entirely on scavenging (vultures are an exception, as they can fly for miles without eating), and additional studies have hinted that it may have been a generalist omnivore like other bear species. Bears in general can be qualified as LightningBruiser, like rhinos/hippos, as they are massive but fast runners compared with the probably slower giant sloths and glyptodonts.
595
596Expect these two bears to be confused in pop culture despite being quite different in appearance, and the short-faced bear being more related to the South American [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectacled_bear spectacled bear]] (''Tremarctos ornatus'') than the modern grizzly or the cave bear. Also expect both to be depicted as hunters of large prey, despite the above noted actual diets. Another thing to note is that despite most books describing the short-faced bear as the largest bear, that title actually belongs to its South American relative ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctotherium Arctotherium]]'' ("bear beast") -- not unlike how the South American ''Smilodon populator'' was bigger than the North American ''Smilodon fatalis''.
597
598#'''Entry Time:''' 1897 (cave bear); 2000s (short-faced bear)
599#'''TropeMaker:''' ''A Story of the Stone Age'' (cave bear); recent documentary media (short-faced bear)
600
601!! Living-Tank Mammals: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glyptodon Glyptodon]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doedicurus Doedicurus]]'' **
602
603After [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs ankylosaurs]] went extinct, evolution decided to create their perfect mammalian equivalents: the glyptodonts. Like the ground sloths, they were xenarthrans (formerly called edentates), the group containing sloths, anteaters, and armadillos, the last of whom they were related to. Despite the old name "edentate" means "no teeth", both ground sloths and glyptodonts had strong molar-like teeth, but small or no frontal teeth.
604
605Glyptodonts lived in South America for millions of years before going extinct only a few thousand years ago: in other words, they had the same history as their cousins, the ground sloths. Both groups were herbivores, and glyptodonts fortunately have never been depicted as meat-eaters or predators in popular media unlike their relatives. Rather, they have often been compared with giant tortoises because of their shell-like armor and short "hoofed" feet. Like the ground sloths, as adults they feared no predators (not even the saber-toothed cats), except of course humans. The size of the largest glyptodonts tends to be sometimes exaggerated in docu-media; they were actually much smaller than ''Megatherium'', being not taller than an adult man -- but their mass was nonetheless as much as a small car, and thanks to their heavy armor, they weighed two tons, like a modern rhino or hippo (which is still smaller than the elephant-sized ''Ankylosaurus'').
606
607There is a secret behind ground sloths' and glyptodonts' success: their backbone. It was far, far stronger than that of any other mammal, thanks to special protrusions (the xenarthral bones, hence the name "xenarthrans") in their vertebrae that permitted them to carry such heavy bodies around without suffering back pain. Some think glyptodonts were even able to briefly rear up on their pillar-like hindlegs, which had enormous femurs and an insanely robust pelvis (like those seen in the ground sloths), making them analogous to stegosaurs. But unlike stegosaurs, glyptodontids were live-bearers, and like modern armadillos, their young were born from their mothers already with their armor formed.
608
609''Glyptodon clavipes'' ("club-footed sculpted tooth") is the archetypal and most well-known glyptodont, whom the group is named after; it had a round upper shell like a tortoise, coupled with a small round head (perhaps ending in a small "trunk" as show in some illustrations; [[https://www.deviantart.com/sanciusart/art/Inspiring-cave-art-Glyptodon-899765863 cave paintings from South America challenge this idea]]) and a short, stocky tail covered in small but pointy spikes. The modern animal that perhaps resembles ''Glyptodon'' the most is the 30 kg [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_armadillo giant armadillo]], ''Priodontes maximus'', of the Amazon Basin. Ironically, the closest living relative of the glyptodonts is [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_fairy_armadillo the pink fairy armadillo]] (''Chlamyphorus truncatus''), the smallest armadillo species!
610
611But it's also worth mentioning the even more armored ''Doedicurus clavicaudatus'' (lit. "club-tailed pestle tail": this is the biggest/longest known glyptodont, and the one seen in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', ''VideoGame/ZooTycoon 2'', and ''VideoGame/ArkSurvivalEvolved''). It was very similar to ''Glyptodon'', but with its long flexible tail covered in massive spikes at the end, it was the most stegosaur- or ankylosaur-like of all glyptodonts, easily able to kill even a smilodont with a single blow from its "[[BewareMyStingerTail medieval mace]]". The ''Doedicurus''' spiky tail would have been even more dangerous for enemies than the Ankylosaurus' more rounded one — recalling more a stocky ''Stegosaurus'' "thagomizer". Injuries inflicted by ''Doedicurus'' on others of their kind suggest they used their club-tails in intraspecific combat, likely for mates or territory. ''Doedicurus'' amd ''Glyptodon'' are [[BiggerIsBetter the most-often depicted]] of the group, also because they were among the biggest and most powerfully armed.
612
613Glyptodont dorsal armor was the strongest among any land vertebrate, tortoises excluded. It was made of a ''single piece'' consisting of several scutes fused together, smooth and usually round, unlike ankylosaurs and armadillos whose armor was more flexible (and spiky in the case of ankylosaurs). With their compact frame, pillar-like legs, and rigid armor, glyptodonts were probably slower-moving than ankylosaurs and armadillos, but still faster than a Galapagos tortoise. Despite these differences, glyptodont armor was astonishingly similar to an ankylosaur's -- only the upper parts of the body were covered; the underbelly was unarmored (but hairy like in modern armadillos); the head had a "shield"; and their tail was covered by bone. We don't know if ground sloths and glyptodonts were solitary or lived in herds: modern xenarthrans are usually solitary, but the nine-banded armadillo has the singularity to give birth to four twins all the same gender.
614
615Like ''Megatherium'', ''Glyptodon'' and ''Doedicurus'' were known to ancient humans; if seen from far distances, it could have given to us the curious impression of a big walking ball roaming slowly across the grasslands. Despite appearances, glyptodonts were totally unable to roll into an actual impenetrable ball like what some South American armadillos, or also the unrelated pangolins and hedgehogs of the Old World, do. They weren't also able to retreat their heads, limbs and tails in a tortoise-like manner; their size, armor, and body robustness were alone effective defense, like in marine turtles.
616
617We now know human hunting wiped out the ground sloths and the glyptodonts, as the species on islands were the last to go and there is evidence of human hunting and change in their habitat. Ancient humans often used the biggest glyptodonts' shells as body armor for themselves or even as makeshift huts. Now, only far smaller xenarthrans survive; armadillos (which were not glyptodont descendants but only relatives), tree sloths (again, relatives and not descendants), and anteaters (sadly, the natural history of anteaters is poorly understood), all Central/South American, except for the nine-banded armadillo, which has colonized part of the USA. Incidentally, there is ''one'' species of glyptodont known from Ice Age North America, that being the large ''Glyptotherium'', found in Southern USA and Mexico.
618
619#'''Entry Time:''' 1864
620#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/JourneyToTheCenterOfTheEarth''
621
622!! Up To Eleven Trophy: ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_elk Megaloceros]]'' **
623
624Now we return in the world of the hoofed mammals (remember that rhinos are true ungulates, but mammoths & elephants are not), this time with an artiodactyl, aka an even-toed hoofed mammal.
625
626The most spectacular extinct deer, this is one of the most depicted extinct mammals in prehistory books because of its antlers, but is rather uncommon in Fictionland. ''Megaloceros giganteus'' simply means gigantic "big horn": continuing the RunningGag of comparing Ice Age mammals with dinosaurs, ''Megaloceros'' could be considered the "hadrosaur" of its time, for its huge size but slender running frame, spectacular head ornamentation like that of the ''Parasaurolophus'', and its ecological niche as prey for other mammals (humans included), just like "duckbills" in the Cretaceous.
627
628But wait: even though it is commonly referred to as the Irish elk[[note]]In British English, elk = moose.[[/note]], ''Megaloceros'' (also called "Megaceros" [[ScienceMarchesOn in older sources]], with the same meaning of "big horn") was more closely related to the European fallow deer -- indeed, in many sources, it is more generically named the "giant deer" (though Finnish author and paleontologist Kurten Bjorn gave it the name of "shelk" in his prehistoric novel ''Literature/DanceOfTheTiger''). It wasn't the largest deer ever -- though it was as large as a moose, even bigger deer lived elsewhere in the Ice Age -- but its antlers were another matter: they would make a modern moose's antlers look puny. Each one was ''as long as the entire animal's body'' (each as long as an adult person is tall, as stated in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''), and each weighed more than 100kg -- more than any other known deer species. They are probably the biggest known "horns" (sensu lato) of any mammal, and rivalled even the biggest horns and spikes of the ceratopsid dinosaurs; but it's possible that the unknown single horn of the giant rhino ''Elasmotherium'' was the same size, or even bigger, of the megaloceros' antlers.
629
630As with all modern deer (except for reindeer and caribou), only males had such headgear, which in reality, more resemble a moose's flat antlers than the typical deer's branched ones. Some scientists believe that ''the antlers alone'' were the cause of its extinction, having grown too big. This phenomenon is called "hyperthely": classically-cited examples of modern hyperthelies are the peacock's tail, the toucan's bill, the right pincer of the fiddler crab, and the narwhal's spiral tooth. This hyperthely should have made the giant deer too clumsy, but this is unlikely. ''Megaloceros'' males were stronger than females but probably just as agile, as with extant deer species: besides, if their antlers actually were too big, evolution probably would have just made them smaller at some point. More likely, climate change, combined with hunting pressures, lead to its extinction.
631
632''Megaloceros'' lived in Europe and Asia alongside woolly mammoths and other large mammals, and was possibly prey for ancient humans (''Walking With Beasts'' show Cro-Magnons successfully killing one adult male ''Megaloceros'' that was tired after fighting another male); its nickname "Irish elk" is due to its remains being very common in Ireland. Its huge antlers are often found isolated in this country (all true deer loose and regrow their antlers seasonally), and have even been used as a tool to cross small streams! In ''Literature/TheLostWorld1912'', the explorers briefly glimpse some kind of giant deer, and protagonist Edward Malone -- an Irishman -- suggests that it was probably one of "those monstrous Irish elk which are still dug up from time to time in the bogs of my native land." Cave art also tells us it had a hump on its shoulders with a white head and a brown body, as depicted in ''Walking With Beasts''.
633
634Other large, spectacularly antlered extinct deer include ''Eucladoceros'' ("well-ramified horn") and ''Cervalces'' ("deer-moose"), the former nicknamed the Bush-antlered Deer, the latter nicknamed the Stag-Moose. The biggest ''Cervalces'' species had a smaller set of antlers, but had a larger body than the Irish Elk; ''Eucladoceros'' was smaller-bodied but had an incredibly high number of points in its antlers. The former lived alongside ''Megaloceros'' during the Pleistocene Ice Age, but the latter lived in the Pliocene epoch before the Ice Age. Other prehistoric deer had more normal-sized headgear.
635
636# '''Entry Time:''' 1854
637# '''TropeMaker:''' Crystal Palace Park in London (believed to be the most realistic animal model of the park)
638
639!! Big Badass Wolf: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dire_wolf Dire Wolf]] *
640
641The dire wolf (''Aenocyon dirus'', formerly ''Canis dirus'') was a recently extinct canid (the dog family) exclusive to the Americas, famous for being bigger/stronger than our wolves, and possibly a hunter of giant bison in competition with saber-toothed cats and extinct American lions. It has been often found in the La Brea Tar Pits, with over 4000 individuals known along with many other Pleistocene American mammals both living and extinct. This animal could be considered the mammalian "raptor" of the Ice Ages.
642
643Despite its fame of power and direness, the dire wolf wasn't much larger than the modern grey wolf (''Canis lupus''). However, it had a much more powerful bite, well over twice that of the grey wolf, and thus often compared to that of a hyena. This would allow it to be a fair competition to other predators at the time. It ranged from as far north as Canada to as far south as South America (though only in the northern and western areas, due to the obstacle presented by the Andes). Like the bears above, neither of which left descendants in modern world, the dire wolf is not the ancestor of modern wolves. It was originally believed to be closely related to the grey wolf, but DNA studies reveal it to be of a uniquely North American lineage of canids most closely related to the African jackals (''Lupulella''). So while it is popularly depicted as looking like a modern wolf, right down to the fur color, the dire wolf might have looked very different when alive. And while we do know it was a pack hunter, it may have had a different hunting style and may not have had its packs dominated by an "alpha" pair like in modern wolves. However, it likely gave birth to several puppies that were raised with love, like what present-day pack-hunting wild dogs.
644
645Surprisingly, this canid is less common in works set in prehistoric times, and more common in fantasy works such as ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' and, most famously, ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' and its television adaptation ''Series/GameOfThrones''. When it appears, expect it to be double the size of a real grey wolf, despite not being much larger in real life. Expect it also to be described in books as "the biggest canid ever", though some [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Borophagines]], nicknamed "bone-crushing dogs", that lived well before it were actually larger (the record belongs to the Miocene North American borophagine ''Epicyon'').
646
647#'''Entry Time:''' 1977
648#'''TropeMaker:''' ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' (1st Edition ''Monster Manual'')
649
650!! Bigfoot or King Kong?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigantopithecus Gigantopithecus]]'' *
651
652This extinct primate is surely the most popular today in media (human ancestors excluded, of course), one reason being [[BiggerIsBetter its size]]. Other giant primates of the past include huge baboons like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Dinopithecus]]'' and [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals the giant lemurs]] of ancient Madagascar.
653
654Originally thought to be an enormous prehistoric human, [[ScienceMarchesOn later research]] made it clear that ''Gigantopithecus blacki'' was a relative of the orangutan that had also convergently exhibited gorilla-like characteristics. Found in Southern Asia from China to India, its name means "giant ape", and with good reason. It's estimated to have measured up to 10ft/3m when standing upright, ''twice'' as tall as a modern silverback gorilla; sort of midway between a RealLife gorilla and Film/KingKong. If it lived alongside dinosaurs, it could have made for a realistic PrimateVersusReptile.
655
656Sadly, the only parts of it known from the fossil record are the jaws and teeth, with the rest of the body having yet to be uncovered; the shape of the teeth show us it was a plant-eater, possibly specialized to a bamboo-based diet just like a gorilla, to the point that some experts think competition with [[KillerRabbit the giant panda]] actually drove it to extinction. ''Gigantopithecus'' lived alongside the Asiatic ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Homo erectus]]'' before going extinct, but we don't known how they interacted with each other due to the scarcity of remains of either.
657
658At least part of the reason this ape has entered stock territory is due to some scientists speculating that it might have been the inspiration for the mythical yeti (especially since it was also discovered in the Himalayas). Some cryptozoologists have taken these theories even further, speculating that not only did it survive to modern times, but at least one lineage migrated to North America and evolved into Bigfoot. Thanks to this radical theory, ''Gigantopithecus'' has been mentioned in virtually every Bigfoot documentary.
659
660There are quite a few problems with this theory. First of all, there is absolutely zero fossil evidence that it survived that long, much less that it made it to North America. It's quite unlikely that such a large creature could go unnoticed for so long without leaving ''some'' sort of proof of its existence. Secondly, since the creature was specialized for eating mostly bamboo, it's doubtful it would survive in a temperate environment without its preferred diet,[[note]]While there ''are'' native bamboo species in North America, they're confined to what's now the Southeastern United States and Mexico, meaning ''Gigantopithecus'' would've needed to migrate across a vast distance without any of its preferred food, and those American bamboos might not even have been close enough to be edible to it (giant pandas tend to be rather picky about which bamboos they eat, and it might've been the same for ''Gigantopithecus'' ).[[/note]] much less spread throughout North America.
661
662Despite this, the "''Gigantopithecus'' = Bigfoot" theory is so popular that the ape is often depicted in models and illustrations in an upright stance like a man, just to fit with this idea. Since all we have are its jaws and teeth, it's hard to be sure, but judging by its relationship with other apes, it most likely walked on its knuckles like most great apes do today. Since primates that habitually stand and walk upright require a specialized foot structure ''extremely'' different from that of other apes, ''Gigantopithecus'' evolving a similar foot structure to that of humans would be a radical case of convergent evolution. Also, if it was as large as believed, its immense weight would cause great stress on its ankles and would be better-distributed by walking on all fours.
663
664In TheNewTens, ''Gigantopithecus'' made two notable film appearances. First, there was the villainous pirate Captain Gutt in ''WesternAnimation/IceAgeContinentalDrift''. Then in ''[[Film/TheJungleBook2016 The Jungle Book]]'', a 2016 remake of [[WesternAnimation/{{The Jungle Book|1967}} the 1967 Disney classic]], King Louie was [[AdaptationSpeciesChange changed]] from an orangutan to a surviving ''Gigantopithecus'', averting MisplacedWildlife in favour of AnachronismStew (orangutans live in Southeast Asia, not in India where the story is set, but ''Gigantopithecus'' has been extinct for about 350,000 years). The latter appearance could very well place this creature in the public's mind for quite a long time, since not only was he quite humorous, being voiced by Creator/ChristopherWalken and all, but he was much more menacing than his 1967 counterpart, chasing Mowgli through the ancient temple ruins in a memorably chilling sequence. That said, both film appearances [[ShownTheirWork correctly]] depict ''Gigantopithecus'' as an orangutan-like ape, walking quadrupedally on its knuckles as opposed to upright like a human.
665
666# '''Entry Time:''' TheNewTens
667# '''TropeMaker:''' Yeti and Bigfoot documentaries, and the two aforementioned films
668
669!! South American Tapir-Camel: ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrauchenia Macrauchenia]]'' *
670
671''Macrauchenia patachonica'' was a famously [[MixAndMatchCritter enigmatic]] creature that lived in South America during the Ice Age (although earlier species in the same genus date as far back as the Miocene); its name means "big llama of Patagonia". It did indeed resemble a llama or humpless camel in appearance, but actually belonged to a now-extinct group of uniquely South American ungulates called the litopterns; once thought to have no modern relatives, [[ScienceMarchesOn newer research shows]] they are a sister group to the perissodactyls, the odd-toed ungulates.
672
673The size of a horse, one of its most distinct features is its nostrils, which on the skull were located on its ''forehead'' like a whale's blowhole. Early depictions showed it as swamp-dweller that used its weirdly-placed nostrils to breathe while eating water plants (AquaticSauropods, anyone?), but we now know it to be a fully terrestrial animal that ate both leaves and grasses. This lead to it always being depicted with a flexible tapir-like proboscis, which would be helpful for pulling down branches to get at greens. However, if you compare a [[http://www.boneroom.com/uploads/4/8/1/1/48118243/s521972503441136676_p1269_i1_w338.jpeg tapir skull]] to that of ''[[http://www.gastondesign.com/wp-content/uploads/macrauchenia-skull_fs.jpg Macrauchenia]]'', you can see that the tapir has a bony projection on its forehead to hold the proboscis in place, which ''Macrauchenia'' lacks. Therefore, it's more likely the animal had a bulbous trunk similar to that of a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saiga_tatarica Saiga antelope]], instead used to filter dust on the plains of Pleistocene South America. Others however think it might have lacked a trunk completely and instead sported a plain moose-like snout with fleshy lips for grabbing at plants ([[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/Serrania_de_la_Lindosa_rock_paintings_-_macraucheniid_-_Iriarte_et_al_2022_%28cropped%29.jpg/220px-Serrania_de_la_Lindosa_rock_paintings_-_macraucheniid_-_Iriarte_et_al_2022_%28cropped%29.jpg cave paintings from South America depicting long-necked animals with trunks]] challenge this idea though).
674
675Another distinctive feature of the ''Macrauchenia'' is its long legs and rhino-like feet, which were not only built for extremely high speeds, but also some of the sharpest turns for any herbivorous mammal. This makes sense when you realize it evolved alongside the famous [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs terror birds]], which were not only fast runners but, like most birds, had very good color vision, meaning camouflage was useless. Other predators of included carnivorous marsupial-relatives like ''Thylacosmilus'' and terrestrial crocodile-relatives like ''Barinasuchus''. After the formation of the Isthmus of Panama led to the Great American Interchange (remember, South America was an island not unlike Australia for most of the Cenozoic), North American "invaders" like cougars, jaguars, the giant bear ''Arctotherium'', the wild dog ''Protocyon'', and, most famously, the sabertooth ''Smilodon populator'' became the new top predators. ''Macrauchenia patachonica'' thrived in spite of the new dangers and became one of the last surviving litopterns, only going extinct after humans entered South America about 10 thousand years ago. It's likely that the first South Americans hunted these unusual animals to extinction, ending their unique lineage forever.
676
677The sheer oddness of ''Macrauchenia'''s appearance has earned it many appearances in documentary and non-documentary media, including ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', the ''WesternAnimation/IceAge'' franchise, and even an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}''. However, it's usually relegated to the role of an unnamed background animal, and despite the ongoing debate surrounding what was going on with its nose, most go for the tapir-trunk, most likely due to RuleOfCool.
678
679# '''Entry Time:''' 2001
680# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''
681
682!! South American Hippo-Bull: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxodon Toxodon]]'' *
683
684Though less often portrayed than ''Macrauchenia'', ''Toxodon'' also make occasional appearances in media, e.g. ''Series/PrehistoricPark'', in which it is shown as the main herbivore of the time and as ''Smilodon populator'''s main prey, much like how ''Macrauchenia'' was in ''Series/WalkingwithBeasts''.
685
686''Toxodon platensis'' ("flattened bow tooth") was bigger than the "tapir-camel", being 1.5 metric tons weight (about a thousand lbs heavier than ''Macrauchenia''), and was probably the most common plant-eating mammal Ice Age South America (although like ''Macrauchenia'', earlier species existed since the Miocene). ''Toxodon'' belonged to an extinct order of natively-evolved South American hoofed mammals called the notoungulates, lit. "the southern ungulates", and was one of the biggest and latest-surviving members of the group; they were a sister group of the litopterns and like them, most closely related to the still-living perissodactyls. Both ''Toxodon'' and ''Macrauchenia'' were discovered by Charles Darwin during his famous voyage on the ''HMS Beagle''; the sheer strangeness of both animals stumped Darwin, playing a major role in his formulation of the theory of evolution.
687
688''Toxodon'''s look may recall for some that of a stockily-built, hornless buffalo, but it had a wider mouth and strong incisors like a horse. Its body and limbs were stockier than cattle, its head was held low to the ground, and the feet had four or five digits with small "hooflets"; thus, it has been classically compared with a hornless rhino or a small-headed hippo. ''Toxodon'' was once thought to have been a slow-moving, semi-aquatic animal -- today, we believe it was fully terrestrial and capable of running rather quickly, as seen in ''Prehistoric Park'', where one is shown even keeping pace with Nigel Marven's vehicle. The toxodont was arguably not as fast as the ''Macrauchenia'', but thanks to its massive frame, it was a harder target for predators to kill than the relatively more slender ''Macrauchenia''. Terror birds probably were unable to kill a fully grown toxodont, while other predators, like the mighty ''Smilodon populator'', could have been able to do so, but not easily.
689
690Both ''Toxodon'' and ''Macrauchenia'' thrived in Pleistocene South America, and it's easy to imagine vast herds of them roaming the pampas like the zebras and buffaloes of Africa today. Like their neighbors, the ground sloths and glyptodonts, these endemic South American ungulates lived around to meet the first humans to enter South America, and were likely driven to extinction by them. The last ''Toxodon''s vanished roughly ten thousand years ago, likely depriving the ''Smilodon''s of South America of what might have been one of their main prey sources and definitely spelling the end for Darwin's strangest animals.
691
692#'''Entry Time:''' 1912
693#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/TheLostWorld1912''
694
695!! Prehistoric Buffalo: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bison_priscus Bison priscus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bison_latifrons Bison latifrons]]'' *
696
697Among the megafaunal mammals that roamed the North American Pleistocenic landscapes (in a time when humans still lived only in Africa and Eurasia), besides the more famous mammoths, mastodons, sabertooths, ground sloths, and dire wolves, there were also several species of true bison (belonging to the scientific genus ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Bison]]'').
698
699The most famous, but not the biggest, is probably the steppe bison, ''Bison priscus'' (the one live-acted in the last episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''), closely related to the two modern species (''Bison bison'', the familiar American bison, and ''Bison bonasus'', the rarer European bison or wisent). It was, however, a bit bigger than both, similar in size to the largest modern wild bovine, the so-called "Indian bison" or gaur (''Bos gaurus'', more closely related to domestic cattle). The Steppe bison had, more strikingly, longer horns than its two living kin -- more like those of an African Cape buffalo or an Indian water buffalo. It ranged across the icy plains of the northern hemisphere, from Europe to Canada, and likely originated in eastern Eurasia.
700
701An especially famous specimen of ''Bison priscus'' was found mummified in Alaska in 1979; nicknamed "[[Myth/PaulBunyan Blue Babe]]" because of the color it acquired during its preservation, its frozen meat was still edible (its discoverers actually ate a chunk of it!) and its corpse shows perhaps signs of attack from Ice Age American lions (''Panthera atrox''). The carcass is wonderfully preserved, even more than many woolly mammoth specimens, resembling almost a living bison, and the animal appears lying on its knees like a "sitting" bison.
702
703The long-horned bison, ''Bison latifrons'', is today the biggest known wild bovid to have ever lived, and its name means "wide-front bison". Unlike the wider-ranging steppe bison it lived only in Pleistocene North America, but its horn-span reached 7ft/2m in width, more than a standing human, but still less than the horn-span of ''Megaloceros giganteus''. It was arguably a more difficult meal for predators than ''Bison priscus''.
704
705Neither of these were the ancestors of the two species of modern bison. The American bison seems to be descended from a second, smaller species of Ice Age North American bison, ''B. antiquus'', or the ancient bison; the European bison's origins are a little more mysterious, but fossils and cave art indicate it was already existing alongside the steppe bison.
706
707# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
708# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media
709
710!! Lofty Critters: ''[[http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camelops Camelops]]'' and ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aepycamelus Aepycamelus]]'' *
711
712When we think North American wildlife, we tend to think stuff like bears, bison, deer, wolves, and cougars. So it comes as a surprise to many to learn that camels (and their South American relatives, the llamas and alpacas; together, they form the family Camelidae) were once considered characteristic of North American fauna. Indeed, camels and llamas ''evolved'' in North America and were ''only'' found on that continent until relatively recently when the ancestors of today's dromedaries and Bactrians (both in the genus ''Camelus'') crossed over [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beringia Beringia]] into Asia and the ancestors of llamas and alpacas (genus ''Lama'') entered South America across the newborn Isthmus of Panama.
713
714Even despite the migrations, camels remains abundant in North America all the way until the very end of the Ice Age. The most prominent of these is ''Camelops hesternus'' ("camel face of yesterday"), a fairly modern-looking camel about the same size as a Bactrian camel. Also known as the western camel or yesterday's camel, ''Camelops'' was a grazer like the Bactrian camel, and ranged from Alaska to Mexico. Its fossils are quite common in the La Brea Tar Pits, but no preserved soft tissues exist for ''Camelops''. We don't know if it had a hump, but most reconstructions choose to depict it as either humpless or having only a single, very small hump. Given that its range included the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts, a hump could have come in handy. Also, nobody can prove if it "spitted" for defense against enemies like llamas and alpacas do. ''Camelops'' disappeared at the end of the Ice Age alongside the mammoths, sabertooths, and ground sloths, ending the native camel lineage in North America for good.
715
716The North American camels also produced a variety of intriguing species during their period of endemism, ranging from gazelle-like runners such as ''Stenomylus'' to elephant-sized behemoths like ''Titanotylopus''. The most famous of these however was the Miocene "giraffe-camel" ''Aepycamelus''. This animal is often called "Alticamelus" in older media: both names mean "lofty camel", but "Aepy-" is Greek and "Alti-" is Latin. It was indeed taller than the already-tall modern dromedaries (up to 3m), but not much heavier: it was slender and had especially long limbs and neck, convergent with modern giraffes. Unlike more primitive camelids, ''Aepycamelus'' had already the typical flattened toes with small hooves of modern camels and llamas, but did not have a fatty hump on its back. As ''Aepycamelus'' lived in lush grasslands, it should not have had the desert adaptations of modern camels like the ability to store fat to survive the lack of food, or to resist thirst. Interestingly, it's believed that camels originally evolved their desert adaptations to survive ''cold'' environments, as fossils of camels have been found in the Arctic dating the Late Miocene/Early Pliocene; these belonged to the genus ''Paracamelus'', the ancestor of modern camels. The biggest known camel is the 4m-tall Syrian Camel (''Camelus moreli'') of the Pleistocenic Middle East, a member of the same genus that contains modern camels.
717
718# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
719# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media
720
721!! Ancient Gnawers: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castoroides Castoroides]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceratogaulus Ceratogaulus]]'' *
722
723It's not common to see prehistoric rodents and other usually small-sized mammalian groups, like rabbits, bats, "insectivorans",[[note]]moles, hedgehogs, and shrews; properly called eulipotyphlans[[/note]] or pangolins, in popular media. However, these guys tend to be a bit more commonly seen than the others.
724
725''Castoroides ohioensis'', means "beaver-form from Ohio" (''Castor'' is the genus of the modern beaver), is popularly known as the giant beaver: indeed, it was of the same rodent family as modern beavers, the Castorids, but was ''as large as a small bear'' (three times heavier than the capybara, the largest modern rodent) and with extremely powerful incisors, possibly the most powerful ever among rodents. It lived in Ice Age North America and was thus a member of the Pleistocene megafauna, but it wasn't the biggest rodent ever -- some [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals South American rodents]] were as big as a large cattle or a small rhinoceros! Due to its size and massive build, ''Castoroides'' was probably rather slow-moving on land, and may have been prey for the saber-toothed cats, American lions, and dire wolves.
726
727The main difference from modern beavers other than the size is that ''Castoroides'' was not a dam/lodge-builder (some alleged ''Castoroides'' dams have turned out to just be the centuries-long work of generations of beavers). Its incisors were not adapted for cutting down trees. Dam-building seems primarily exclusive to modern beavers; one smaller earlier castorid, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Palaeocastor]]'' ("ancient beaver"), dug strange corkscrew-like burrows in the Miocene North American prairies, making it more like a prairie dog than to a beaver in size, shape, and behavior. But like modern beavers, ''Castoroides'' was a wetlands animal; evidence suggests it ate water plants, rather than the woody plants preferred by today's beavers. It also had a longer, thinner tail that looked more similar to that of a muskrat. ''Castoroides'' vanished alongside the rest of the North American Ice Age megafauna, but some believe it was preserved in Native American stories of monster beavers.
728
729Another prehistoric rodent fairly common in docu-media is the so-called "horned gopher", ''Ceratogaulus''. Formerly known as ''"Epigaulus"'', it was not an Ice Age animal, instead living the prairies of Miocene-Pliocene North America. It also was not related to modern gophers (family Geomyidae), but rather belonged to an extinct family of rodents: the Mylagaulids. The prefix ''Cerato-'' ("horned") indicates its peculiarity: a unique two-forked bony projection above its nose that no other rodent has ever had, recalling that of the more famous and totally unrelated brontothere ''Megacerops'', or even that of the pseudo-deer ''Synthetoceras'' or the pseudo-rhino ''Arsinoitherium''. This makes this critter the smallest known horned mammal of all time. Several theories exist for the horns, but the most widely accepted is that they were for defense against predators.
730
731Apart from this, the "epigaulus" was not so different from other rodents of the past and the present: it resembled a [[MixAndMatchCritter horned guinea pig]] in size and shape, digging burrows with its robust forefeet like true gophers do. It's not known if it could store seeds in cheek-pouches like them, however. Interesting, ''Ceratogaulus'' was not the only small burrowing mammal to develop horns -- the 1m-long South American Oligocene-Miocene armadillo ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Peltephilus]]'' developed strikingly similar nasal "horns" by convergence.
732
733# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
734# '''TropeMaker:''' Popular paleo-art
735
736!! Giant Rhino-Wombat and Giant Koala-Roo: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diprotodon Diprotodon]]'' and ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procoptodon Procoptodon]]'' *
737
738Now we enter the realm of Pleistocene marsupials. ''Diprotodon optatum'' ("wishful two teeth in front") was related to modern wombats, but was ''a lot'' bigger: it reached the size of a rhinoceros, making it the biggest marsupial ever known. With its robust limbs and massive body, it looked a bit like a hornless rhino or small-mouthed hippo, and also like several extinct ungulates like its South American contemporary ''Toxodon'' or the much older ''Coryphodon'' (see the next folder). It is the namesake of the still-living order Diprotodontia, which contains modern kangaroos, koalas, wallabies, wombats, and sugar gliders (basically, all of Australia's plant-eating marsupials).
739
740Australian marsupials have undergone an extraordinary case of convergent evolution with placental mammals. One major difference between the diprotodont and ungulates, other than (of course) their reproductive system, is that the former had the same rodent-like incisors seen in modern wombats. We know that ''Diprotodon'''s hide was not naked like a modern rhino or hippo, but hairy like a wombat, and it had a pouch with a backward-facing opening just like the latter. Its paws were more similar to those of a bear, and many illustrations portray this overgrown marsupial rather bear-like, like a koala or a wombat indeed. Early reconstructions tended to give it a trunk, but nowadays, it's instead shown with a koala- or wombat-like nose.
741
742''Procoptodon goliah'' deserved the title of "giant kangaroo" more than modern red kangaroos (''Macropus rufus''), the largest living marsupial. It was taller and more massively-built than both (standing over 6ft tall, as opposed to the 4ft-tall red kangaroo), with a shorter tail and more robust forelimbs. It's the biggest known kangaroo ever, and is also known as the "short-faced kangaroo" because of its flattened muzzle, which looked like a koala's. Its pouch was similar to modern female kangaroos, but its hindfeet had a single horse-like hoof each. Its body frame and limbs were much stockier than modern kangaroos, and this, together with the flat face, almost made it look like a giant ape.
743
744Unlike modern kangaroos, which are all grass-grazers, ''Procoptodon'' was a browser of trees similar to ground sloths, using its robust forelimbs to pull down branches. Although popularly portrayed as a jumper, [[ScienceMarchesOn more recent research]] indicates it was too heavy to hop on two legs and instead walked in a similar manner to a human -- its broad hips even supported a pair of large ''buttocks'', an adaptation convergently evolved with us for walking on two legs for long distances. For this reason, it would have maintained a different stance from its modern relatives, keeping its heels off the ground and standing on its hoofs like a horse. We don't know at all if it "boxed" with other conspecifics like modern male kangaroos do, nor of it had the same ability to bear three cubs at different stages of development of modern female kangaroos.
745
746These two giant mammals from the LandDownUnder are more excellent examples of MixAndMatchCritters, and the two most commonly-portrayed herbivorous prehistoric marsupials in media because of [[BiggerIsBetter their size]]. They could have been portrayed even in prehistoric paintings made by the ancient Aborigines of the Stone Age, maybe even on the Uluru. Some also believe stories of these animals (as well as Megalania mentioned above and ''Thylacoleo'' below) have been preserved in Australian Aboriginal mythology.
747
748# '''Entry Time:''' Late 1990s
749# '''TropeMaker:''' ''The Prehistory of Australia'' (documentary)
750
751!! Marsupial Felines?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thylacoleo Thylacoleo]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thylacosmilus Thylacosmilus]]'' *
752
753Ice Age Australia was also home to one of the most unusual carnivorous mammals to have ever lived: ''Thylacoleo'' ("pouched lion"), nicknamed the "marsupial lion". While the first members of the genus debuted in the Pliocene, the most known species, ''T. carnifex'', meaning [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast "executioner"]], is the Ice Age one, the last and largest of them all. It was part of the family Thylacoleonidae (named after it, of course), which in turn was in the Diprotodontia order, with its closest relatives all being herbivores -- the koala, the wombats, and ''Diprotodon''. All of modern Australia's carnivorous marsupials are in the order Dasyuromorphia, thus unrelated to ''Thylacoleo''.
754
755The marsupial lion was so-called because its body shape, sharp claws, and short head remember modern big cats. But unlike the latter, it had ''rodent-like incisors'' (like wombats and ''Diprotodon'') instead of the classic fangs, and "guillotines" similar to those the Paleozoic fish ''Dunkleosteus'' instead of carnassial molars. Scientists once thought ''Thylacoleo'' was herbivorous like a wombat or rabbit because of its strange teeth; [[ScienceMarchesOn they now know]] it was predatory, thanks to bite marks on the bones of other extinct marsupials. Not only that, it may have been ''the most efficient'' mammalian predator ever. Despite being no bigger than a jaguar, it was likely able to kill even the diprotodonts and giant kangaroos! The combination of retractable ''Velociraptor''-like claws in its powerful forelimbs (perfect for scaling trees to ambush victims) and guillotines in its mouth proved a powerful killing arsenal, able to slice the neck of prey and deliver instant death. Were it not for the presence of two larger, faster, and equally well-armed reptilian predators -- the terrestrial crocodile ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Quinkana]]'' and Megalania, the giant goanna -- it would have been the continent's unrivalled predator. And yet despite all this, its close relationships and the unusual shape of its teeth tell us it was descended from ''herbivorous'' ancestors.
756
757We often think of Ice Age animals as primordial beasts of a bygone era, but the truth is that they were all very modern animals adapted to today's world; virtually all living and historically-extinct animals we know of co-existed with them, including us humans, and in another timeline, the Pleistocene megafauna would still be roaming Earth today. In the case of Australia's ancient giants -- the marsupial lion, the diprotodont, the giant short-faced kangaroo, Megalania, and others -- it seems they all met an untimely end at the hands of the first Aboriginals, who set fires to grow different plant species, consequently starving their prey into extinction. The introduction of the dingo a few centuries later spelled the same fate for the other main mammalian predators of prehistoric Australia -- the smaller thylacines (see Historically-Extinct Mammals) and Tasmanian devils. While the devils still survive today, the thylacine missed the chance to be observed by modern wildlife lovers only by a matter of decades. Forget {{Prehistoric Monster}}s, it seems that HumansAreTheRealMonsters.
758
759Moving on to a lighter topic (and way before the Ice Age), we head to the then-island continent of South America, ruled by a strange cast of apex predators -- [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs terror birds]], [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles terrestrial crocodile-relatives]], and the next guys on our prehistoric tour, the sparassodonts. Though not "marsupials" in the modern sense of the term, and thus possibly lacking a true "pouch" just like some South American opossums, the sparassodonts were a closely related lineage of carnivorous mammals that converged on many placental carnivorans. Members included the bear-like ''Borhyaena'' and the weasel-like ''Cladosictis'', but the largest and most well-known of these was the Miocene-Pliocene ''Thylacosmilus atrox'' ("atrocious pouched knife"), a marsupial ''sabertooth''.
760
761The same size as the marsupial lion but slenderer, ''Thylacosmilus'' had two upper fangs virtually identical to those of actual saber-toothed cats, but unlike the latter, they were ''ever-growing'' like an elephant's tusks or rodent's incisors. To protect these fangs, the lower jaw has a couple of bizarre bony sheaths covered with skin, which could have given it a curious drooping-lipped appearance. Some think even real saber-toothed cats had drooping lips to contain the "sabers" when the mouth was closed, but if they had these lips they were fleshy and not bony like those of ''Thylacosmilus''. Traditionally, it was believed that ''Thylacosmilus'' used its sabers in the same way ''Smilodon'' did, but in 2020, studies revealed that ''Thylacosmilus'' had a decidedly un-catlike hunting style -- instead of using its huge teeth to stab its victims' throats, as saber-toothed cats likely did, it probably used them to [[GroinAttack slash open their abdomens]] and feed on their internal organs.
762
763The existence of the sparassodonts is testament to the "splendid isolation" South America experienced for most of the Cenozoic, not unlike Australia today. The terror birds, xenarthrans, and native ungulates discussed on this page and previously are other examples of the unusual and often convergent lifeforms that emerged at the time, along with native rodents, monkeys, and opossums. Then South America collided with its northern counterpart, forming the Isthmus of Panama and instigating [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_American_Interchange the Great American Interchange]]. Xenarthrans, terror birds, rodents, monkeys, opossums, parrots, toucans, and hummingbirds entered North and Central America, while cats, elephants, horses, deer, tapirs, dogs, bears, raccoons, llamas, peccaries, venomous snakes, and condors came down south. Traditionally, it was believed the predatory northern invaders outcompeted the native southern carnivores, spelling the end for ''Thylacosmilus'', but new evidence shows the sparassodonts were gone long before placental carnivores arrived, leaving the real answer a mystery for now (the terror birds briefly thrived alongside their mammalian competitors before going extinct as well, while the croc-relatives had gone extinct well before the sparassodonts did).
764
765In old illustrations, both ''Thylacosmilus'' and ''Thylacoleo'' are often portrayed with a literal cat-like external appearance, with the same eyes, ears, body, fur, or even retractable claws of real felines, but since both weren't related with them at all, the reality of this is uncertain. Sadly, neither the giant herbivores of Australia nor the two "marsupial cats" appear in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''; interestingly, the producers initially planned a seventh episode with Australian Ice Age fauna -- thus giving at least ''Thylacoleo'' the chance to appear -- but this program [[WhatCouldHaveBeen never materialized]].
766
767# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
768# '''TropeMaker:''' Their resemblance to big cats
769
770!! A Cold Safari: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panthera_spelaea Cave Lion]], the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panthera_atrox American Lion]], & the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cave_Hyena Cave Hyena]] *
771
772Prehistoric cats weren't all sabertooths; there were also more normal-looking ones from the subfamily Felinae (which contains all modern cats; sabertooths were in the other subfamily Machairodontinae). The former are nicknamed by paleontologists "biting cats", the latter "stabbing cats"; it's easy to see why.
773
774The most well-known "biting" extinct cats were the American lion (''Panthera atrox'': ''atrox'' = "atrocious") and its Eurasian cousin, the cave lion (''Panthera spelaea'': ''spelaea'' = "from caves"), both formerly considered larger Ice Age subspecies of their closest living relative, the modern lion (''Panthera leo''), and well-adapted to live in colder climates along with the northern species of mammoths. Some think they were the main predators of ancient humans, but this is not certain. They were similar in shape and look to modern ''Panthera'' felines, but unlike modern lions -- at least according to some prehistoric paintings -- they had no manes. It's uncertain if their social structure was identical to modern lions, or if they were more solitary like tigers and jaguars.
775
776In ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', a cave lion has a minor role in the episode dedicated to the woolly mammoths: here, it's correctly depicted mane-less (unlike in other paleo-artistic works) and imagined as living in small prides, but it also has snow-white fur, a short tail, and even small "sabers" like a "stabbing cat". A lot of these errors are due to it being a reused model of the short-sabered sabertooth cat ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Dinofelis]]'' from the 4th episode; in reality, the cave lion's teeth and tail were like those of every other "biting cat", and thanks to some frozen specimens, we know its coloration was like a modern lion's but paler.
777
778The Cave Hyena is regarded today as a simple subspecies (''Crocuta crocuta spelaea'') of the well-known African spotted hyena (''Crocuta crocuta''). The cave hyena lived alongside the cave lion in Ice Age Eurasia, but compared with the more famous cave bear, both were less strictly associated with caves. The cave hyena was similar in appearance and behavior to its savannah equivalent, but with thicker fur and a stockier body against the cold. In ''Series/PrehistoricPark'', the cave hyenas are not CGI but live-acted by modern spotted hyenas, and it's very likely that cave hyenas "laughed" much like African spotted hyenas, given the former was a subspecies of the latter.
779
780# '''Entry Time:''' 2001/2006
781# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' (cave lion); ''Series/PrehistoricPark'' (cave hyena)
782
783!! ''Mûmakil'' in Prehistory: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbian_mammoth Columbian Mammoth]] and the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steppe_mammoth Steppe Mammoth]] *
784
785People often assume that mammoths were bigger than modern elephants. This is wrong if we're talking about the stock mammoth, the hairy, curly-tusked, tundra-dwelling woolly mammoth that everyone knows, but it ''is'' true about certain other mammoth species.
786
787There were indeed ''many'' mammoth species in RealLife, with the ''Mammuthus'' genus having first appeared in the Pliocene. The largest ones did challenge ''Paraceratherium'' (see the next folder) for the title of largest land mammal ever, weighing 15 tons or more (comparable to a medium sauropod dinosaur), while a modern elephant and a woolly mammoth are "only" 4-6 tons (like a big ceratopsid or stegosaur). However, a paracerathere would still be taller than any mammoth thanks to its giraffe-like shape.
788
789The most famous are the American Columbian mammoth (''Mammuthus columbi''; a common synonym is ''Mammuthus imperator'', the Imperial mammoth) and the lesser-known but earlier-living and even larger Asian steppe mammoth (''Mammuthus trogontherii''; the ancestor of the Columbian and woolly mammoths), very similar to each other in look, and both with the typical dome-like head and hump on their shoulders shared with the woolly mammoth. Others include ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammuthus_meridionalis Mammuthus meridionalis]]'', the southern mammoth of Southern Europe and West Asia, and ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammuthus_africanavus Mammuthus africanavus]]'', the African ancestor of all other mammoths -- both pre-Ice Age, like the steppe mammoth. Columbian mammoths have been discovered in the famous La Brea Tar Pits along with mastodons, ''Smilodon fatalis'', camels, ground sloths, dire wolves, and many other modern and extinct animals. Mammoth behavior was probably analogous to modern elephants, with a matriarch leading a herd and the bulls living lonelier lifestyles.
790
791The lesser popularity of the giant mammoths (despite their size) compared to the woolly one is probably due to their more "normal" appearance. They were more similar-looking to modern elephants than to the popular image of a "mammoth" because they were mostly hairless and with straighter tusks. These tusks were nonetheless more curved than any modern elephant, and ''much'' bigger -- up to 5m/15ft long and weighing 200kg or more, they were the biggest/longest teeth known so far in the animal kingdom. These tusks tended to be straight at the base and curly only at their tip, unlike those of the woolly mammoths. Only large ''Palaeoloxodon'' and some older proboscideans like ''Anancus'' had tusks of comparable size to those of male mammoths. Females of the giant mammoths had smaller tusks, like what is visible with woolly mammoths.
792
793Giant mammoths inhabited relatively warmer climates, and their greater size was enough to preserve heat without a woolly coat. Think the ''mûmakil'' from ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings''; okay, not ''quite'' that big (nor six-tusked), but generally similar in appearance. It's easily thinkable that the giant mammoths feared no predator as adults, like the earlier "giraffe-rhino" ''Paraceratherium'' of Oligocenic Asia.
794
795It's worth noting that mammoths as a whole actually thrived even after the end of the Ice Age, as there was more food available. Therefore, it was almost certainly humans changing their habitat that drove them to extinction, evidenced by the fact that populations on islands lasted much longer than those in the more easily-accessed mainland areas.
796
797# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
798# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media and gigantic skeletons in museums
799
800!! Lilliputians or Cyclopes: the astonishing [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_elephant Dwarf Elephants]] *
801
802Among extinct members of the elephant clan, last but not least are the island-dwellers that lived in the Ice Age but managed to survive until in recorded history: the oxymoronic [[OxymoronicBeing dwarf elephants]]. Yes, they were REAL, and some were even ''sheep-sized'': true miniatures of modern elephants, like Gulliver's famous Lilliputians.
803
804Most of them lived in the Mediterranean islands; especially famous is ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeoloxodon_falconeri Palaeoloxodon falconeri]]'' (one of the "straight-tusked elephants") of Sicily and Malta, known the possible link with ancient legends from Greek Antiquity (see below). There was also ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammuthus_creticus Mammuthus creticus]]'', the Cretan dwarf mammoth, and ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeoloxodon_cypriotes Palaeoloxodon cypriotes]]'' of Cyprus. Others lived elsewhere; ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygmy_mammoth Mammuthus exilis]]'', the Channel Islands mammoth, lived on the Channel Islands off southern California was descended from the gargantuan Columbian mammoth, while Wrangel Island off eastern Siberia and Saint Paul Island off Alaska supported woolly mammoths smaller than the mainland forms (but of the same species). Additionally, dwarfs of the slightly more primitive proboscidean ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stegodon Stegodon]]'' existed around the same time in Celebes and Flores in Indonesia. All achieved their dwarfism due to the limited resources of island environments and the lack big mainland predators reducing the need to defend themselves with their bulk -- at least until humans drove them all to extinction. As for how they ended up on islands in the first place? In most cases, they swam (elephants are excellent swimmers), while the Wrangel and Saint Paul mammoths walked there due to the lower sea levels of the Ice Age. Interestingly, the "woollies" of Wrangel and Saint Paul managed to survive until about 4,000 years ago, contemporaneous with AncientEgypt. However, dwarf elephants still exist today -- Borneo in Indonesia hosts [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borneo_elephant Asian elephants smaller than their mainland and Sumatran counterparts]].
805
806There's a theory that elephant bones found in the Mediterranean were identified by the ancient Greeks as the remains of monsters, heroes, and mythical animals from the [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Age of Heroes]]. Some of these bones were identified as [[ClassicalCyclops cyclopes]], due to the alleged misunderstanding of the elephant's nasal opening, placed where cyclopes would have their one eye. This theory is doubted by some historians, as no elephant skulls have been found in the alleged areas -- Mediterranean fossils are far too fragmentary due to the frequent earthquakes and volcanoes of the region preventing something as fragile as a fossilized skull to survive intact for long periods.
807
808# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
809# '''TropeMaker:''' The oddness of their size and the association with the cyclops myth
810
811[[/folder]]
812
813[[folder:Stock Pre-Ice Age Mammals]]
814
815NOTE: A few animals in this folder actually reached the Ice Age, but are here for comparison.
816
817!! The Start of Horses' Evolution: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eohippus Eohippus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyracotherium Hyracotherium]]'' **
818
819Now we'll go before the Ice Age and meet the so-called "horse ancestors" (more precisely, the equid ancestors). Although little-portrayed in mainstream media, they are more familiar than other pre-Ice Age mammals because they have always been among the symbols of evolution, almost as much as the [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs dodo]] is the icon of extinction. Horse ancestors weren't so cool-looking compared to most other extinct hoofed mammals: they mostly resembled their modern namesake at a glance. The most famous of these [[{{Pun}} forerunners]] are, obviously, the [[RuleOfCool least horse-like]] of them all, averting BiggerIsBetter for once, as they were also the smallest: ''Eohippus'' ("dawn horse") and ''Hyracotherium'' ("mole beast"), both Early Eocene and often considered the same animal in the past (the former was North American, the latter European).
820
821An almost-unbelievable ScienceMarchesOn affair has actually encircled horse evolution, despite its iconic role in popular science. This evolution was ''not'' as linear as shown in popular science books and elsewhere, though it's certain that equine ancestors progressively lost their digits from four to one on each foot, their heads became loftier to see farther, their limbs became nimbler to run faster, their overall size constantly increased, and their teeth progressively adapted from browsing forest vegetation to grazing the grass of the first grasslands. Horse evolution has often been cited as a symbol of progress and improvement in general, probably due to the historical fame of the horse as a "noble" animal, that started as a small modest forest-dwelling leaf-eater... forgetting that modern animals are actually not "better" than the older ones ''only'' because they [[HumansAreSpecial reached our time]]; every animal is adapted to the environment of its own period. Elephants too and their evolution have had a similar reputation of the horses' one in pop-science media, and elephants have also been classically quoted as "noble" animals in several human cultures.
822
823While ''Eohippus'' was a true horse within the modern family Equidae, ''Hyracotherium'' was actually a much more primitive animal part of a group of horse relatives called the palaeotheriids (such as ''Propalaeotherium'' from ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''). However, systematics of the earliest ungulates are very messy, due to how similar the earliest ones all looked, with many other early ungulates (including some rhino and tapir ancestors) being mistakenly labelled as horse-ancestors. Among modern ungulates, the artiodactylan chevrotains (mouse-deer) and duiker antelopes are perhaps the ones that most resemble these animals in size and appearance.
824
825Whenever the putative "ur-horse" ''Hyracotherium''/''Eohippus'' shows up in media, expect it to be portrayed as a RedShirt, usually falling prey to the giant flightless bird ''Gastornis''/"Diatryma". But after ScienceMarchesOn, we know it's highly unlikely for the bird to have had any interest in the small ungulates due to its herbivorous diet -- the "ur-horses" might have instead been prey for terrestrial crocodilians like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Boverisuchus]]'' (aka "Pristichampsus"), being "[[StockPhrase as large as a fox terrier]]", to use a classic description in paleo-books. Among fictional appearances, the most notable was perhaps Creator/RayHarryhausen's cowboys-versus-dinosaurs film ''Film/TheValleyOfGwangi''.
826
827# '''Entry Time:''' 1969
828# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Film/TheValleyOfGwangi'' (film)
829
830!! A Run for the Future: the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_the_horse Horse Ancestors]] *
831
832Among confirmed horse ancestors, they make a sort of {{pun}} if read together.
833
834The Late Eocene-Early Oligocene ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesohippus Mesohippus]]'' ("middle horse") of North America, still small and with three fingers for each limb, was still a forest browser like ''Eohippus''; the North American ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merychippus Merychippus]]'' ("grazing horse"), also with three digits, was larger, more horse-like and [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin grazed]] on Early Miocene grasslands; the Late Miocene ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliohippus Pliohippus]]'' ("more horse"), again North American, was very similar to a modern equine in size and shape, and had the familiar one-hoofed toe with two vestigial toes. They are the most commonly-shown in media, but there were in reality dozens of other ''-hippus''es, almost all North American. It's important to note that ''Pliohippus'' is no longer considered the direct ancestor of modern horses as once believed, but rather part of a sister lineage with no modern descendants. Modern horses are instead descended from the Miocene-Pliocene North American ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinohippus Dinohippus]]'' ("terrible horse").
835
836Also worthy of note are the Miocene-Pliocene ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hipparion Hipparion]]'' (meaning "pony" in Greek) and the Ice Age ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippidion Hippidion]]'' (lit. "little horse"), which break the theme of having ''-hippus'' as a prefix instead of a suffix; they also break the geographic rule, the first being an Old World critter, the second South American, both offshoots of the horse family with no descendants. Remember that ''all'' modern equines descended from North American ancestors. The wild mustangs of North America are actually descendants of European domesticated horses, which are descended from true wild horses of Asia and Europe, which, in turn, originated from North American ancestors. There were also a few exceptions of the "''-hippus''" rule, such as ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchitherium Anchitherium]]'' (another Eurasian offshoot, this time a Miocene browser closely related to ''Mesohippus'').
837
838Oh, and all the animals above were not only the horse's ancestors, but also the donkey's and zebra's. Despite their different appearances and habits, modern equids are so closely related to each other they're all placed in a single genus, ''Equus'' -- by comparison, the modern five rhinoceros species are put in ''four'' different genera: ''Diceros'' (the black rhino), ''Ceratotherium'' (the white rhino), ''Dicerorhinus'' (the Sumatran rhino), and the namesake ''Rhinoceros'' (the Indian and Javan rhinos). The genus ''Equus'' also includes two recent historical extinctions: the African quagga, a kind of zebra with incomplete stripes, and the European tarpan, the direct ancestor of the domestic horse.
839
840Unlike ''Eohippus'' and kin, all these confirmed horse ancestors have little chance of ever appearing in non-documentary media, probably because they look more like modern horses.
841
842# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
843# '''TropeMaker:''' Portrayals of their evolutionary sequence in pop science books
844
845!! Six Horns and Two Sabers: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uintatherium Uintatherium]]'' **
846
847Not all fossil mammals that looked like rhinoceroses actually were, although they'll probably get identified as such in popular media. Among the most well-known is ''Uintatherium'' ("Uinta Mountains' beast"), found in huge numbers in several fossil deposits in the western USA (but also in China). Like several other early mammals, it was described for the first time during the Bone Wars -- Marsh called it "Dinoceras", "terrible horn", but the animal was re-designated ''Uintatherium'' by Joseph Leidy after it turned out he described a year earlier. For some, however, it recalls more a hippo than a rhino because of its upper pair of tusks, to the point it could be renamed "[[MixAndMatchCritter the saber-toothed rhinoceros]]" or the "[[MixAndMatchCritter six-horned hippopotamus]]".
848
849The uintathere is perhaps the most mistreated extinct mammal of them all. Expect somebody describing its appearance as [[PrehistoricMonster "monstrous" or "scary"]]. True, it had three pairs of giraffe-like "horns" and the two aforementioned upper protruding tusks, but, honestly, if ''Uintatherium'' were alive today, it would probably appear no scarier than an elephant, rhino, hippo, or giraffe. Also expect a crack about its allegedly slow movement and its "tiny" brain (just like what happens to ''[[DumbDinos Stegosaurus]]''), and just like the stegosaur, expect the writer to cite [[TooDumbToLive its slowness and/or stupidity as the reason for its extinction]]. Though they had comparatively short limbs and feet, similar in shape to an elephant's, this wouldn't necessarily have prevented the uintathere from running with speed if necessary -- again, just like modern elephants, or rhinos, or hippos.
850
851In RealLife, ''Uintatherium'' was one of the dinocerates, a group of primitive ungulate-relatives that were among the very first mammals to reach large sizes (about as large as a modern-day rhino). Their body plan was ''very'' successful at the time, as they roamed the northern hemisphere in huge numbers for millions of years in the Early and Middle Eocene epoch, before being outcompeted by the even larger brontotheres (see below) and the first true rhinos. The uintathere is usually depicted with rhino-like hide and sideways-pointing ears, a bit like a cow; sadly, we don't have remains of soft tissues from them, so we don't know how their skin and ears really looked. Given that it was a rhino-sized mammal living in a warm forest environment, hairlessness seems more plausible. We're not sure if their six "horns" were covered in skin like a giraffe, or keratin like cattle or antelopes, either. Another notable dnocerate was the almost-identical but larger ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eobasileus Eobasileus]]'' ("dawn king"), of the same time and place.
852
853Rather strangely, the famous franchise ''Franchise/WalkingWith'' doesn't mention ''Uintatherium'' in any of its pieces, despite them having been among the most iconic early big herbivores in the Mammal Age. This could be seen as a missed opportunity to talk more accurately about these animals, also because the uintathere is scientifically better-understood than many other primitive Eocene mammals.
854
855# '''Entry Time:''' 1955
856# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Film/JourneyToTheBeginningOfTime''
857
858!! Slingshot Horn: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megacerops Megacerops]]'', aka "Brontotherium", "Brontops", and "Titanotherium" **
859
860''Megacerops'' ("big-horned face") is the genus given to a very recognizable Cenozoic pseudo-rhino that has gone under ''many'' names. You might have heard of it as ''Titanotherium'', ''Brontops'', or most famously, ''Brontotherium'' (man, these ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursTrueDinosaurs Bronto]]''s just can't keep their names!). Regardless of name, this behemoth is the most well-known member of its group of mammals, the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Brontotheres]], ("thunder beasts"), also called Titanotheres ("titanic beasts"). Whereas ''Uintatherium'' was not related to any modern hoofed mammals, brontotheres were [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perissodactyla perissodactyls]] (odd-toed ungulates), thus distant relatives of horses, tapirs, and rhinos. The biggest brontotheres, like ''Megacerops'', were almost ''Triceratops''- or elephant-sized (larger than the biggest uintathere), but still smaller than other giant herbivorous mammals of prehistory, like the giant mammoths and the guy we'll see in the next chapter.
861
862Like ''Uintatherium'', ''Megacerops'' was also first discovered during the Bone Wars, this time by Cope, who gave it the name "Brontotherium". Unfortunately, it turned out Leidy had already given it the name ''Megacerops'' a few years prior. ''Megacerops'' had a more rhino-like appearance than ''Uintatherium'', having one single "horn" on its nose, and no tusks. Unlike rhinos, however, the brontotheres' protrusion was solid bone instead of hardened hair, and thus its shape has preserved in fossils. The horn of the North American ''Megacerops'' was forked with round points (rather slingshot-like), while that of its Asian cousin ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embolotherium Embolotherium]]'', "battering-ram beast" (the brontothere in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'') was shovel-like. Both had notably concave heads if seen from the side, with the eyes rather near the top, and also a big hump on their shoulders like a bison. Shattered ribs on ''Megacerops'' specimens tell us they were definitely using their horns to fight each other; ''Embolotherium'''s was more fragile, so it is les certain what they were doing with them. If their horns were covered in hairy skin, naked skin, or in keratin is uncertain. Brontotheres had four digits on the front feet and three on the back, like the ur-horse ''Eohippus'' and modern tapirs (true rhinos always have three toes on each foot). Like dinocerates, we don't know if brontotheres were hairy-bodied like bovines or "naked" like typical rhinos or elephants -- the latter is more likely given how enormous they were. Brontotheres roamed the open woodlands of the northern continents in huge numbers during the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene. Compared with dinocerates, they tend to be portrayed as more active and faster-running in paleo-art, and more overall similar to true rhinos, but still rather unintelligent because of their smaller brains. Note, however, that small brains ''doesn't'' necessarily mean low intelligence; after all, dinosaurs are today well-known to have been intelligent and social creatures despite having even smaller brains than those of the brontotheres and dinocerates.
863
864Brontotheres eventually went extinct perhaps because they weren't able to adapt to the diffusion of the first grasslands, which replaced their former food sources (soft plants; grass is a very tough plant to chew). Like the uintathere, expect to see brontotheres identified as rhinoceroses in popular works. Despite this, it seems that their closest living relatives among odd-toed ungulates were horses and their kin, and not the rhinoceroses! Two brontotheres appear prominently in the first ''WesternAnimation/IceAge'' movie: according to their appearance, they are ''Megacerops'' and ''Embolotherium''. They fall in the RhinoRampage trope, even being identified as rhinos in the film.
865
866# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
867# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
868
869!! The Giant of the Giants: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraceratherium Paracera-Indrico-Baluchi-therium]]'' **
870
871Here is Our Majesty, the "biggest land mammal that ever lived"; though some giant mammoths like the steppe mammoth and the giant Indian "straight-tusked elephant" ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeoloxodon_namadicus Palaeoloxodon namadicus]]'' were heavier, neither were as long or tall as ''Paraceratherium''.
872
873Its size was really ''immense''; it would make modern pachyderms look small in comparison. The paracerathere was 5m up to the shoulders, as tall as a ''Brontosaurus''; reached 7.5m/24ft when holding its head high, 5ft taller than the tallest giraffe; and weighed 15 tons, as much as ''three'' elephants or three ''T. rex''es (some earlier estimates made it even heavier than that: up to 30 tons, as much as a brontosaur!). Contrasting with all this, it had a quite slender, elegant frame: like a muscular giraffe with a long straight neck, a small hornless head, and long, slender limbs with three toes each, like a rhino -- indeed, it was a close rhino relative. Its behavior was probably more giraffe-like than elephant- or rhinoceros-like, browsing the treetops and walking with long steps like a giraffe. In short, it was the mammalian equivalent to a sauropod.
874
875It lived in Asia during the Oligocene, after ''Megacerops'' and ''Uintatherium'', and was only the biggest member of a whole group of extinct rhino relatives: the hyracodontids, most of which were horse-sized and more similar to horses than to rhinoceroses. Our record-holder is also a prime example of IHaveManyNames among prehistoric critters: now called ''Paraceratherium'' ("near-horned beast"), you might have heard of it as ''Indricotherium'' ("Indrik's beast"; Indrik is the king of all animals in Russian folklore) or ''Baluchitherium'' ("Balochistan beast"; Balochistan is a region of Asia straddling Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran). There are still some scientists that believe they are three distinct yet similar genera of animals, like the equally controversial ''Brontosaurus'' and ''Apatosaurus'' case.
876
877Some think these critters went extinct because they got ''too'' large, and when their habitat dried out, they were unable to find sufficient food; but this is only a supposition. It's also speculated that they're at or near the upper limit for how big a land mammal can get; no evidence of a land mammal larger than 20-30 tons has ever been found. There's much speculation as to ''why'' this would be the upper limit, though the very long gestation periods[[note]]a modern elephant's pregnancy lasts almost 2 years, and it's believed that both ''Paraceratherium'' and the largest of the mammoths probably took even longer to give birth[[/note]] are suspected to be a major factor. This results in low birth rates that make it more difficult for huge mammals to recover from any major population loss. Anyway, like ''Megacerops'' and ''Uintatherium'', the indrico/paracera/baluchithere was well adapted to its environment, though its lineage was relatively short-lived compared the true horned rhinoceroses that have reached our days with five species.
878
879A young "indricothere" is the main character of the third episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''. To indirectly illustrate how big the adults of its species are, the beginning of the episode shows its mother defending it just after it's born against a pack of ''Hyaenodon''s (see below), the latter being described as "as big as rhinos" but still appearing tiny next to the adult indricothere. Indricotheres also appear huge confronted with the neighboring chalicotheres and entelodonts, even though both mammals were taller than a human and weighing more than one metric ton; at the end of the episode, the teenage indricothere is bigger than an ''adult'' entelodont, and easily chases it away from the scrubs nearby.
880
881# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
882# '''TropeMaker:''' Its size
883
884!! Shovels and Spears: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platybelodon Platybelodon]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anancus Anancus]]'' *
885
886Let's return to extinct elephant relatives: there were A LOT of them in prehistory, not just mammoths and mastodons. Many of them were even cooler-looking than those two, though all (except the most primitive, such as ''Moeritherium'' below) shared a similar shape to a modern elephant, with long pillar-like limbs, short feet with round nails, short necks, small tails, and compact bodies. It was their mouths and teeth that were ''very'' different.
887
888The most infamous is doubtlessly ''Platybelodon'', a staple of clickbait articles and videos on prehistoric life. Living across Africa and Asia during the Middle Miocene, it resembled a cross between an elephant and a hippo, with its huge mouth opening and shovel-like lower jaws; a pair of tusks were visible ''both'' in the upper jaw ''and'' in the lower. A similar beast was the widespread Miocene-Pliocene genus ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gomphotherium Gomphotherium]]'', which had longer and pointier lower tusks compared to ''Platybelodon'', earning it comparisons to the ''mûmakil'' from ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''. Whereas ''Gomphotherium'' was the namesake of the gomphotheres, ''Platybelodon'', once thought to be closely related, was one of the ambelodonts, or "shovel-tuskers", for their short, spade-like lower tusks. One Late Miocene North American gomphothere, ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnathabelodon Gnathabelodon]]'', lacked the lower tusks entirely, but kept the shovel-shaped jaws, earning it the nickname, the "spoon-billed mastodon". Even the primitive elephantid (thus in the same group as mammoths and modern elephants) ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stegotetrabelodon Stegotetrabelodon]]'' widespread in the Old World during the Late Miocene/Early Pliocene, had very long and pointy lower tusks, literally resembling a four-tusked elephant. The similarly aged and distributed ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primelephas Primelephas]]'', the direct ancestor of mammoths and modern elephants, had much smaller lower tusks. Many ancestral proboscideans, like ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeomastodon Palaeomastodon]]'' and ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phiomia Phiomia]]'' (both Early Oligocene Africa), also had similar arrangements; the latter lacking lower tusks entirely.
889
890Many of these animals are often shown with bizarre ''flat'' trunks to accommodate the shape of the lower jaw, but this is unproven -- trunks have no bones, so they don't fossilize. However, studies suggest ''Platybelodon'' and the rest all had normal cylindrical elephant-like trunks instead, as the upper tusks show signs of wear that complement a flexible modern-styled trunk. As for the lower tusks, it was once believed they used them to scoop up water plants, but signs of wear on them indicate they were more likely being used to dig up ground-level vegetation like a literal shovel. Many of these animals are popularly called "mastodons", but none were closely related to the American mastodon.
891
892Other "mastodons" looked more like modern elephants, lacking the lower tusks of the older kin. But even they would appear unusual to modern eyes: the Pliocene Old-World genus ''Anancus'', had extraordinarily long and straight tusks that jutted out forward like spears. Likewise, ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stegodon Stegodon]]'', had huge parallel tusks so close to each other that illustrations show the animal as obligated to keep its trunks ''to the side'' of both tusks! Both of these animals were among the closest relatives of modern elephants and mammoths, and the latter was widespread in Asia during the Ice Age. Also living in the Ice Age were the last of the gomphotheres, ''Cuvieronius'' and ''Notiomastodon'', both of which lost the lower tusks and elongated jaws of their older kin. But while they were more "normal"-looking than previous gomphotheres, they both managed to reach South America -- something no other proboscidean had achieved.
893
894#'''Entry Time:''' undetermined
895#'''TropeMaker:''' Their jaws and tusks
896
897!! Forked Jaw: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinotherium Deinotherium]]'' *
898
899A more primitive proboscidean lineage were the deinotheres, whose namesake is their most famous member: ''Deinotherium'' ("terrible beast"). Unlike ''Platybelodon'', ''Deinotherium'' had only two tusks like modern pachyderms.. only they grew from the ''lower'' jaw like a two-pronged fork, and were curved downward. The function of these tusks is still uncertain: possibly stripping the bark from trees, or fighting against individuals of the same species.
900
901Several species of ''Deinotherium'' are known across the Old World from the Miocene to the Early Pleistocene, just before the Ice Age, but the two most notable are ''D. giganteum'' and ''D. bozasi''. ''D. bozasi'' existed in Africa alongside the first humans and was the very last ''Deinotherium'' species before they went extinct. ''D. giganteum'', on the other hand, roamed Miocene and Pliocene Europe, and was the largest of its kind, as big as the aforementioned giant mammoths (''D. bozasi'' was no bigger than a modern Asian elephant). As a whole however, ''Deinotherium'' had longer limbs than modern elephants and was taller at the shoulders than at the hips, much like a giraffe. Its tail was small, and apart from the head, ''Deinotherium'' looked like modern elephants despite their extreme primitiveness among proboscideans -- a great case of convergent evolution with the other giant proboscideans.
902
903Due to how primitive ''Deinotherium'' was (to the point that some old studies didn't even consider it a true proboscidean!), we don't know if deinotheres shared a lot of the behaviors elephants and mammoths have, like going through musth or trumpeting. Since they were part of the same family as modern elephants, it's highly probable that mammoths did trumpet, and studies have proven they underwent musth too. We also don't know how ''Deinotherium'''s ears or trunk were shaped; some have suggested it had an extremely short, stubby trunk, but that has raised the question of how it would have been able to drink. Similarly, we don't know how much hair extinct proboscideans had on their bodies (if any) -- given how big the biggest ones were, hairlessness seems likely.
904
905#'''Entry Time:''' 1864
906#'''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/JourneyToTheCenterOfTheEarth''
907
908!! A Dinosaur of a Whale: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilosaurus Basilosaurus]]'' **
909
910The first whales evolved early in the Mammal Age, in the Eocene, from terrestrial ancestors related to modern even-toed hoofed mammals (especially hippopotamuses). Most early cetaceans were medium-sized, but not ''Basilosaurus cetoides'' ("whale-like king lizard"). This one reached the length of a modern baleen whale or sperm whale: up to 20m/60ft, longer than most stock marine reptiles -- though still much shorter than a blue whale. In spite of its length, the basilosaur weighed "only" 20 tons, less than shorter modern whales like the 30-ton humpback: this is because it was much slenderer, to the point that it's sometimes described as "eel-like". But wait, why does its name end in [[{{Whateversaurus}} -saurus?!?]] Well, when first discovered by American paleontologist Richard Harlan, its elongated shape was misidentified as a mosasaur-like reptile: hence its strange-sounding name. There was an attempt to rename it ''Zeuglodon'' ("yoke tooth") to fix the error, but nomenclature rules prevented that.
911
912Its first remains were discovered in North America in the 19th century, and more were found in the 20th century in Egypt, which at the time ''Basilosaurus'' lived was mainly occupied by a shallow sea. For a long time, the basilosaur was one of the few early cetaceans known by science. Other early whales, like ''Pakicetus'' and ''Ambulocetus'' (see below), were discovered only during or after TheEighties, along with more modern whales like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Odobenocetops]]'' and ''Livyatan melvillei'' (see below). In ''Basilosaurus''' time, all whales were still active hunters, like modern orcas and sperm whales, but still with differentiated teeth: the anterior ones pointed, the posterior serrated, an old legacy that betrays their origins from land mammals.
913
914''Basilosaurus'' was at the centre of a peculiar hoax in the 1840s by the notorious huckster Albert Koch. Koch had come into possession of a large number of ''Basilosaurus'' fossils, the remains of at least six different individuals, which he assembled into a 114ft-long amalgam he dubbed "Hydrarchos harlani" ("Harlan's Water King"). Koch presented his creature as a real-life SeaSerpent and the inspiration for the [[Literature/TheBible biblical]] [[KrakenAndLeviathan Leviathan]], until after naturalist Jeffries Wyman correctly identified it as the hodgepodge of whale bones it was. Undeterred, Koch toured across Europe and USA with his "Hydrarchos", eventually selling it off to Kaiser Wilhelm IV of Germany. Koch's "Hydrarchos" was destroyed during [=WW2=] by Allied air raids on Berlin; a second "Hydrarchos" he made after selling off his first one was lost in the Great Chicago Fire. Koch had previously pulled off a similar hoax with his 32ft-long mastodon amalgamation "Missourium", even twisting the tusks to point upwards and make it look scarier.
915
916''Basilosaurus'', with its size, was likely the top predator of its oceans, potentially preying on every other creature in its world -- fossils of its smaller relative ''Dorudon'' have been found with bite marks attributed to it. However, ''Basilosaurus'' may have been a less able swimmer than modern cetaceans because of its primitiveness, maybe more similar in swimming style to a seal than to a modern whale. It also lacked adaptations for deep diving, forcing it stay near the surface of in shallow water. Since soft remains have not been preserved, we don't know if the basilosaur's tail fluke was already identical to modern whales/dolphins, or smaller and/or shaped differently, nor if it had a dorsal fin. Unlike modern whales, it retained the tiny remnants of its hindlegs, which were maybe used to lock mating pairs' bodies together).
917
918''Basilosaurus'' has been a recent hit in documentary media since the 1990s and especially the 2000s; see ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' and ''Series/SeaMonsters'' for example. However, it hasn't received the same amount of attention in broader popular culture as other giant sea critters of the past, like ''[[StockNessMonster Elasmosaurus]]'', Megalodon, and ''[[Film/JurassicWorld Mosasaurus]]''. Its serpentine form however has been of great interest to cryptozoologists, with many proposing modern sea serpent sightings to be of surviving ''Basilosaurus'' or its descendants.
919
920# '''Entry Time:''' 2001
921# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''
922
923!! Mysterious Giant Skull: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrewsarchus Andrewsarchus]]'' *
924
925''Andrewsarchus'' means "Andrews' ruler" and is quite possibly the most enigmatic fossil mammal known. As its complete name suggests (''Andrewsarchus mongoliensis'') it was discovered [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin in Mongolia]] during the same American expedition led by Roy Chapman Andrews ([[NamedAfterSomebodyFamous hence the name]]) in which ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Velociraptor]]'' was first found.
926
927Living during the Middle Eocene, only a single skull is known from this beast -- and what a skull it is! At about 1m/3ft long and vaguely wolf-like in form, the sheer size of ''Andrewsarchus''' head has classically led to it being called the largest carnivorous land mammal ever. Unfortunately, because its known from the skull and nothing else, there isn't any hard proof of that; it might have been omnivorous instead, and of course its overall size can only be guesstimated. It is often depicted as a scavenger of large herbivores' carcasses, but has also been shown as an active hunter.
928
929''Andrewsarchus'' was traditionally considered to be one of the mesonychians, a group of primitive ungulate relatives that evolved to be ''predators'' and were once considered the ancestors of whales. As a result, its typically shown to be a giant, wolf-like beast with primitive hooves, similar to the much smaller but scientifically better-known mesonychian archetype ''Mesonyx'' (we'll get to that guy later). However, later studies indicate that it might have actually been a close relative of the entelodonts (again, see later), thus placing it within the modern group of even-toed ungulates. However, until more fossils of this animal are found, any phylogenetic placement will only remain tentative.
930
931''Andrewsarchus'' memorably appeared in its traditional mesonychian form in the ''Basilosaurus''-centric episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''. However, everything about its appearance in that show, from its size to its behavior to its overall body shape are entirely speculative and without strong fossil evidence. The hype and WildMassGuessing surrounding ''Andrewsarchus'' might remind one of the stories behind the dinosaurs ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Deinocheirus]]'' and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Therizinosaurus]]'' -- both also from Mongolia and long touted as unknowable giant killers until some incredible fossils showed them to be far weirder than what anyone could have expected. Let's hope the same happens with ''Andrewsarchus'' sooner or later.
932
933# '''Entry Time:''' 2001
934# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''
935
936!! Elephant or Pig?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moeritherium Moeritherium]]'' *
937
938How did elephants look when they were just starting to evolve? Not really like pachyderms. The most classic ur-elephant is ''Moeritherium'', found in Egypt in the Late Eocene. It's been called "the first elephant", but some proboscideans were even more basal: ex. the fox-sized ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eritherium Eritherium]]'' is the most ancient proboscidean currently known, from Paleocene Morocco.
939
940''Moeritherium'' (" beast from Lake Moeris") was no bigger than a large pig and had four short tusks, a pair in the upper jaws and another in the lower ones. It had also hippo- or tapir-like limbs and possibly pig-like or tapir-like snout, and was definitively more like a tapir than an elephant in appearance. It also multiple cheek-teeth in its jaws like a typical mammal, unlike the single giant cheek-tooth for each half-jaw that modern elephants and mammoths have. Living in coastal swamps and estuarine environments, the moerithere is often thought to have been an amphibious animal a bit like a modern hippopotamus or a tapir, but its actual lifestyle is still unknown. As shown in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', it lived alongside the giant early whale ''Basilosaurus'', with the latter even making a failed predation attempt on it.
941
942Like the ur-horse ''Eohippus'', ''Moeritherium'' has often been shown in textbooks as the start of the evolutionary trip of its group, the proboscideans, passing through deinotheres, mastodonts, gomphotheres, stegodonts, etc. and ending with modern elephants and mammoths (although they do not form a straight line, instead being a radiation of multiple lineages). Its look tends to vary a bit in classic paleo-art: some depict ''Moeritherium'' as a sort of boar-thing with dense hair, while others show it naked-skinned and more looking like a hippopotamus, and usually but not always with an elephant-like short trunk and the four short tusks.
943
944# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
945# '''TropeMaker:''' Textbooks portraying elephant evolution
946
947!! An Incredible Headgear: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsinoitherium Arsinoitherium]]'' *
948
949As previously seen with ''Uintatherium'' and ''Megacerops'', the early part of the Cenozoic produced a lot of pseudo-rhinos. Perhaps the most peculiar, and at the same time one of the most striking-looking, was ''Arsinoitherium''.
950
951''Arsinoitherium'' means "Arsinoe's beast": Arsinoe was an {{Ancient Egypt}}ian queen. It is sometimes misspelled "Arsinotherium" without the "i" in the middle because so it's [[TheUnpronounceable easier to pronounce]]. ''Arsinoitherium'' lived in Africa during the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene, after ''Uintatherium'' but contemporaneous with the North American brontotheres, and was of similar size and body shape to the former. Its classification has long been an enigma, but today, it is considered one of the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrotheria afrotheres]], making it a cousin of elephants, manatees, hyraxes, and the aardvark. Specifically, it belongs to extinct subgroup known as the embrithopods, being the last and largest of this poorly-known lineage.
952
953''Arsinoitherium'''s most visible peculiarity is by far its quadruple horns -- an enormous pair above the nose and a second tiny knob-like pair over the eyes (the latter resembling the ossicones of a giraffe). Composed of solid bone and possessed by both males and females, they were most likely used for defense; we don't know if they were covered in keratin like with cattle or in skin like with giraffes. A lesser-known arsinoitherian peculiarity is its teeth: they were more numerous than in most four-legged mammals (though similar to cetaceans), and not clearly differentiated into incisors, canines, and molars. An inhabitant of forests and swamps, its fossils have been recovered from the same ancient coastal mangroves that produced elephant-ancestors like ''Moeritherium''. This, combined with its short robust legs ending with "hooflets", has led some to speculate it was an amphibious animal, making it like a cross between a rhino and a hippo.
954
955''Arsinoitherium'' was portrayed in the ''Franchise/WalkingWith'' spinoff ''Series/SeaMonsters'', and like ''Moeritherium'', it showed up in the episodes focused on the predatory whale ''Basilosaurus''. In the show, ''Arsinoitherium'' is shown with a short trunk like a tapir, and thus looking simply like a bigger, horned version of ''Moeritherium''. While the trunk helped to emphasize to viewers that it was a cousin of elephants, it is unfortunately improbable, as the shape of its skull's nasal openings lack any points of attachment for a trunk, even a small one. We also don't know if it was naked or hairy, although its size and the warm climate it inhabited point to the former.
956
957# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
958# '''TropeMaker:''' Its horns
959
960!! Gorilla-Horses or Sloth-Bears?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalicotherium Chalicotherium]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moropus Moropus]]'' *
961
962The chalicotheres (sometimes known as their German name, "krallentier") are typically regarded as some of the best examples of a MixAndMatchCritter among prehistoric mammals. They all had the head of a horse (but without the strong incisors), the body shape of a gorilla, and bear-like forelimbs with hooked claws for pulling down branches and feeding on the tasty leaves. Some nickname them [[MixAndMatchCritter "gorilla-horses" or "sloth-horses"]], comparing them with therizinosaur dinosaurs, ground sloths, large apes, or even panda bears.
963
964Like sloths, chalicotheres probably weren't especially fast runners compared to other ungulates due to their frame (yes, they were ungulates!), with short hindlegs and longer forelegs (the latter being up to ''twice'' the length of the former). Nonetheless, they were powerful and muscular animals (the biggest were 3m tall and weighed about two tons) and arguably not an easy target for even the biggest mammalian predators. We don't know how long/dense their hair was, or if they had it at all, as with almost all prehistoric mammals -- except those found frozen in ice.
965
966A very successful group of hoofed mammals, chalicotheres, despite their un-ungulate-like appearance, were perissodactyls or odd-toed ungulates, distantly related to horses, rhinos and tapirs (like the aforementioned brontotheres). Their body plan however was quite heavily modified from the original ungulate shape -- more so than any other ungulate except for obviously the cetaceans, which descend directly from land artiodactyls or even-toed ungulates -- with claws instead of hooves. The two most well-known chalicotheres are the Early Miocene North American ''Moropus'' and the Late Miocene Asian namesake ''Chalicotherium''. Together, they represent the two main lineages of chalicotheres -- the chalicotheriines and the schizotheriines. ''Moropus'' (lit. "silly foot" because its nails had a split in the middle) was a schizotheriine, and as such, had a more horse-like appearance, walking on its claws in the same way normal ungulates do with their hooves. ''Chalicotherium'', as a chalicotheriine, ''knuckle-walked'' like a gorilla to protect its claws against damage, just like modern giant anteaters do.
967
968Chalicotheres roamed for a long time in Asia, Europe, Africa, and North America, lasting from the Eocene to the Pleistocene. The last species, the chalicotheriines ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesperotherium Hesperotherium]]'' and ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestoritherium Nestoritherium]]'', lived in the forests of China and Southeast Asia during the Ice Age, while the last schizotheriine, ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancylotherium Ancylotherium]]'' (shown in ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''), existed just before the Ice Age in Africa, alongside the first humans. However, [[WildMassGuessing some think]] the infamous "Nandi bear" [[OurCryptidsAreMoreMysterious cryptid]] that allegedly lives in modern African rainforests is a surviving chalicothere.
969
970An unnamed chalicothere (based on ''Chalicotherium'' itself) is portrayed in the third episode of ''WWB'' as a rather torpid animal with a very giant panda-like face, that makes it look more harmless than other, more badass popular representations of chalicotheres. Here, it mainly appears as fodder for other large mammals of the time -- the predatory ''Hyaenodon'' and the scavenging entelodonts, to be precise -- while being mostly overshadowed by the colossal ''Paraceratherium''. ''Moropus'', on the other hand, is one of the star animals of the Nigel Marven-narrated documentary ''Forgotten Bloodlines: Agate Springs'', alongside the next animal on this list, the giant entelodont ''Daeodon''.
971
972# '''Entry Time:''' 2001
973# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts''
974
975!! Giant Hippo-Boar?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daeodon Daeodon]]'' *
976
977We jump from odd-toed ungulates to even-toed ungulates, and this time with another unusual, iconic group, and very different-looking of extinct hoofed mammals that has achieved some popularity: the entelodonts, popularly nicknamed [[FullBoarAction "hell pigs" or "terminator pigs"]].
978
979Living in Europe, Asia, and North America from the Late Eocene to the Early Miocene, entelodonts ("complete teeth"; formerly called the "elotheres") had the same overall body plan as pigs but usually with a hump on their shoulders like bison. They were once thought to be closely related to pigs, but are now understood to be closer to hippos (incidentally, also thought to be pig cousins) and whales. The biggest were buffalo-sized, and the bony knobs on their massive heads and jaws made them resemble giant warthogs. But their tusks were straight like those of peccaries, much smaller than a warthog's or a babirusa's, and didn't protrude out of the mouth. The exact shape of their snout is unknown, but it's unlikely that they had pig-like noses as shown in classic paleo-art, especially given their new classification as hippo relatives.
980
981The food habits of these critters are almost certainly like those of pigs. Their huge teeth display wear patterns consistent with omnivorous mammals: their strong jaws were able to crush the bones of corpses to reach the softer marrow inside, and their vegetarian options likely included leaves, nuts, fruits, and branches. And while certainly capable of scavenging by driving away small predators from their kill, bite marks on herbivores that shared their environment (including early camels, rhinos, and horses) suggest the possibility of active predation being part of their lifestyle. One remarkable find from Early Oligocene North America preserves multiple partially eaten remains belonging to the early camel ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poebrotherium Poebrotherium]]'' stashed in a burrow and covered in bite marks attributable to the entelodont ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeotherium Archaeotherium]]''. Entelodonts' cheek teeth were flat like those of a horse or a bovine, and their incisors were small, just like modern pigs, peccaries, tapirs, and hippos. The bony knobs on their heads may have protected them against rivals during fights, as scars on the skulls of some specimens indicate they engaged in some brutal matches. They probably could open their mouths much wider than boars, but not to the same degree as hippos, which can open their mouth almost 180 degrees!
982
983''Daeodon'' ("dreadful tooth"; also called ''Dinohyus'', "terrible pig") was last of the entelodonts, as well as the largest and historically the most-often depicted entelodont, living alongside the chalicothere ''Moropus'' in Early Miocene North America (featured in ''Forgotten Bloodlines: Agate Springs'', where ''Daeodon'' is one of the focus animals alongside ''Moropus''). Daedon-like creatures appear in ''Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'', and are accurately portrayed for a fantasy show. They are bigger than humans, have a boar-like even-toed ungulate appearance, hooves, and even the bony knobs entelodontids are known for. Yet in universe, they are referred as wolves and are supposed to be related to the canid wargs. Other notable species include the previous mentioned ''Archaeotherium'' ("ancient beast") of Late Eocene-Early Oligocene North America and the group's namesake, ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entelodon Entelodon]]'' of Late Oligocene Asia. The former was one of the smallest entelodonts, the size of a modern boar; the latter was more similar in size to ''Daeodon''.
984
985''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' depicts showed an unnamed Asian entelodont (identified as ''Entelodon'' in some sources, but likely its even bigger relative, ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraentelodon Paraentelodon]]'') living alongside ''Paraceratherium''. However, the opening of its mouth is exaggerated and its cheeks and lips are reduced to make it seem uglier and scarier -- emphasized further by its behavior and the narration characterizing it as a vicious brute. Additionally, the entelodonts also appear almost naked like a warthog, but we don't know if entelodonts were like this or if they had fur. Extinct true pigs include the Late Miocene "unicorn-pig" ''Kubanochoerus'' and the giant Ice Age warthog ''Metridiochoerus'', but see UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals for these.
986
987# '''Entry Time:''' Late 1980s
988# '''TropeMaker:''' ''WesternAnimation/DinoRiders'' (identified as "giant warthogs")
989
990!! Spectacular Heads: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sivatherium Sivatherium]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetoceras Synthetoceras]]'' *
991
992These mammals were also artiodactyls, but similar to deer or moose in shape. ''Sivatherium giganteum'' was one of the biggest ruminants ever; it was heavier than an average bison, and 2.5m tall at the shoulder -- as massive as a giraffe, though less tall. Its name means "[[Myth/HinduMythology Shiva's]] giant beast".
993
994''Sivatherium'' was indeed related to giraffes, but little resembled them. Stocky and short-necked, it looked more like a huge okapi, except with "antlers" quite similar to a moose's; these "antlers" were true ''ossicones'' like those of a living giraffe, firmly attached to the skull as seen in the ''Sivatherium's'' surviving relatives. Being a ruminant, it arguably "chewed its cud" like a cow or a giraffe in life. Though it cannot be proven because soft tissues cannot be preserved for so long, it is assumed to have a had the same prehensile tongue as its living relatives. ''Sivatherium'' first appeared in the Pliocene and survived into the Ice Age, living in both India and Africa (the African ones were initially identified as its own animal ''Libytherium''); some think it's represented in ancient rock paintings in the Sahara and India, and alleged depictions have even been recovered from Ancient Sumeria. Many other extinct giraffe-relatives existed in the Cenozoic across Europe, Africa, and Asia: together, the form the family Giraffidae, of which only two members have survived to today: the proper giraffe and the okapi, both exclusive to Africa, where the family first evolved before spreading into Europe and Asia. Interestingly, most of them look more like the okapi, with the giraffe being a much more specialized member of the group -- not all "oddball" members of a group of animals are prehistoric! Contrary to popular belief, the giraffids are not distinguished by their ossicones, which have been found in extinct non-giraffid mammals, but by their ''teeth''; giraffids are the only animals to possess bilobed canines, which are essentially two teeth with a single root. Even the okapi was identified as a giraffid by these teeth when physical specimens were finally found; the people searching for it were expecting first a forest zebra, then an unidentified antelope before the teeth and their [[ThereIsAnother implication]] took them by surprise.
995
996''Synthetoceras tricornatum'' ("three-horned fused horn") has traditionally been more enigmatic. From Late Miocene North America, it resembled in shape a common deer or antelope, but had indeed ''three'' horns placed on the head surprisingly similarly to a ''Triceratops'', although the nasal horn was long and Y-shaped like that of ''Megacerops'', albeit with pointed ends like a kitchen fork. Its size was more normal, like a big modern antelope. It was arguably a faster runner than the giant sivathere, probably able to jump easily like a deer or a wildebeest.
997Despite all this, this "mammalian ''Triceratops''" was part of a now-extinct group called the protoceratids: no one is sure what this unique North American family of artiodactyls is related to, but they've been suggested to be cousins of either the camels or the chevrotains/mouse-deer. Either way, since camels and mouse-deer both ruminate like true ruminants (cattle, giraffes, deer, sheep, and antelopes), ''Synthetoceras'' almost certainly did the same. Another frequently depicted protoceratid is the Early Miocene ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syndyoceras Syndyoceras cooki]]'', which had similar brow horns but a smaller V-shaped pair on the snout. The last protoceratids vanished in the Early Pliocene, well before the Ice Age. As with the above-mentioned ''Sivatherium'', ''Synthetoceras'' may be wrongly identified as a true deer or antelope in media -- although like them, only male protoceratids had horns.
998
999In older depictions, ''Sivatherium'' was more moose-looking than in the modern ones, in which it's often painted with the same colors of a modern giraffe or a modern okapi. ''Synthetoceras'', on the other hand, can be either represented as deer-like or antelope-like according to the artist. But unlike deer, the "syntheto" had perennially-attached horns on its head, more like an antelope. The prominences of both ''Sivatherium'' and ''Synthetoceras'' were probably covered in skin, like the ossicones of a giraffe (deer antlers are ''naked bone'' covered by hairy skin only at the start of their periodic growth, while the horns of antelopes are bony cores covered in keratin).
1000
1001# '''Entry Time''': Undetermined
1002# '''TropeMaker''': Their head-prominences
1003
1004!! Early Hooves: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coryphodon Coryphodon]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenacodus Phenacodus]]'' *
1005
1006Among the earliest mammals traditionally classified among the "ungulates", these two have been among the relatively most common in popular paleo-media.
1007
1008''Coryphodon'' was one of the biggest mammals of the Early Eocene, the size of a large cow. It lived roughly alongside the famous bird ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Gastornis]]'', as well as ''Eohippus'' and ''Uintatherium'', in North America. It was very similar to a hornless uintathere, with small tusk-like canines like the latter, and is classically compared with a hippo. Because of this, ''Coryphodon'' was once considered an early ungulate-relative; in actuality, it was a member of the extinct pantodonts, an extremely basal Paleocene-Eocene group composed of the first large, plant-eating land mammals, with ''Coryphodon'' being one of the biggest members. Though smaller than other later herbivorous mammals, an adult coryphodont probably feared no predators except for perhaps large crocodilians. Classic portraits often show the coryphodont as amphibious like a hippopotamus, but it could have been more terrestrial. It was often believed slow and had actually a very small brain, but again, this doesn't mean it was harmless and/or witless.
1009
1010''Phenacodus'' was much smaller (about the size of the better-known ''Eohippus''), and also lived in the Early Eocene. It was very generic, with dentition suited for various foods (probably was a mainly-herbivorous omnivore), and with an archaic long tail typical of the earliest "hoofed mammals". It was formerly considered part of a group of primitive ungulates known as "condylarths", but this order has been disbanded; ''Phenacodus'' is now thought to have been a relative of the perissodactyls or even a true primitive member of this group. When the giant bird 'Gastornis''/"Diaryma" was believed to have been the superpredator of the Early Eocene, ''Phenacodus'' was considered one of its possible prey, just like ''Eohippus''.
1011
1012# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
1013# '''TropeMaker:''' Media portraying the early Mammal Age
1014
1015!! Meat-Eaters, but not Carnivores: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyaenodon Hyaenodon]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarkastodon Sarkastodon]]'' *
1016
1017Although "carnivore" literally and commonly just means "meat-eater", in cladistics, it refers to members of the order Carnivora (the less ambiguous term for members of this group is "carnivoran"). The vast majority of large carnivorous land mammals are carnivorans -- bears, dogs, cats, hyenas, weasels, seals, etc. -- but there have been exceptions: not counting marsupials like the pseudo-feline ''Thylacoleo'', there were also the creodonts, composed of the hyaenodontids and the oxyaenids.
1018
1019Creodonts (meaning "meat tooth") were related to true carnivorans, but were more primitive. They had smaller brains (like most early mammals), larger skulls, and different cheek teeth than true carnivorans; they nonetheless often had powerful jaws with a stronger bite than modern carnivores. They thrived across Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America during the first half of the Cenozoic, finally vanishing in the Late Miocene from their last strongholds in Africa and India. It is widely believed they were outcompeted by true carnivorans.
1020
1021''Hyaenodon'' (often misspelled "Hyaenadon", "Hyenodon", or "Hyenadon"), the most iconic and portrayed creodont in media, has a name that is not mere coincidence: despite being more similar in shape to a short-limbed, long-tailed, big-headed wolf, it had the typical crushing jaws/teeth of a hyena -- hence the name, "hyena tooth". Scientists once thought the hyaenodont was a scavenger because of this, but since RealLife spotted hyenas are more often active hunters, contrary to popular belief, the bone-crushing jaws of their ancient namesake don't rule out more predatory behavior. Over ''30'' species of ''Hyaenodon'' existed, ranging from the size of a weasel to the size of a bull and living across Eurasia and North America from the Middle Eocene to the Early Miocene.
1022
1023The third episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' features the biggest ''Hyaenodon'', the Asian ''H. gigas'', exaggerated to the size of a rhino and as the main predator of the story, capable of killing with extreme ease two-ton chalicotheres, and digesting [[ExtremeOmnivore even their teeth]] -- based on modern hyenas, which can dissolve bones in their stomachs. The last claim is mere speculation: note that most modern meat-eating mammals can't digest bones, much less enamel-covered teeth. It may also have been shown as more agile than it was in RealLife, since a large specimen of ''Hyaenodon'' was arguably rather slow-moving compared with modern wolves, cats, or hyenas, not only being heavier but also having shorter feet. The ''Hyaenodon'' of ''WWB'' is also given [[AllAnimalsAreDogs a lot of dog/wolf-like behaviors]] even growling in the same manner as an AngryGuardDog when approaching the young indricothere in a pack -- again, there's no proof of wolf-like pack behavior or even growling.
1024
1025Note also that other creodonts were even bigger than the biggest hyaenodont, ex. the half-ton ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals Megistotherium]]'' ("huge beast"), which hunted elephants on the plains of Early Miocene Africa (proven by the presence of its bite marks on their bones). The older ''Sarkastodon'' (also meaning "meat-tooth", like creodont does) lived in Asia during the Middle Eocene and was bigger than both ''Hyaenodon gigas'' and ''Megistotherium'' at nearly one ton. Like the hyaenodont, we don't know much of its lifestyle apart from the fact that it was specialized for meat-eating; it likely hunted early rhinos and dinocerates by ambush as it would not have been very fast. However, there is the possibility, however, that like many modern carnivorans (such as bears, raccoons, and skunks), these giant creodonts were not pure flesh-eaters but omnivores instead.
1026
1027# '''Entry Time:''' 2001 (''Hyaenodon''); 2010s ''Sarkastodon''
1028# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' (''Hyaenodon''); ''VideoGame/JurassicWorldTheGame'' (''Sarkastodon'')
1029
1030!! Cat and Dog Mimics: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eusmilus Eusmilus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphicyon Amphicyon]]'' *
1031
1032Other extinct mammals were true carnivorans: all carnivorans can be divided into two groups -- the caniforms (dogs, bears, seals, raccoons, weasels, etc.) and the feliforms (cats, hyenas, mongooses, etc.). And while all many extinct carnivorans fall into these lineages, many deceptively looked like members of the modern families.
1033
1034''Eusmilus'' ("true saber"), for example, was an almost-perfect copy of a saber-toothed cat in shape, size, and anatomy. However, it actually belonged to a distinct lineage of feliforms called the nimravids, or "false sabertooths", which also included ''Nimravus'', ''Dinictis'', and its possible synonym ''Hoplophoneus''. ''Eusmilus'' lived earlier than the true sabertooths during the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene in North America, sharing its environment with the three other nimravids mentioned prior, as well as brontotheres, entelodonts, creodonts, and primitive horses, camels, rhinos, dogs, and rabbits. Like all nimravids, ''Eusmilus'' had shorter legs and tails than real cats and walked on the soles of its feet like a bear instead of on its toes like a cat. ''Eusmilus'' also had particularly long sabers, almost as long as ''Smilodon'''s and longer than most other nimravids and most other true saber-toothed cats. The behavior and predation style of nimravids are uncertain; some say they were less intelligent than true cats, but that's only a guess, obviously. Nimravids were widespread across Europe, Asia, and North America from the Middle Eocene to the Late Miocene, likely going extinct as a result of grasslands replacing its wooded habitat and competition with modern cats.
1035
1036''Amphicyon'' means "half-dog", an apt term because it was related to canines but was not one of them -- it's the namesake of its own family of caniform carnivores, the amphicyonids, or "bear-dogs". ''Amphicyon'' was rather in the middle between [[MixAndMatchCritter a long-tailed wolf and a slender bear]], possessing the flat-footed, or plantigrade, posture of the latter (dogs walk on their toes, in a digitigrade posture). Over two dozen species of ''Amphicyon'' are known across Miocene Europe, Asia, and North America, but the most infamous is the massive ''A. ingens'', the apex predator of Middle Miocene North America. Bear-dogs were widespread across the three abovementioned continents and Africa from the Middle Eocene to Late Miocene, but the cause of their extinction is currently unknown. They should not be confused with [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemicyoninae the "dog-bears", or hemicyonines]], a Miocene subfamily of bears that evolved towards being fast-running pursuit predators.
1037
1038# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
1039# '''TropeMaker:''' Popular media about Cenozoic animals
1040
1041!! Straight from the Pit: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptictidium Leptictidium]]'', ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurotamandua Eurotamandua]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eomanis Eomanis]]'' *
1042''Leptictidium'' is probably the most famous of the mammals preserved in [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messel_pit the Messel Pit of Germany]], which during the Middle Eocene was a tropical rainforest surrounding an anoxic lake. While many are familiar creatures, including early pangolins, hedgehogs, bats, horses, rhinos, rodents, marsupials, and primates, ''Leptictidium'' was the most peculiar of them all. About the size of a cat, it looked like a small kangaroo or jerboa, but the modern animal that most resembled it is maybe the sengi, or elephant shrew, of Africa. However, ''Leptictidium'' was not related to any modern mammalian group; formerly considered an "insectivoran" (the group containing hedgehogs, moles or shrews), it is today placed in the eponymous leptictids, a group of extremely primitive placental-relatives that first appeared when the nonbird dinosaurs were still ruling the Earth. ''Lepticitidium'' is the largest of this group, and its kin would last until the Oligocene.
1043
1044Arguably because of its MixAndMatchCritter look, ''Leptictidium'' was chosen as the main character of the first episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', set in Eocene Germany. However we don't know if it actually hopped like a kangaroo like in ''WWB'' or ran like a miniature dinosaur; some portrayals prefer the first choice, others the second. Additionally, we don't know if it had a tiny trunk, like seen in the show. Anyway, judging from its teeth, it was arguably a predator of insects or small vertebrates.
1045
1046The Messel Pit has produced countless exquisite fossils -- whole skeletons complete the fur, feathers and, "skin shadows" (such as the wing membranes of early bats); not to mention ants the size of hummingbirds, turtles caught in the act of mating, thousands of fish and insects (some still with color!), over 30 distinct plant species (including prehistoric grapes and walnuts), and even evidence of the infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordyceps cordyceps fungus]] zombifying ants. All this can be attributed to the anoxic lake; animals that fell in and drowned were preserved in conditions hostile to decomposers and scavengers (caused by toxic volcanic gasses at the bottom of the lake that would periodically erupt, as shown in ''WWB''), thus allowing them to remain in pristine condition.
1047
1048Among the mammals of Messel, two of the most notable are members of a very ancient group: ''Eomanis'' and ''Eurotamandua'' are the first known pangolins. As expected from Messel animals, their remains include soft parts of their body. Their shape was already that of their modern relatives, with long muzzles, short legs, robust claws, long tails, and a long sticky tongue to catch ants and termites. However, their external look was ''very'' different from each other: ''Eomanis'' had the familiar tile-like scales covering most of its body, and was virtually identical to modern pangolins; ''Eurotamandua'' was ''hairy'' and resembled more a modern South American anteater than a pangolin -- indeed, it was long classified as a proper anteater (which have only ever lived in South America). The names of both animals are referred to this older classification: ''Eomanis'' means "dawn pangolin”, ''Eurotamandua'' means “European tamandua” (Tamanduas are medium-sized anteaters). Pangolins were once considered xenarthrans like the sloths, anteaters, and armadillos, but today, they are considered cousins of the carnivorans.
1049
1050# '''Entry Time:''' 2001 (''Leptictidium''); undetermined for the pangolins
1051# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'' (''Leptictidium'')
1052
1053!! Near Ancient Shores: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesonyx Mesonyx]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmostylus Desmostylus]]'' *
1054
1055''Mesonyx'' ("middle-nail") was an Eocene North American mammal similar in size and shape to a strange dog or hyena with a big head and long tail, but with [[MixAndMatchCritter primitive hooves]] like ''Phenacodus'' or ''Eohippus''. It was one of the first mammalian predators, but being no bigger than a modern dog, it was definitely not the apex predator in a world dominated by terrestrial crocodilians like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles Boverisuchus]]'' (formerly ''Pristichampsus'') and huge flightless birds like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Gastornis]]'' (which is now considered a herbivore). It was the namesake of a group of carnivorous basal ungulate-relatives called the mesonychians, who are most famous for having once thought to have been the ancestors of the cetaceans (the mysterious ''Andrewsarchus'' mentioned above was once considered part of this group).
1056
1057The traditional image was that ''Mesonyx'' and is relatives roamed the coasts in search of dead fish and carcasses,, and that this was the kick-off of the evolution of whales. This could explain why the ''Walking With Beasts'' producers decided to show ''Andrewsarchus'' near the shore in search of turtles in its first relevant scene. Nowadays, whales are considered true artiodactyls descended from the same ancestor as hippos, while mesonychians are believed to be fully terrestrial predators that ruled the mammalian hunter niche in Asia, Europe, and North America during the Paleocene and Eocene before vanishing in the Early Oligocene.
1058
1059Carnivorous ungulate-relatives are strange enough already, but few groups of extinct mammals have baffled scientists as much as the demostylians, the only totally extinct group of sea mammals ever. Debate rages over which modern mammal group this lineage of ''true'' sea mammals is most closely related to -- they are traditionally believed to be afrotheres related to manatees and elephants, but the fact they are exclusively from the North Pacific contradicts the consistently African and Atlantic evolutionary history of the afrotheres, leading other scientists to propose they are instead perissodactyls or perissodactyl-relatives, closer to horses and rhinos. However, the jury remains out for now. Desmostylians looked a bit like hippos but with shorter hindlimbs than forelimbs and smaller heads. Also like hippos, they had small tusk-like incisors and canines, except these pointed forward and there were multiple on each jaw. They also possessed uniquely tubercled cheek teeth they used to eat kelp. They were once thought to be amphibious, but later studies suggest they were unable to support their weight on land and thus fully aquatic, mostly power-walking on the bottom like hippos do.
1060
1061''Desmostylus'' ("bundle-pillar", for the shape of its teeth) is the archetype and the most known of the group, first found by Marsh in USA during the Bone Wars; it lived in shallow coastal seas from Japan to Baja Califonia up to Alaska and Siberia during the Miocene. As a group, the demostylians lasted throughout the Oligocene and Miocene, going extinct as manatees and dugongs rose to prominence and entered the North Pacific (where they also eventually went extinct during historical times; see Historically-Extinct Mammals for that story). Interestingly, the demostylians are very popular in Japan, where they are among the most well-known groups of prehistoric mammals, due to the many fossils of them found there.
1062
1063# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
1064# '''TropeMaker:''' Popular books depicting sea mammals' evolution
1065
1066!! When Whales were Spinosaurs: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakicetus Pakicetus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambulocetus Ambulocetus]]'' *
1067
1068''All'' mammals were small and rodent-shaped in their evolutionary beginnings. Some became larger and more derived after the extinction of the dinosaurs, but none to the same level as whales, who themselves are descended from even-toed ungulates.
1069
1070The first cetaceans were likely freshwater/estuarine animals that lived on land but waded into water to feed on fish. ''Pakicetus'' ("Pakistan whale") is the traditionally most-portrayed of them. Found in Pakistan (duh) in 1981, it was still four-limbed and looked more like a wolf than whale (old illustrations depicting it as something akin to a mammalian crocodile were disproven with further fossil finds), but it had a long tail (the typical archaic trait of the earliest ungulates), anticipating the powerful muscular tail of later cetaceans. It was already a good swimmer, but probably swam using its legs like land mammals. Its nostrils were still placed at the tip of its snout like a land mammal, but its ears already showed specializations for hearing underwater like a modern whale. This combination of land and water adaptations makes ''Pakicetus'' another excellent example of a MixAndMatchCritter.
1071
1072First described in 1994, ''Ambulocetus'' (lit. "walking whale") was also found in Pakistan. It was larger and much more adapted for life in the water than the former, with shorter limbs, palmated feet instead of primitive hooves, and a more powerful tail. At the time of its discovery it was celebrated in media as the "missing link" between the still terrestrial-looking ''Pakicetus'' and more modern whales like ''Basilosaurus''. Maybe because of this fame, ''Ambulocetus'' was chosen as the archetypical early whale in the first episode of ''Series/WalkingWithBeasts'', but was incorrectly shown [[MisplacedWildlife in Europe instead of Asia]] and interacting with critters known from the Messel Pit like ''Leptictidium'' above. In the show, ''Ambulocetus'' was portrayed as an ambush-hunter of small land mammals, like a modern Nile crocodile; actually, its lifestyle is unknown. It may have been a specialist fish-hunter, like modern otters.
1073
1074Both these early whale-ancestors had the same two tooth shapes in their jaws as ''Basilosaurus''. But whereas ''Pakicetus'' was likely to have been a mostly-terrestrial animal that spent a lot of time in the water to hunt, ''Ambulocetus'', once assumed to have been amphibious like a seal, seems to have been already ''fully aquatic'', thus not really deserving the name "walking whale", but nomenclature rules being what they are, it's stuck with it. Both ''Pakicetus'' and ''Ambulocetus'' can be shown widely differently in paleo-art and paleo-books: sometimes they are portrayed hairy, sometimes naked-skinned like a modern whale. Apart of the lack of dorsal sail, they could be considered in anatomy the mammalian equivalents of the famous dinosaur ''Spinosaurus'', though obviously both are much smaller than it.
1075
1076# '''Entry Time:''' End of the 20th century
1077# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media about whale evolution
1078
1079!! ''Moby Dick'' in Prehistory: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livyatan_melvillei Livyatan]]'' & the "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroraptorial_sperm_whale Macroraptorial Sperm-Whales]]" *
1080
1081A 2008 discovery made in Peru, ''Livyatan melvillei'' could make the much celebrated ''Basilosaurus'' quite insignificant in comparison. It possessed what may be the largest functional teeth of any animal ever at a little over a foot in length: that is, not counting tusks like on an elephant, walrus, or narwhal. The record for biggest teeth of all time is still held by giant extinct elephants like mammoths and ''Palaeoloxodon''.
1082
1083The size of the partly preserved skull indicates that ''Livyatan'' reached up to 57ft long, comparable to the modern sperm whale. The head was 3m long, only half that of a large male sperm whale and perhaps recalling in shape more the head of an orca. ''Livyatan'' was overall physically similar to the living sperm whale and belonged to the same group, Physeteroidea. Like all toothed whales, ''Livyatan'' had one single blowhole on its head, correspondent to the left nostril of the land mammals, and a fatty mass on its head (the "melon") to help echolocation -- all specialized odontocetans traits, missing in the primitive whales like ''Basilosaurus'', ''Ambulocetus'', and ''Pakicetus'', which had two symmetrical nostrils like all the other mammals. ''Livyatan'' had teeth in both of its jaws, in contrast to how sperm whales only have teeth in their lower jaw. It does however share this trait with [[WesternAnimation/{{Pinocchio}} Monstro]], who is probably the best overall physical comparison, except ''Livyatan'' was smaller and lacked the rorqual-like underbelly ridges present in the Disney critter. By comparing its skull to that of a modern sperm whale, we know it would have had a spermaceti organ, the hallmark trait of the modern sperm-whales that gives them their name and sits above the melon to give them their iconic boxy heads.
1084
1085''Livyatan'' living during the Late Miocene, and the fossil beds it was found in have also produced Megalodon. It's also theorized that they had a similar taste in preferred prey: large marine mammals, such as baleen whales. Indeed, ''Livyatan'' hunted even more powerful prey than the modern giant squids eaten by sperm whales today, and it definitely would have had to directly compete with Megalodon for food. Perhaps ''Livyatan'' was even able to kill an adult Megalodon, like modern orcas do sometimes with the great whites. It also happens to be one of those prehistoric animals whose name is a reference, too. "Livyatan" is the Hebrew name for the [[Literature/TheBible Biblical]] sea monster [[KrakenAndLeviathan Leviathan]] (note that the word of "whale" in modern Hebrew is just "livyatan"), and "melvillei" is coined after Creator/HermanMelville, the author of ''Literature/MobyDick''.
1086
1087''Livyatan'' was not the only one of its kind. Throughout the Miocene lived similar sperm whale-relatives of smaller size and with smaller (but still huge) teeth: their scientific names recall the one of the modern sperm whale, ''Physeter macrocephalus'', with a prefix ahead. Among the most notorious of these are the 15ft-long ''Acrophyseter'' from Middle Miocene Peru, the 23ft-long ''Brygmophyseter'' from Middle Miocene Japan (portrayed in ''Series/JurassicFightClub'' as the rival of Megalodon), and the 23ft-long ''Zygophyseter'' from Late Miocene Italy; ''Acrophyseter'' and ''Zygophyseter'' stand out for having smaller spermaceti organs than the others, giving them a dolphin-like beak. Together with ''Livyatan'' are nicknamed "macroraptorial sperm whales" (not considered an actual taxonomic group within Physeteroidea). These animals were all apex predators that occupied the same niche as the modern orca; they certainly would have given Megalodon a run for its money as King of the Cenozoic Ocean!
1088
1089# '''Entry Time:''' TheNewTens (''Livyatan'')
1090# '''TropeMaker:''' Its size and power and its rivalry against Megalodon
1091
1092!! Small Primate Relatives: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plesiadapis Plesiadapis]]'', ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purgatorius Purgatorius]]'', & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetetherium Planetetherium]]'' *
1093
1094Size doesn't always matter to make extinct mammals interesting to people. ''Plesiadapis'' was an archaic primate that lived in the Late Palaeocene and Early Eocene of North America and Europe. It was similar to a lemur but with gnawing teeth like a rodent (MixAndMatchCritter again in play). Today, only one species of living lemur has gnawing incisors, the unrelated aye-aye of Madagascar.
1095
1096''Purgatorius'', named after Purgatory Hill, was a small, more generic-looking shrew-like placental that lived in at both the very end of Cretaceous and the very start of the Paleocene, before and after the Great Dinosaur Extinction. As its fossils are known from the same sites that have produced the very last North American dinosaurs, it coexisted with the likes of ''UsefulNotes/TyrannosaurusRex'', ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Edmontosaurus]]'', ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Ankylosaurus]]'', and ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursOrnithischianDinosaurs Triceratops]]'', as well as the last pterosaurs like ''Quetzalcoatlus''. But what makes this unremarkable-looking animal really stand out was that it is the earliest known primate! Related to the more derived ''Plesiadapis'', it is often imagined similar to the modern treeshrew (a cousin of primates) in look -- and so is frequently-mentioned in the sources talking about the evolution of humans together with ''Plesiadapis'' ("near-monkey").
1097
1098Not primates but related to them are the colugos or "flying lemurs". Today found only in Southeast Asia, fossils show these animals were widespread in the past. Take for instance, ''Planetetherium'', meaning "gliding beast". It lived in North America during the Late Palaeocene, and was very much like its modern counterparts (no skin impressions exist, but its body proportions match modern colugos, telling us it likely could glide). This mammal has also been frequently portrayed in prehistoric books and paleo-art, but not always linked with the evolution of humans -- because of its flying-squirrel-like "wings", it was [[ScienceMarchesOn once]] once considered the possible ancestor of bats.
1099
1100# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
1101# '''TropeMaker:''' the discussion about human origins
1102
1103!! Little Menace?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Didelphodon Didelphodon]]'' *
1104
1105''Didelphodon'' ("possum tooth") was, as its name suggests, related to marsupials -- unlike the Ice Age Australian ''Thylacoleo'', ''Procoptodon'' and ''Diprotodon'', it was not a marsupial in the modern sense, as was once thought by scientists, but rather part of a basal family of marsupial-ancestors called Stagodontidae. Because of this, it's not known if ''Didelphodon'' had a pouch like kangaroos, or was pouchless like many opossums. Alongside ''Purgatorius'', ''Didelphodon'' lived at the very end of the Cretaceous in North America, under the feet of ''T. rex'' and ''Triceratops''. Unlike ''Purgatorius'', it went extinct 66 mya with the dinosaurs. It was one of the bigger mammals of the Mesozoic at the size of an oppossum and formerly considered the biggest until the discovery of the badger-sized ''Repenomamus'' from Early Cretaceous China (a known predator of baby dinosaurs!).
1106
1107Other mammals of the Mesozoic are the Early Jurassic ''Morganucodon'' and ''Megazostrodon'' (some of the earliest and most widespread), the beaver-like ''Castorocauda'' and gliding ''Volaticotherium'' of Middle Jurassic China, the Late Jurassic ''Juramaia'' and Early Cretaceous ''Eomaia'' of China (the earliest known placental-ancestors), the digging termite-eater ''Fruitafossor'' of Late Jurassic North America (living alongside ''Allosaurus'', ''Diplodocus'', and ''Stegosaurus''), ''Cronopio'' of Late Cretaceous Argentina (a contemporary of ''Giganotosaurus'' that looked like Scrat from ''WesternAnimation/IceAge''), the platypus-like monotreme ''Stereopodon'' of Early Cretaceous Australia, the badger-sized herbivore of ''Adalatherium'' of Late Cretaceous Madagascar (depicted in ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet''), the possum-like marsupial-relative ''Alphadon'' of Late Cretaceous Canada, the jerboa-like ''Zalambdalestes'' (which lived alongside ''Velociraptor'' in Late Cretaceous Mongolia), and the Late Cretaceous North American multituberculate ''Cimolodon'' (part of a group of herbivores that survived the Great Dino Extinction, only to be outcompeted by rodents in the Late Eocene). [[LongList Phew!]]
1108
1109''Didelphodon'' used to be a very obscure animal, seldom portrayed even in prehistory books. But in 1999, it became abruptly famous when it was appeared in last ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' episode, “Death of a Dynasty”, as the annoying mammal stealing eggs from the mother ''T. rex''. In the show, and science at the time, [[ScienceMarchesOn it was depicted as a badger-like creature]], but fossil finds made after this revealed it resembled and behaved more like an otter, making the WWD portrayal very inaccurate now apart from its size.
1110
1111# '''Entry Time:''' 1999
1112# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs''
1113
1114[[/folder]]
1115
1116[[folder:Historically-Extinct Mammals]]
1117
1118!! Cattle Ancestor: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurochs Aurochs]] **
1119
1120This animal is not strictly prehistoric, but like the [[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs dodo]], it went extinct in the Modern Era thanks to humans.
1121
1122The aurochs (whose scientific name, ''Bos primigenius'', means "primeval ox") was, together with the European bison (or wisent), the biggest European land mammal to survive the Ice Age and reach recorded history. It's a classic imprecision in media to say the aurochs was a ''prehistoric'' animal; this is not completely wrong, since it was widespread during the Ice Age both in Europe and Asia alongside woolly mammoths, woolly rhinos, cave bears and so on, but strictly "prehistoric" creatures are those that disappeared before the dawn of civilization (roughly 4000 B.C.).
1123
1124Also known as the urus, the aurochs was a powerful animal, though sometimes oversized in media: it was actually no bigger than modern wild bovines. According to paintings, the aurochs' color varied from brown to blackish but usually darker than the wisent, its fur was quite long to withstand frigid winters but shorter than a yak's, and its body lacked the shoulder hump of a true bison. It roamed ancient forests and steppes, and was probably a browser/grazer like the wisent. Its predators would have included cave lions, cave hyenas, modern wolves, and brown bears, from which it defended itself with its long, robust, pointy horns and rapid charges -- it was a fast runner despite its weight of one ton. It gave birth to one calf at a time after a long gestation of 10-11 months, and like all modern ruminants, it chewed its cud to better digest plant matter.
1125
1126The aurochs was already known by prehistoric European people, the Neanderthals and the Cro-Magnons, who often depicted it in cave art -- Lascaux in France and Altamira in Spain, for example -- together with many other extinct and extant animals they hunted. Ancient Celtic, Greek, Roman and Medieval peoples too knew the animal, often mentioning it in literature as a particularly dangerous wild game, or as a symbol of power, or (in the case of the Celts) even as a divinity. Some peoples painted images of it on their war shields. The aurochs still appears in the national flag of the modern Republic of Moldova (in Europe).
1127
1128But since Medieval and Renaissance times, the reduction of the forests/steppes it lived in, coupled with extensive hunting, made the aurochs rarer and rarer, until it disappeared entirely in the 17th century; the last individual died in 1627 of natural causes in Poland's Jaktorów Forest. The European bison managed to escape the same fate, only thanks to a bunch of individuals saved JustInTime in Białowieża between Poland and Belarus, in the 1800s.
1129
1130The aurochs left an extremely crucial legacy in modern times, however: around the end of the Ice Age, 10,000 years ago, some aurochs (yes, ''not'' aurochses or aurochsen) were domesticated by humans. This domestication was one of the most successful and important ever: their descendants became the bulls, oxen, and cows (''Bos taurus''), whose contributions to mankind's development, as everyone knows, has been fundamental.
1131
1132Interestingly, there are some very archaic cattle breeds that strongly resemble the aurochs, for example the famous Spanish Fighting Bull used in bullfighting. Some of these breeds have been reintroduced into ancient European forests (ex. Białowieża, the same place that saved the last European bison), resurrecting, at least partially, the memory of their wild ancestor's ancient presence.
1133
1134# '''Entry Time:''' European Antiquity
1135# '''TropeMaker:''' Undetermined (maybe Pliny the Elder or Aristoteles, both naturalists)
1136
1137!! Horse Ancestor: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarpan Tarpan]] *
1138
1139The tarpan was a true wild horse (''Equus ferus'': "ferus" = wild, "Equus" = horse in Latin) that lived in Europe until the Modern Age, but was depleted by humans. It was much more widespread during the Ice Age, with fossils also being found in Asia and North America (debate rages if the numerous North American ''Equus'' species represent individual variation in the tarpan or not). But by the Modern Age, the tarpan's range had been reduced to the steppes of Southern Europe -- the last wild tarpans lived in southern Russia until 1879, and the last captive individual (also Russian) died in 1909. But also like the aurochs, the tarpan has left an important legacy in the form of its modern descendant, the domestic horse (''Equus caballus''). Some archaic domestic horse breeds even resemble the tarpan, and are visible in some European parks, just like cattle breeds that resemble their own wild ancestor.
1140
1141The tarpan was a smallish, greyish horse very similar to the living conspecific Przewalski's horse and the equally rare wild asses of Asia and Africa: all of them combined a donkey-like mane with normal horsy tail. Its behavior was no different from modern wild equids, roaming grasslands and steppes in large herds to defend itself from predators. The tarpan too was depicted in prehistoric caves like the aurochs, and mentioned in classic European literature throughout the centuries as "the wild horse". Both the aurochs and the tarpan arguably shared the same voice (mooing and neighing respectively) as their domestic descendants, and both had a quite long gestation of 10-11 months, but the tarpan, being an odd-toed ungulate, didn't ruminate, like modern equines and unlike bovines.
1142
1143# '''Entry Time:''' European Antiquity
1144# '''TropeMaker:''' Mentions in classic literature
1145
1146!! Half Zebra: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quagga Quagga]] *
1147
1148All modern equines are so similar to each other in anatomy that they are all included in a single genus: ''Equus''. This genus, as mentioned in the "horse ancestors" chapter, originated on the North American prairies, and then spread throughout Eurasia across [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beringia Beringia]], and later into Africa through the Sinai Peninsula. Modern "wild" (or rather, feral) horses of North America, Asia, Australia etc. actually descend from domestic horses returned to the wild -- except for the Mongolian Przewalski's horse (''Equus przewalskii''), previously extinct in the wild but successfully reintroduced by zoos.
1149
1150The quagga (''Equus quagga'') was an unusual-looking kind of zebra with dark & white stripes only in the front part of its body, and the remaining body colored uniformly brownish or whitish like [[ZebrasAreJustStripedHorses many horses]]. It was closely related to the modern plains zebra (''Equus burchelli''), to the point they may even be the same species (in that case, the plains zebra would be renamed ''Equus quagga'', as the quagga was described first). But unlike the latter, it lived only in the southernmost part of Africa -- making it the southernmost kind of modern equine together with the Mountain Zebra (''Equus zebra''), which was formerly critically endangered until zoo reintroduction programs and wild conservation efforts saved it.
1151
1152The quagga's lifestyle was probably identical or very similar to the surviving zebras, but sadly, it was overhunted by European settlers; the last wild individual died in 1878 and the last captive individual died in 1883. Being less skittish and more robust than other zebra species, the quagga was probably well-suited for domestication, making it all the more wasteful that it was instead hunted to extinction. Unfortunately, the quagga was not the only animal to fall to the overhunting of African colonialists -- another notable extinction was the quagga's neighbor the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluebuck Bluebuck]] (''Hippotragus leucophaeus''), a South African antelope related to the still-living sable antelope (''Hippotragus niger'').
1153
1154The quagga is mentioned in the first ''Franchise/JurassicPark'' book as an example of a recently-extinct species of animal that could possibly be cloned in the park, and is still present in several tales from native South African peoples today. And speaking of ''Jurassic Park'', it's actually one of several species being considered for [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De-extinction De-Extinction]] programs to clone and resurrect recently-extinct animals, including the aurochs, the thylacine, the passenger pigeon, and most famously, the woolly mammoth.
1155
1156# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
1157# '''TropeMaker:''' Embalmed mounts in natural history museums and animal books
1158
1159!! Gentle Giant: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrodamalis_gigas Steller's Sea Cow]] *
1160
1161The story of this mammal is a particular TearJerker. The Steller's sea cow (''Hydrodamalis gigas'') was not a cow, despite the name, but a giant relative of modern manatees and dugongs -- that is, a large sirenian, and not a cetacean at all, but a distant cousin of elephants.
1162
11639m/30ft long and weighing up to 10 tons, it was similar to a manatee in shape but with a smaller head and flippers, rougher hide, and the same whale-like fluke as a dugong, which it was more closely related to. It used to swim slowly and peacefully in the cold waters of the Northern Pacific coasts along with sea otters and sea lions, grazing kelp with its unusual toothless jaws (manatees and dugongs have few teeth). Like modern manatees and dugongs, it gave birth to one offspring at a time after a long gestation, and thus was not an especially fast breeder. The European explorers who encountered them described them as passive and slow-moving animals that floated on the surface (a result of their naturally buoyant bodies, unlike those of all other sirenians) and congregated in herds. Their sheer bulk, combined with their thick skin, kept Steller's sea cow safe from even orcas.
1164
1165The common name of Steller's sea cow comes from German naturalist Georg Steller, the first European to describe the animals -- he came across them on an expedition to the North Pacific under Russian explorer Vitus Bering when the crew got shipwrecked on the Commander Islands off the coast of Siberia in 1741. Steller (whose name is also on several other North Pacific animals, like Steller's sea eagle, Steller's sea lion, Steller's jay, and Steller's eider -- all also first recorded by him) noted that sea cow was already rare at that time, with only ''few thousand'' individuals left -- all of them only living around the Commander Islands. Unfortunately, hunters and whalers soon saw it as a great source of food and animal grease because of its size, and also noted that it was a relatively easy animal to kill, more so than the bigger and/or faster cetaceans nearby. The result was: the giant sirenian went extinct merely ''27 years after its discovery'' in 1768 -- most other historically-extinct mammals and birds were depleted at least one century after Western people learned about them. Sadly, fossil evidence indicates Steller's sea cow was much more widespread during the Ice Age and into pre-Modern History, ranging from Japan to Alaska down to Baja California, until humans too exterminated them from overhunting -- it's likely the ones Steller encountered were the very last of their kind.
1166
1167Steller's sea cow has made a few notable appearances in pop-culture, to date. Creator/RudyardKipling featured it prominently in his story ''The White Seal'', published as part of ''Literature/TheJungleBook'', where one of the last surviving individuals is sought for advice by the title character. Also, the 2012 docufiction ''Tales of a Sea Cow'' involved the 2006 discovery of a a surviving population of Steller's sea cows off the coast of Greenland as its premise -- indeed, Steller's sea cow is occasionally sighted today, making it something of a cryptid now. However, it is not the sole historically-extinct marine mammal: the Yangtze river dolphin or baiji, was declared extinct in 2006, while the Caribbean monk seal suffered the same fate in 1952.
1168
1169# '''Entry Time:''' 1894
1170# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Literature/TheJungleBook''
1171
1172!! Extinct or Not?: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thylacinus_cynocephalus Thylacine]] **
1173
1174This mammal is not strictly prehistoric, to the point that it could actually [[HesJustHiding still be alive today]]. Nonetheless, like the animals above, it has left several fossils from prehistoric times.
1175
1176In popular media, the thylacine (''Thylacinus cynocephalus'', lit. "[[MixAndMatchCritter pouched dog]] with a [[DogFace dog head]]") is known as the Tasmanian wolf or the Tasmanian tiger. Wolf, because its shape and size effectively recall that of a long-tailed, round-eared wolf -- to the point that it's often cited as an example of convergent evolution with true canids. Tiger, because of its coloration, which was vaguely similar to the [[PantheraAwesome eponymous cat]] but with a simpler design: wide black stripes on the rear of its back upon an otherwise uniformly brownish body.
1177
1178But this mammal was neither a canine, nor a feline; it was a marsupial, just like kangaroos! More precisely, it was not part of the Diprotodontia order like them, but rather a member of Dasyuromorphia, which contains all of the modern carnivorous marsupials of Australia, like the Tasmanian devil, the quoll, and the numbat (remember, ''Thylacoleo'' was in Diprotodontia; its closest living relatives are wombats and koalas). It's called Tasmanian because Europeans found it only on the island of Tasmania, but in the past, the thylacine also lived on mainland Australia -- until it was outcompeted by the dingo when the latter was brought in the LandDownUnder by the ancestors of Aborigines thousands of years ago (the still-living Tasmanian devil suffered the same fate). During the Ice Age however, it would have not been the apex predator of the continent, what with the giant lizards, marsupial lions, and terrestrial crocodiles romping around.
1179
1180Like all the other historically-extinct birds and mammals detailed on these pages, the thylacine is often and rightly mentioned as an example of human irresponsibility. Its possible extinction happened only in the 20th century: [[https://youtu.be/nBpyAOpzlEE old black-and-white films]] exist showing the animal alive in zoos, and reveal that it could open its mouth rather widely for a mammal. It was hunted to extinction mainly because Tasmanian farmers of the 19th and 20th centuries considered it a serious peril to their livestock, especially their sheep and their poultry. This was only partly true, however, because the animal mainly hunted wild game. The alleged ferocity of the thylacine was notably exaggerated by several reportages and citations in books and encyclopedias as well. These accusations of viciousness and perilousness, even toward humans, were among the excuses that led to it and its placental namesakes, the grey wolf (''Canis lupus'') and the tiger (''Panthera tigris'') being driven to endangerment or extinction in many countries worldwide. The last known wild thylacine was killed in 1930, while the last captive thylacine died at Hobart Zoo in Tasmania on September 7, 1936 (now commemorated in Australia as National Threatened Species Day).
1181
1182Despite being extinct, the thylacine has entered pop-culture as one of the icons of Australian wildlife, with appearances in video games, cartoons, movies and literature. A boomerang-wielding thylacine is the protagonist of ''VideoGame/TyTheTasmanianTiger'', while Tiny Tiger is a recurring villain in the ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot''. The competitive shooter game ''VideoGame/{{Valorant}}'' and young adult novel ''Literature/{{Leviathan}}'' both feature thylacines being kept as pets by a major character, while the cartoon ''WesternAnimation/{{Tazmania}}'' has a neurotic thylacine named Wendell T. Wolf co-starring with Taz of ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' fame. The thylacine also appears on Tasmania's coat of arms and numerous other Tasmanian logos; it also regularly appears in the stories of the Australian Aboriginals. Most interestingly however, alleged sightings of surviving thylacines have become a regular thing since its official extinction in 1936, making it something of a cryptid too. While regularly reported in newspapers in the form of stories about "[[https://youtu.be/Zs3fSM9UFgs the last thylacine]]", none of them are confirmed -- at least for now.
1183
1184# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
1185# '''TropeMaker:''' Uncertain, possibly footage and photos of zoo specimens
1186
1187!! Other extinct mammals
1188Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Protosiren'', ''Titanohyrax'', ''Teleoceras'', ''Metamynodon'', ''Homotherium'', ''Borophagus'', ''Cynodictis'', ''Viverravus'', ''Pelorovis'', ''Titanotylopus'', ''Protoceras'', ''Prolibytherium'', ''Remingtonocetus'', ''Eurhinodelphis'', ''Merycoidodon'', ''Anoplotherium'', ''Thalassocnus'', ''Stegotherium'', ''Palaeolagus'', ''Palaeocastor'', ''Phoberomys'', ''Icaronycteris'', ''Dinopithecus'', ''Archaeoindris'', ''Phascolonus'', ''Palorchestes'', ''Murrayglossus'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals here.]]
1189
1190[[/folder]]
1191
1192----
1193
1194!Prehistoric Amphibians
1195
1196Extinct amphibians are interesting, and the ones listed below are all from ''before'' the dinosaurs (though, of course, authors frequently forget that and put them in dinosaur settings anyway).
1197
1198[[folder:Amphibians in Media]]
1199
1200!! The First Vertebrate with Limbs?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichthyostega Ichthyostega]]'' **
1201
1202Although not a amphibian in the technical sense of the term, ''Ichthyostega'' has always been one of the most iconic paleo-amphibians. Found in Greenland -- HilariousInHindsight, during most of prehistory, Greenland really ''was'' a green land, covered with forests; the ice cap formed only 30 million years ago in the Cenozoic -- ''Ichthyostega'' lived before all the animals mentioned above, in the Late Devonian, about 360 mya, in a time when flying insects didn't yet exist and the very first forests had just started to grow.
1203
1204Described in 1932, it was long considered among the very first land vertebrates and the common ancestor of all tetrapods (mammals + birds + reptiles + amphibians). Like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Archaeopteryx]]'', ''Ichthyostega'' has been often cited as a "missing link" between two main animal classes: fish and amphibians in this case, and like the "ur-bird", it is seen as an icon of evolution. However, older intermediate forms between fish and land animals have been found since; the 365 mya-old ''Acanthostega'' (found in Greenland in 1952) and the 375 mya-old ''Tiktaalik'' (2006 in the Canadian Arctic) are some relatively known examples.
1205
1206Like many other basal tetrapods (properly known as stegocephalians), ''Ichthyostega'' was a big animal, 5ft/1.5m long and weighing as much as an adult human. This half-fish/half-amphibian, often quoted as a "fish with legs" or an "amphibian with fins", was indeed one of the first animals that developed true legs, already similar to modern animals except for one thing: it had ''seven'' digits on each foot -- later vertebrates have no more than five, except for very rare anomalies like some ichthyosaurs. Its body plan, however, had still several fishy traits (''Ichthyostega'' indeed means "roof fish"): a streamlined body, fish-like scales, a powerful tail with a long true ''fin'' on top, and maybe even a "lateral line" to sense underwater! On the other hand, it could have had eyelids and external ears like in modern amphibians, as well as two breathing lungs in the adults. The larval stage is unknown, but it was certainly made of "tadpole"-like gilled small creatures that hatched in water and then underwent a metamorphosis like in modern amphibians, but also like in modern lungfish.
1207
1208But wait! Though classical portrayals show it crawling on dry land, today scientists think ''Ichthyostega'' lived mainly in water, and [[ScienceMarchesOn recently research]] suggest its limbs were ''not'' used for walking on dry soil but only on the bottom of lakes and rivers, like a modern giant salamander (the biggest living amphibians today, incidentally the same size of ''Ichthyostega'').
1209
1210In ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'', its close and almost-identical (but slightly older) relative ''Hynerpeton'', found only in 1994 in Pennsylvania, is shown in the traditional mainly-terrestrial way, but also with many unlikely traits typical of ''modern'' true amphibians: like frogs, it's given a loud voice and scale-less skin, and lays eggs that are just the same shape as frogspawn. One individual is killed and eaten by the giant lungfish-like ''Hyneria'' (see ''Eusthenopteron'' in the next folder below for more on that).
1211
1212# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1213# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1214
1215!! The Hammerhead Salamander: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplocaulus Diplocaulus]]'' *
1216
1217''Diplocaulus'' was 1 meter long, smaller than ''Ichthyostega'' (but still bigger than most modern salamanders) and lived in Early Permian North America contemporary with the famous predatory proto-mammal ''Dimetrodon''. Its unique boomerang-like head makes it a very bizarre-looking and enigmatic prehistoric animal, and a very common sight in paleo-books (though it has not yet appeared in CGI documentaries). The purpose of its head protrusions has been a headache to paleontologists: A swimming device? A display tool? A mean to excavate the bottom of lakes? An attachment point for gills? A defense mechanism? Some have even proposed that it supported skin flaps that made the animal look like a stingray when alive.
1218
1219''Diplocaulus'' means "double-stem" -- while ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Diplodocus]]'' means "double-beam". It was a true amphibian, but not a member of the group comprising modern amphibians (the lissamphibians): it was the largest of the lepospondyls, a Carboniferous-Permian group whose shape only coincidentally recalled that of modern salamanders and newts. Its eyes and nostrils were placed on the top of its flattened head, and were very close to each other (the exact opposite of a modern hammerhead shark, whose eyes and nostrils are at the extremities of the "hammer"), which gave it what may have been a rather funny appearance if seen from above.
1220
1221According to experts it was mainly aquatic, probably swimming with its tail and/or walking on the bottom of the water with its five-toed feet. ''Diplocaulus'' likely fed upon small water critters, and would have fallen prey to larger amphibians and ''Dimetrodon''. One remarkable discovery was of a burrow of eight ''Diplocaulus'' with three individuals having bite marks on their heads from a ''Dimetrodon'' that unearthed them, likely as they were hibernating during a drought as many modern amphibians do. It was likely quite clumsy when on land, being arguably as slow as a big modern salamander on dry soil. In water, on the other hand, it could have been more fast and agile. We don't know what shape its larvae were, since it belonged to a totally extinct group of amphibians. It also could have had a lateral line like fish do to hear vibrations underwater, as some modern lissamphibians that live in water do have it.
1222
1223# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1224# '''TropeMaker:''' Its skull
1225
1226!! The Alligator Frog: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eryops Eryops]]'' *
1227
1228Temnospondyls (lit. "cut vertebrae") were the most successful group of true amphibians in RealLife, thriving from the Late Carboniferous to the Late Triassic, with one holdout reaching the Early Cretaceous. Many of them looked like salamanders mixed with crocodiles, and the most iconic of them has traditionally been ''Eryops megacephalus'' ("big-headed drawn-out face").
1229
12302.4m/8ft long, bigger than ''Ichthyostega'', and weighing as much as two adult humans, ''Eryops'' was the size of a small crocodile, and has indeed classically been compared with crocs in documentary media. But ''Eryops'' was more massively-built than a modern-day crocodilian; it had a shorter tail, lacked armor, and had comparatively weaker legs, making it probably more awkward than a croc on land. Still, it had a massive, very alligator-like head, with eyes placed above the skull and a large snout. Its teeth were different from those of a gator, though, being thinner and more numerous, more like a gharial's.
1231
1232Living in Early Permian North America, ''Eryops'' is believed by most experts to have been mainly aquatic -- other temnospondyls from its time and place, such as the equally short-named armored ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Cacops]]'' and the sail-backed '''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Platyhystrix]]'', were more terrestrial. ''Eryops'' was likely a predator of other smaller amphibians such as ''Diplocaulus'' above, as well as fish and invertebrates, but when on dry land, it could have fallen prey to ''Dimetrodon''. Nonetheless, it can't be ruled out that it could have eaten baby ''Dimetrodon'' and ''Edaphosaurus'' if it got the chance. Like ''Diplocaulus'' and modern amphibians, it would have laid its eggs in the water, but its tadpoles would have just looked like tiny versions of the adults (we have fossils of temnospondyl tadpoles proving this). Like many other extinct amphibians, ''Eryops'' can be wrongly portrayed with reptilian scales and reptilian nails in illustrations, making it look more like a reptile than an amphibian.
1233
1234# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1235# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1236
1237!! The Biggest Amphibian Ever?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastodonsaurus Mastodonsaurus]]'' *
1238
1239From the Middle Triassic comes the even larger ''Mastodonsaurus''. Its name means "mastodon lizard" for its size, and sometimes is misspelled "Mastodontosaurus". It was the very first temnospondyl discovered by science, in 1828, and was portrayed in the London Crystal Palace Park as "Labyrinthodon" (although depicted as literal giant toads with gator-like heads; only the skull was known at the time). It was the namesake of the "labyrinthodonts" ("labyrinth teeth"), an informal name for all temnospondyls, basal tetrapods, and reptiliomorphs (see below) -- so-named because many had teeth with strange convoluted "labyrinthic" patterns of enamel inside them for uncertain purposes.
1240
1241''Mastodonsaurus'' lived in Europe before the first dinosaurs like ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Plateosaurus]]'' or the North American ''[[UsefulNotes/StockDinosaursSaurischianDinosaurs Coelophysis]]''. 15ft/5m long, it was long considered the biggest amphibian ever, but this title was later taken by the 8m long but more slender ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Prionosuchus]]'' of Early Permian Brazil. Nonetheless, ''Mastodonsaurus'' remains remarkable for its massive body, powerful limbs, and its 1.2m/4ft-long head with a couple of strange protruding teeth in the lower jaw, which may have perforated the upper jaw in life (though this latest detail is usually ignored in paleo-books).
1242
1243Temnospondyls first appeared in the Early Carboniferous, and proceeded to dominate the world's waterways from the Late Carboniferous to the Early Triassic, occupying the same niche held by crocodiles today. Some became more land-dwelling (although still bound by the need to lay their eggs in water), and others even managed to enter the ocean (all living amphibians are all freshwater-bound or terrestrial and cannot survive in saltwater). But in the Middle and Late Triassic, they entered a sharp decline as they were outcompeted the ancestors of crocodilians. The last species, ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Koolasuchus]]'' of ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' fame, managed to reach the Early Cretaceous only because of its isolation in Australia, which at the time was in the Antarctic circle and thus too cold for crocs. ''However'', it seems the temnospondyls may not be as extinct as we thought, as new research suggests the modern-day lissamphibians (frogs, toads, newts, salamanders, etc.) may in fact be the sole surviving descendants of these giants.
1244
1245# '''Entry Time:''' 1854
1246# '''TropeMaker:''' The Crystal Palace Park in London
1247
1248!! Nearly Reptile: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seymouria Seymouria]]'' *
1249
1250Reptiliomorphs ("reptile-shaped") were transitional animals between amphibians and the first amniotes (reptiles, birds and mammals). We don't know if they already had scaly skin like reptiles, or were naked like amphibians today. Traditionally, the best-known among these half-amphibian/half-reptiles has been ''Seymouria baylorensis''. The genus name comes from the town of Seymour, Texas, near where it was discovered; the species name from Baylor County (where Seymour is in).
1251
1252''Seymouria'' used to be described in textbooks as the "missing link" between reptiles and amphibians, or alternatively the very first reptile. Only 60cm long, like ''Diplocaulus'', it lived in Early Permian North America alongside the "hammerhead salamander" and ''Eryops''. It was more terrestrial than them though and was possibly a regular prey item for ''Dimetrodon'' in RealLife. In ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'', however, it's shown (albeit unnamed) mainly as a potential thief of the latter's eggs. Despite its similarity to reptiles, ''Seymouria'' still laid shell-less eggs from which "tadpoles" hatched in water, as some fossils show (although said tadpoles looked just like tiny versions of the adults).
1253
1254Prehistoric true frogs are rarely-seen in Fictionland, but when they do, they normally don't belong to specific kinds of frogs or toads; for example, the "tailed frog" that jumps near Littlefoot in ''The Land Before Time'' film is an invention of the movie, though ancestral frogs really existed at dinosaurs' time, some very similar to the modern ones.
1255
1256# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1257# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1258
1259!! Other prehistoric amphibians
1260
1261Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Triadobatrachus'', ''Karaurus'', ''Eocaecilia'', ''Beelzebufo'', ''Phlegetontia'', ''Platyhystrix'', ''Cacops'', ''Branchiosaurus'', ''Gerrothorax'', ''Metoposaurus'', ''Eogyrinus'', ''Westlothiana'', ''Diadectes'', and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures here]].
1262[[/folder]]
1263
1264----
1265
1266!Prehistoric Fish
1267
1268It's not often that you'll see prehistoric fish in paleo-media, but when you do, it will usually be these guys. The first two are the most common, especially the one at the top of the list.
1269
1270[[folder:Fish in Media]]
1271
1272!! ''Jaws'' on Steroids: [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalodon Megalodon]] ***
1273
1274It's usually accepted that the biggest/most spectacular prehistoric animals lived in the Age of Reptiles, the mythical Mesozoic. Well, sharks give us a notable exception in Megalodon. This is the biggest predatory shark ever, and it lived ''just a few million years ago'', at the time of the first hominids!
1275
1276[[RuleOfCool Obviously]], this animal is often shown in documentary media: for example, its open jaws are often depicted with [[ThreateningShark some people inside]] to show how immense they are. However, this animal has also begun to fascinate the world of fiction, most notably in the book ''Literature/{{Meg}}'' and its movie adaptation ''Film/TheMeg''. But wait: Megalodon (literally "big tooth") is ''not'' the name of its genus; it's that of its species. The full scientific name used to be ''Carcharodon megalodon''; today it's ''Otodus megalodon'' (or ''Carcharocles megalodon'', depending on who you ask). It was once believed to be an extremely close relative of the great white shark (''Carcharodon carcharias'') in the family Lamnidae, but today, it's placed in Otodontidae, a different family convergently similar to the great white's. However, both Otodontidae and Lamnidae are in the same order of sharks: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamniformes Lamniformes]], which also include the thresher shark, basking shark, megamouth shark, goblin shark, and sandtiger shark, among the others.
1277
1278Like the most impressive extinct beasts, Megalodon is often a victim of sensationalism. Some sources describe it as 30m/90ft long, nearly as big as a blue whale; palaeontologists estimate it at just over a third to just under two thirds of this length. Still, it remains one of the biggest known fishes of all time, as well as the biggest known predatory shark, and one of the most successful apex predators ever, with a tenure of 20 million years, lasting from the Early Miocene to the Early Pliocene and being found worldwide.
1279
1280Megalodon was a specialist hunter of large cetaceans, and its bite marks have been found on whale skeletons, but it also could have fed on smaller prey. We don't know what colors it was, but it was arguably countershaded, like typical big swimming sea creatures (such as great white sharks). If it was solitary or lived in groups is uncertain. It probably gave live birth, like all lamniform sharks do, and it left its young to grow in warm shallow-water coastal "nurseries" as great whites do (baby megalodons are estimated to be about 3.5m/11ft long). As typical of prehistoric sharks, its most common fossil remains are jaws and teeth, not the softer cartilaginous rest of its skeleton, which rarely fossilizes.
1281
1282We don't know why it went extinct, but the most popular theory is that climatic changes deprived it of its main food sources: in particular, the formation of the Isthmus of Panama, would have closed off an important hunting, breeding, and migration area and caused major shifts in the world's currents and weather systems. It is hypothesized that Megalodon held back the [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeMammals evolution of cetaceans themselves]], which underwent a third explosion in diversity right after its extinction -- therefore, the theory that orcas outcompeted the giant shark is highly unlikely.
1283
1284Megalodon is probably the one prehistoric creature that gets almost as much sensationalism as ''Tyrannosaurus rex''. From frequent, fraudulent reports of it still patrolling the seas to erroneous portrayals of it chomping on Mesozoic marine reptiles (despite not appearing until ''long'' after those creatures had gone extinct), Megalodon is frequently cast as the ultimate sea predator. This obviously cannot be verified -- in the ''Franchise/WalkingWith'' spinoff ''Sea Monsters'' it's portrayed as "only" the third-most-dangerous marine superpredator of prehistory, after the sea reptiles ''Tylosaurus'' and ''Liopleurodon'', but before the fish below.
1285
1286# '''Entry Time:''' Late 1990s/early 2000s (pop culture)
1287# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary books on the shark buff side, ''Literature/{{Meg}}'' in pop culture
1288
1289!! Living-Tank Fish: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunkleosteus Dunkleosteus]]'' **
1290
1291The [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures placoderms]] were a group of armored fishes that thrived during the Devonian period, going extinct at its end, well before the dinosaurs evolved. Most were small, obscure animals, but the [[{{Pun}} big]] exception is the most infamous of them all -- ''Dunkleosteus'' ("Dunkle's bone"; formerly known as ''Dinichthys'', "terrible fish").
1292
1293Size estimates for ''Dunkleosteus'' have varied across the decades between 4-10m/13-33ft in length, but either way, it would have been one of the biggest members of its group. A lot of the difficulty in determining its size is because ''Dunkleosteus'' is only known from its skull, as placoderms, like sharks, have cartilage skeletons that don't usually fossilize. Traditionally depicted with an eel-like body due to comparisons with its smaller and lesser-known (but better-preserved) relative ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Coccosteus]]'', the modern vision of ''Dunkleosteus'' gives it a more shark-like tail, complete with a dorsal fin. Its most distinctive and notorious feature however is its armored head, equipped with strange scissor-like "teeth" that were in fact plates of sharpened bone that were only further sharpened by simply being gnashed together.
1294
1295It was evidently the top predator of its time: the Late Devonian, the same period in which the ur-"amphibian" ''Ichthyostega'' lived, and its fossils have been found in North America, Europe, and Africa. Studies of its jaw reveal that it probably sucked up food like a vacuum as many modern fish do, using its tooth-plates to slice through armored prey in less than a second, like a giant guillotine. Since it couldn't chew, it would have had to regularly regurgitate the armor and bones of its prey in the same way owls regurgitate pellets of undigestable bones and fur; indeed, its fossilized vomit is regularly found in Late Devonian fossil beds. Additionally, several ''Dunkleosteus'' fossils preserve evidence of being attacked by other ''Dunkleosteus'', which has led some to suggest that they were active cannibals like many fish today are. It was traditionally thought of a slow creature due to the way it was formerly reconstructed, but we now believe it was a very fast-moving animal that pursued early sharks, ammonites, and other placoderms in the open ocean. Since placoderms are totall extinct, we cannot easily compare ''Dunkleosteus'' with modern fish, but based on on some exquisite specimens of smaller placoderms, it likely gave live birth.
1296
1297Despite its status as "the living tank fish", ''Dunkleosteus'' has not gained much attention outside of paleo-books. Its most prominent appearance to date is ''Series/SeaMonsters'', where it's ranked as the fifth-most-dangerous ocean superpredator of all time, after two marine reptiles, Megalodon, and the early whale ''Basilosaurus''. This version of ''Dunkleosteus'' has its scare-factor amped up to emphasize the "sea monster" image, with cat-like eyes and blood-red coloration, whereas most other portrayals show it with round pupils like a typical fish, and more generic colors.
1298
1299# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1300# '''TropeMaker:''' Documentary media
1301
1302!! Overgrown Herring: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xiphactinus Xiphactinus]]'' *
1303
1304The marine reptiles were not the only large ocean predators of the Mesozoic. Asides from sharks, one of the most infamous was ''Xiphactinus audax'', which roamed Late Cretaceous oceans worldwide (with most fossils being found in North America). At 5–6m/16–20ft, this bony fish is longer than most great white sharks and rivals a small orca in length. Among bony fish alive today, the only ones of comparable size are the most massive -- large sturgeons and the ocean sunfish (or mola mola). It wasn't the biggest bony fish ever though: that honor goes to the Late Jurassic filter-feeder ''Leedsichthys'', known mainly from Europe and estimated to be over 50 feet long.
1305
1306''Xiphactinus'' goes by a lot of names -- informal works often nickname it the "bulldog fish" or the "X-fish", but it also used to be known as "Portheus molossus". ''Xiphactinus audax'' means "courageous sword ray"; the meaning of "Portheus" comes from a [[Myth/GreekMythology Greek mythical character]], but "molossus" refers to an early breed of mastiff. Indeed, its protruding lower jaw slightly resembles that of a bulldog; this, together with its long-pointed teeth, clearly indicates it was a predator. Like most modern bony fish, it swallowed and sucked its prey whole -- [[BigEater some of which were nearly half its size]]! Its behavior in life could have been comparable to modern species of large, fast-moving predatory fish, like tuna -- actively pursuing prey, but it's uncertain if it lived in shoals or was solitary. Like large modern bony fish, it arguably had external fertilization and lied a huge number of tiny unshelled eggs (sharks have internal fertilization, their eggs have a keratinous "shell" and are bigger and less numerous). ''Xiphactinus'' belonged to a Mesozoic-exclusive group of bony fish called the ichthyodectiforms, most of which superficially resembled tarpons and lived very similar lifestyles to ''Xiphactinus''.
1307
1308''Xiphactinus'' has appeared in quite a few documentary media, most notably ''Series/SeaMonsters'' and ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet''. Both series depict the fish hunting and feeding on the mans-sized swimming bird ''Hesperornis'', with the former show also having it fall victim in turn to the dominant marine reptiles of the Cretaceous (especially large mosasaurs like ''Tylosaurus''). Despite its reputation as a voracious predator, it's largely ignored in mainstream media, likely because prehistoric bony fish have a pretty "generic fish" look when compared with the other giant sea-dwellers of the past, like marine reptiles, cetaceans, giant sharks, cephalopods, etc.
1309
1310# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
1311# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1312
1313!! Fish Conquer the Land: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eusthenopteron Eusthenopteron]]'' *
1314
1315First described in 1881 from fossils found in Canada, this early relative of lungfish and the coelacanth is classically mentioned in paleo-books coupled with ''Ichthyostega'' to show how vertebrates came onto land for the first time. Living in the Late Devonian about 385 mya, the long-named ''Eusthenopteron'' means "good strong fin". Its shape recalled a bit that of the famous ur-"amphibian" above, but smaller (60cm), with fleshy paired fins instead of true legs, classically fishy dorsal and anal fins, and a curious three-lobed caudal fin reminiscent of [[Myth/GreekMythology Poseidon]]'s trident. It even had labyrinthic teeth, underlining its affinity with the first tetrapods and extinct amphibians. It's frequently depicted in paleoart as being able to breathe air and crawl out of the water like a lungfish, but [[ScienceMarchesOn newer research]] suggests it was a strictly aquatic animal -- the more derived ''Panderichthys'' that lived about 5 million years later in Latvia (discovered 1941) ''was'' able to do the above. Like lungfish, its fry very probably underwent metamorphosis, but unlike them, the adults were scaly like a coelacanth).
1316
1317Its almost-identical relative ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyneria Hyneria]]'' was much bigger (3-4m long), and [[BiggerIsBetter because of its size]] was chosen by ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' producers instead of the better-known ''Eusthenopteron'' as the representative of its group. However, it's shown only to provide a predator to the ''Ichthyostega'' relative ''Hynerpeton'', and with no mention at all of its role as one of the forerunners of land vertebrates (despite even showing it crawling onto land to pursue ''Hynerpeton'', which it likely was not able to in real life, given what we now know): in effect, it was eating its descendant!
1318
1319# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
1320# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1321
1322!! Fish or Shellfish?: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalaspis Cephalaspis]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pteraspis Pteraspis]]'' *
1323
1324''Cephalaspis'' and ''Pteraspis'' are perhaps the two most-depicted members of the ostracoderms in paleo-media -- at least, non-fictional media. The ostracoderms were an informal (non-scientific) grouping of armored fish that looked a bit like tiny bony fish at a glance -- that is if today's minnows and guppies wore crash helmets. In actuality, their closest living relatives are lampreys and hagfish, and likewise, they lacked jaws. This last trait differentiates them from the also-armored placoderms, which were among the first jawed vertebrates.
1325
1326''Cephalaspis'' ("head shield") and ''Pteraspis'' ("wing shield") both lived during the Early Devonian, with their fossils being extremely numerous and widespread. These were totally harmless creatures -- ''Pteraspis'' was only about 20 cm long, while ''Cephalaspis'' was about as big as a trout. And whereas their modern cousins, the lampreys and hagfish, are parasites and scavengers, these were inoffensive filter-feeders, with ''Cephalaspis'' using its flat, shovel-shaped head to sift through muck and ''Pteraspis'' swiftly swimming in the water column with ease, thanks to its narrow and pointy head.
1327
1328''Cephalaspis'' and ''Pteraspis'' are the namesakes of two major groups of ostracoderms, Cephalaspidomorphi and Pteraspidomorphi. Ostracoderms thrived in the Early Paleozoic, first appearing in the Ordovician and going extinct at the end of the Devonian. ''Cephalaspis'' appears in ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' as the protagonist, of the ''[[AnachronismStew Silurian]]'' segment, escaping the claws of giant "scorpions" and migrating into freshwater to spawn like salmon -- the last behavior is entirely speculative, no to mention highly unlikely, given that ''Cephalaspis'' was a slow swimmer compared with most modern fish.
1329
1330# '''Entry Time:''' Uncertain
1331# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media
1332
1333!! Other prehistoric fish
1334
1335Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for ''Coelacanthus'', ''Mawsonia'', ''Dipterus'', ''Palaeoniscum'', ''Hybodus'', ''Stethacanthus'', ''Helicoprion'', ''Climatius'', ''Bothriolepis'', ''Coccosteus'', ''Arandaspis'', ''Drepanaspis'', ''Birkenia'', ''Haikouichthys'', the Conodonts, and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures here]].
1336
1337[[/folder]]
1338
1339----
1340
1341!Prehistoric Invertebrates
1342
1343It's uncommon to see prehistoric invertebrates in Fictionland, but some are so common in ancient rocks (even cropping up in fossil markets and shops, as well as popular paleo-books and magazines) that they've become familiar to the public nonetheless.
1344
1345[[folder:Invertebrates in Media]]
1346
1347!! The First successful Invertebrates: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilobite Trilobites]] ***
1348
1349Some things have had more impact than others. Trilobites are among them. Their [[http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trilobites extreme abundance]] in the fossil record had made them index fossils: that is, Paleozoic rocks can be easily recognized ''just because'' they almost certainly contain at least one trilobite.
1350
1351As a group, trilobites lived through the whole Paleozoic era, but became rarer and rarer after the Devonian, and none survived the devastating Permian mass extinction: thus, they might be taken as the Paleozoic's unofficial symbol. Trilobites were arthropods, and though their appearance could lead to them being confused with woodlice or horseshoe crabs, they were closely not related to any modern arthropod groups.
1352
1353"Trilobite" means "three lobes". Their bodies were divided into three parts: the head, the segmented thorax, and the telson (the scute at the rear end of the body). But their flattened bodies also show three parts in the longitudinal sense, the middle segment and the two lateral ones [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trilobites_main_morphological_groups.svg (like this)]]. They had many pairs of legs (up to 100), one pair of antennae, many pairs of gills, and two, usually large, compound eyes similar to those of insects; trilobites were among the first creatures capable of seeing images. They fulfilled many ecological niches: some lived on the bottom, some were active swimmers, some were scavengers, some were predators, some ate plankton, and some even crawled onto land. There's even speculation that ''parasitic'' trilobites existed! They also came in a variety of sizes, ranging from being shorter than a human finger to 3ft/90cm long. Some were equipped with unusual features and defenses, including horns, spikes, and eyestalks; a few were even able to curl up for protection, like pillbug woodlice do. Baby trilobites were identical to the adults, and like modern crustaceans, they shed their exoskeletons to grow. Of the 10 orders of trilobites known to science, the most frequently presented in media are the phacopids, which are probably what usually appear in your head when you think "trilobite".
1354
1355In fiction, trilobites can often be seen in underwater visuals, usually as ambient animals that skitter about on the ocean floor. They might even show up in the Mesozoic alongside dinosaurs, despite having actually gone extinct millions of years before the first dinosaurs. They're much more common in older works, where they tend to be used as an indicator of "prehistoric" -- for example, in the original ''Film/Godzilla1954'', a living trilobite is found in one of Godzilla's footprints, indicating his origins to the characters.
1356
1357# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1358# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media.
1359
1360!! The Symbol of the Mesozoic: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonite Ammonites]] ***
1361
1362Is there anyone who hasn't seen those spiral stony shells emerging from the surrounding rocks? Ammonites, more technically ammonoids, have always been among the most iconic fossil invertebrates, together with the trilobites. They originated in the Paleozoic during the Early Devonian, only reaching their prime in the Dinosaur Age. They went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous alongside the nonbird dinosaurs, marine reptiles, and pterosaurs, when the asteroid struck. Ammonites are cephalopods, related to octopuses and squids -- although it resembles an ammonite, the modern nautilus is not descended from them, being part of an older group of shelled cephalopods called the nautiloids (we'll get to them later).
1363
1364Despite the abundance of their shells, their soft bodies are only rarely preserved and poorly known. They had ten tentacles, a beak, a small siphon for jet propulsion, and even an ink sac. Given that they were more closely related to octopuses and squids than to nautiluses, it's likely that their tentacles had suckers and that they had complex eyes to see images (nautiluses lack either trait). Many were excellent swimmers, but others were slow-moving bottom-dwellers. Their diets likely varied from species to species, with some being active hunters and others being filter feeders. Their hard shells were excellent protection against predators, as shown by some ammonites with marks of teeth left by ichthyosaurs or mosasaurs which tried to break the shell in vain. Like nautiluses, their shells also let them function like miniature submarines, with small chambers they could fill with water or empty to control bouyancy and depth. Ammonites laid their eggs in coastal shallows and produced planktonic larvae, which made them extremely vulnerable to the devastating effects of the asteroid that ended the Cretaceous -- unlike nautiluses, which lay their eggs on the deeper seafloor and have babies that look just like tiny adults. Most ammonites were no bigger than a human hand, but some were as big as tractor tires. Many ammonite genera end with ''-ites'', ex. ''Ceratites'', ''Goniatites'', and so on, while many others end in ''-ceras'': ''Dactylioceras'' is one.
1365
1366In media, ammonites are always shown with the classic curly, laterally-flattened shell; these are known as homomorph ammonites. During the Cretaceous however, some ammonites showed unusual forms; these are called hetereomorph ammonites, all within the group Ancyloceratina. Some had loosely uncoiled shells, some had u-shaped shells, some had spiny tower-like shells, some just had straight shells, and others had shapes so bizarre they must be seen to be believed. ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet''s second season shows off a small handful of these, but [[https://twitter.com/satoshikawasaki/status/1243374402386808833 this Japanese artist gives us even more!]] No one is certain how these ammonites lived; none were likely to have been fast animals, and they may have been either bottom-dwellers, jellyfish-like free-floaters, or mostly stationary animals.
1367
1368Ammonites, like trilobites, are common as ambient animals in paleo-media, though their presence in Mesozoic works at least makes more sense seeing as they were ''extremely'' common back then and their fossils are among the most commonly found. So common, in fact, that like the Paleozoic trilobites, individual ammonite species are used as "index fossils" for the Mesozoic, with their presence in layers of rock denoting specific geological time zones.
1369
1370# '''Entry Time:''' Unknown
1371# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media.
1372
1373!! The First Giant Flyer: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meganeura Meganeura]]'' **
1374
1375Popularly referred to as a "giant dragonfly", ''Meganeura'' ("big nerve", a reference to its heavily-veined wings) was in fact a part of a related group of insects, Meganisoptera (formerly called Protodonata), informally known as "griffinflies". Actual dragonflies and damselflies belong to the group Odonata, and while ''Meganeura'' was extremely similar to them, its lineage has been extinct for over 250 million years.
1376
1377''Meganeura'''s most iconic quality was its size. With a wingspan like a crow (not like an [[BiggerIsBetter eagle]] as is sometimes said), ''Meganeura'' has been called the largest-known true insect of all time (millipedes like ''Arthropleura'' are not insects), although in reality, it had some larger relatives, such as ''Meganeuropsis''. As stated above, ''Meganeura'' had the same shape as modern dragonflies, with a slender body, huge eyes with excellent vision, short antennae, powerful mandibles, and two pairs of independent-moving wings; it would have likely been a very powerful flyer, perhaps as fast as many modern birds.
1378
1379''Meganeura'' lived in the swamp-forests of Late Carboniferous Europe alongside the giant millipede ''Arthropleura'' (below), while its bigger cousin ''Meganeuropsis'' lived in the Early Permian of North America -- this still makes ''Meganeura'' the earliest known GiantFlyer. Unlike ''Arthropleura'', ''Meganeura'' was carnivorous and fed on smaller insects, catching them with spiny legs (like dragonflies) and tearing into their flesh with large mandibles (unlike dragonflies, which have much smaller, less visible mouthparts). ''Meganeura'' and ''Arthropleura'' were usually safe from the predators of the time: the millipede's armor and the griffinfly's agility protected them against giant amphibians and large fish. Fossils of ''Meganeura'' nymphs are known too, and like modern dragonfly nymphs, they were fierce aquatic predators.
1380
1381In media, ''Meganeura'' is more common than its land-bound neighbor ''Arthropleura''. Like trilobites and ammonites, ''Meganeura'' tends to be an ambient animal in fiction, that exists mostly to emphasize a prehistoric setting. Older works tend to portray ''Meganeura'' as living [[AnachronismStew alongside dinosaurs]], despite the fact that it had already died out long before the dinosaurs arrived on the scene. A good example is in the first ''[[Franchise/JurassicPark Jurassic Park]]'' novel, where a cloned ''Meganeura'' is present in the park. This is despite the fact ''Meganeura'' went gone extinct long before mosquitoes or even amber would have existed -- mosquitoes and modern conifer trees appeared only in the Mesozoic, meaning the only way they could have possibly cloned a ''Meganeura'' is if it was living alongside dinosaurs.
1382
1383# '''Entry Time:''' Undetermined
1384# '''TropeMaker:''' Educational media.
1385
1386!! The Super-Millipede of the Coal Forests: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropleura Arthropleura]]'' **
1387
1388While plenty of regular-sized arthropods existed in the Carboniferous, those guys don't gain much attention in media because: A) they were basically identical to today's insects; and B) BiggerIsBetter. And among the giant arthropods, the biggest of them all was ''Arthropleura''.
1389
1390''Arthropleura'' ("articulated side") was a 2.5m/8ft long millipede, the biggest known land arthropod of all time (one group of aquatic arthropods, the eurypterids, produced even bigger forms -- we'll get to them in a bit) It was also well-armored, to the point that it could be considered a living tank. But like modern millipedes, it was an inoffensive herbivore that fed on the rotting vegetation abundant in the swamp-forests of Late Carboniferous Europe and North America. ''Arthropleura'' wouldn't have resembled a millipede at first glance: wide and flattened, it more resembled an overgrown trilobite, although there are modern millipedes with a rather similar body shape, albeit obviously much smaller. Its fossil tracks are a common find in Carboniferous rock, looking like miniature railways. We don't know if it was able to rear up like a cobra as portrayed in ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' and ''Series/PrehistoricPark'', given its weight.
1391
1392So why did land arthropods reach [[BigCreepyCrawlies such a large size]] in the Carboniferous? The common explanation goes like this: the oxygen content at the time was much greater than in every other period, and the respiratory system of insects and land arthropods prevents them from growing very large (over a certain size, they just can't breathe) -- as a result, the upper limit an insect can grow to depends on the quantity of oxygen in the atmosphere, and more oxygen —> bigger size. However, this has been called into question, as ''Meganuera'', ''Arthropleura'', and the rest all first appeared ''before'' the oxygen levels rose to ridiculous levels ''and'' survived into the Permian when oxygen levels nosedived. The new theory is that they were simply able to get massive due to a lack of competition with large terrestrial vertebrates: once the first large land animals evolved, the giant ground-based arthropods went extinct, while large flying insects continued into the Triassic, vanishing shortly after the appearance of the first flying vertebrates -- the pterosaurs.
1393
1394Despite this critter's size and appearance, ''Arthropleura'' historically got little presence in the media, outside of books on prehistoric life. However, after it appeared on ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'', it quickly became a common sight in documentaries about life before the dinosaurs and other prehistory-themed pop culture. The most noteworthy appearance of an ''Arthropleura'' in a non-educational work was ''Series/{{Primeval}}'', which [[RuleOfCool instead]] decided to portray it as a giant venomous ''centipede''.
1395
1396# '''Entry Time:''' 2005
1397# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters''
1398
1399!! Ancient Sea Critters: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterygotus Pterygotus]]'' & ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cameroceras Cameroceras]]'' *
1400
1401Today, marine invertebrates are by far the most diverse animals on Earth: almost ''every'' zoological phylum is represented in the oceans, just like in the past. Among Paleozoic sea invertebrates (apart from trilobites and the earliest ammonites), the eurypterids and nautiloids are the most iconic in docu-media.
1402
1403Eurypterids are popularly known as "sea scorpions", but are not true scorpions, or even arachnids -- rather, they are cousins of both arachnids and horseshoe crabs (which, while we're at it, aren't crabs or any other kind of crustacean). They did look a bit like scorpions though -- if scorpions evolved lived to underwater, that is. They had large compound eyes with excellent vision, lobster-like bodies, and six pairs of limbs; they also had two respiratory systems -- one for breathing underwater and another able to breathe air. The second set, combined with fossil trackways, tells us they were likely able to come onto land for brief periods, possibly to breed. Like trilobites, the babies resembled miniature adults and grew by moulting their exoskeletons. Two main groups exist: the free-swimming eurypterines (whose last pair of limbs became swimming paddles) and the bottom-dwelling stylonurines (which had spidery legs) -- the former were active predators, the latter bottom-feeders. First appearing in the Middle Ordovician, they ruled the oceans as top predators until the evolution of jawed fish, which almost completely outcompeted the eurypterines in the Devonian and forced the stylonurines to move inland and evolve into freshwater animals. The last eurypterines died out in the Early Permian, while the stylonurines were killed off in the colossal Permian mass extinction.
1404
1405The most famous eurypterids are the Middle Silurian-Late Devonian pterygotid eurypterines, which could reach over 2m in length -- the biggest arthropods of all time (the smallest eurypterids were as big as paperclips!). The namesake and most famous of the pterygotids (or "seraphims") was the 1.7m-long ''Pterygotus'' ("the finned one" or "the winged one"). Like all pterygotids, ''Pterygotus'' had lobster-like claws on its first pair of limbs and a paddle-shaped tail -- adaptations for life as a powerful, fast-moving predator of the water column able to compete with early jawed fish. [[BiggerIsBetter Being among the biggest]] and [[RuleOfCool fiercest of its kind]], ''Pterygotus'' is a popular inclusion in docu-media about the Paleozoic: it memorably appeared in ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' as the top predator of the Silurian, ambushing the giant, aquatic ''true'' scorpion ''Brontoscorpio'' to feed its babies.
1406
1407Unlike the trilobites, eurypterids, and ammonites, nautiloids are still alive in today's world in the form of the chambered nautilus found in the deeper waters of the Indo-Pacific. As cephalopods, nautiloids were likely the ancestors of the ammonites and coeloids (octopus and squid): they likewise have tentacles, a beak, and a siphon for jet propulsion. However, compared to ammonites and coeloids, they have much simpler eyes with poor vision, up to a hundred small tentacles without suckers (rather than just eight or ten), and no ink sac. And while their chambered shells are easily mistaken for those of ammonites (and serve the same purpose of defense and buoyancy), nautiloids have simple smooth walls to their chambers while ammonites have wrinkled, curved walls: also, an ammonite's siphon forms under the animal's tentacles, while a nautiloid's is in the middle of them. And whereas coeloids and ammonites produced numerous planktonic young, nautiloids produce few young, and they resemble tiny versions of the adults. Nautiloids first appeared in the Late Cambrian, but were most numerous during the Ordovician and Silurian: they entered a steady decline in the Devonian due to competition with ammonites and coeloids -- in the Oligocene and Miocene, their numbers crashed until only the modern species remained. For a long time, their Cenozoic near-extinction was attributed to the oceans getting colder, but in 2022, new research revealed the evolution of seals also played a role: seals eat shelled prey by biting on and sucking/shaking the soft-bodied animal out, and the decline of nautiloids worldwide coincides with the arrival of seals in the area -- there are no seals found in the places the modern nautilus inhabits.
1408
1409Although the modern nautilus possesses a helix-shaped shell, many Paleozoic nautiloids possessed long, straight shells resembling ice cream cones. These nautiloids are dubbed "orthocones", and the most oft-depicted form is the Ordovician-Silurian genus ''Cameroceras'' ("chambered horn"). Popularly nicknamed the "giant orthocone", many paleo-books and documentaries will tell you that ''Cameroceras'' was the largest of all nautiloids, up to 9m/30ft in length. This interpretation most famously appeared in ''Series/SeaMonsters'', feeding on sea scorpions and giant trilobites. ''However'', this is no longer considered a valid interpretation -- as it turns out, those alleged 9m/30ft ''Cameroceras'' specimens actually belonged to a different genus, the already-known ''Endoceras'', and were in fact only 6m/20ft. Today, ''Cameroceras'' is now believed to have been about 1m/3ft long: although some experts think that ''Endoceras'' and ''Cameroceras'' are the same, potentially allowing the latter to regain its title. Regardless of identity, the giant orthocone was doubtlessly a formidable predator and certainly the biggest animal to have ever lived up to that point in Earth's history. The last orthocones vanished during the Triassic, leaving only their spiral-shelled brethren today, the very last of an over 400-million-year-old lineage.
1410
1411# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined for ''Pterygotus''; 2003 for ''Cameroceras''
1412# '''TropeMaker:''' educational books (''Pterygotus''); ''Series/SeaMonsters'' (''Cameroceras'')
1413
1414!! Unshelled or Shelled?: the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belemnite Belemnites]] *
1415
1416The fossils of many marine invertebrates are so common and widespread that before they were understood to be the petrified remains of long-gone animals, people made up all sorts of stories about them. Ammonites, for instance, were believed to be stony horns ("ammonite" comes from Amun, an Ancient Egyptian deity who was often portrayed with rams' horns), or petrified snakes -- some folks even sculpted snake heads on the shells' extremities to make them look like more serpentine! The lesser-known belemnites (technically belemnitids), with their straight pointed shape, were believed to be stony arrows, or even the Devil's fingers!
1417
1418Belemnites were a group of cephalopods exclusive to the Mesozoic era: like their ammonite contemporaries, only their shells are usually preserved. This shell was straight, arrow-shaped, and ''inside'' the animal's body, invisible in life; belemnites would resemble simple squid or cuttlefish if alive today, and indeed, they are part of the same group that contains modern octopus, squid, and cuttlefish -- the coeloids. Note that squids and cuttlefish have internal shells too (octopuses have lost them entirely), but this is a much simpler structure than in belemnites: almost entirely gone in the squids' case. Additionally, the belemnite's body extends beyond the fins, whereas a squid's fins form at the very end of the body. Most belemnites were highly active animals adapted for moving at high speed in the open ocean, and they were able to do the same things modern squid do: spraying ink, swimming using the lateral "fins", catching prey with their suckers, seeing complex images with their eyes. Unlike squids however, belemnites went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous alongside the ammonites when the asteroid struck. In popular media, belemnites tend to be shown as ambient animals for prehistoric placements, but it's not uncommon to hear them referred to as proper squids, which they weren't. And despite appearances, they were not the ancestors of squids either, bur rather the most primitive branch of the coeloid family tree.
1419
1420# '''Entry Time:''' undetermined
1421# '''TropeMaker:''' educational media
1422
1423!! The First Predator of the Seas: ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomalocaris Anomalocaris]]'' *
1424
1425About 540 million years ago, the "Cambrian Explosion" occurred, marking the sudden appearance of a staggering variety of complex lifeforms -- some of the first-ever animals. And among the "wonderful life" that emerged in this era, the most famous of all is ''Anomalocaris'' ("odd shrimp"). This, of course, is because [[BiggerIsBetter it was one of the largest animals of the Cambrian]] and [[RuleOfCool among the earliest examples of a large apex predator]]
1426
1427Living in the shallow seas that cover what is now Canada (alleged Chinese specimens have since been reclassified as relatives), ''Anomalocaris'' means "anomalous shrimp": this name reveals a singular RealLife case of MixAndMatchCritter. Initially, the name was invented in 1892 for one of its "arms", which was mistaken for the tail of a shrimp. Then, its circular mouth and body were found separately, each of them believed in turn to have been distinct organisms: the mouth was first described as a jellyfish named ''Peytoia'', while the body was thought to be a sea cucumber named ''Laggania''. In 1966 however, scientists found new fossils showing that the "three" animals were actually fragments of one bigger animal, with ''Anomalocaris'' taking priority. However, the original ''Peytoia'' and ''Laggania'' fossils have since turned out to belong to a related animal that has kept the ''Peytoia'' name (''Anomalocaris''' mouth, while similar in shape, was structured slightly differently).
1428
1429Like many "Cambrian Explosion" lifeforms, ''Anomalocaris'' was an extremely early member of a modern phylum -- in this case, the arthropods. Specifically, ''Anomalocaris'' was a member of the Dinocardids. And like a lt of its fellow "Cambrian Explosion" animals, it looked like something from another planet -- it had a soft body with numerous lateral "fin-like structures in place of articulated legs to swim above the seafloor, compound eyes on stalks, a pair of mustache-like "arms" at the front of its head (the alleged "shrimps" that gave it its name), and a circular mouth on the underside of its head with "teeth" placed in a circular fashion like [[LampreyMouth a lamprey]] (this was the alleged jellyfish).
1430
1431''Anomalocaris'' gets a lot of hype in docu-media as "the first SeaMonster", but at only 56cm/2ft long, it would have been very harmless by today's standards. Nonetheless, ''Anomalocaris'' and many of its relatives were the biggest and fiercest animals of their day -- twelve to six times larger than their prey. Bizarre, finger-sized animals like ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Hallucigenia]]'', ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Pikaia]]'', ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Wiwaxia]]'', and ''[[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures Opabinia]]'' (the last one also a dinocardid) were hunted by ''Anomalocaris'', which would have snatched them with its "arms" and sucked them into its maw. In fact, it's quite possible that the evolution of predatory dinocardids set up the important role of predators in ecology and evolution, driving animals to evolve a variety of defenses or to directly compete with their predators and each other.
1432
1433While the strange animals of the "Cambrian Explosion" are a staple of palaeo-books, ''Anomalocaris'' is the only one that has made to make regular appearances in popular media, such as ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'', where its size is exaggerated to that of a human! Interestingly, "Cambrian Explosion" lifeforms are extremely popular in Japan (''Hallucigenia'', for instance, plays a major role in ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' as part of the eponymous giants' origin story), and ''Anomalocaris'' is again the most popular. For example, the {{Franchise/Pokemon}} Anorith and its evolved form Armaldo are based on it, while franchise rival ''{{Franchise/Digimon}}'' features Anomalocarimon. Evidently, Japan's love for the bizarre extends even to extinct animals!
1434
1435# '''Entry Time:''' Early 2000s
1436# '''TropeMaker:''' ''Series/WalkingWithMonsters'' and ''{{Franchise/Pokemon}}''
1437
1438
1439!! Other prehistoric invertebrates
1440Sorry, these aren't here. If you're looking for prehistoric crustaceans, rudists, brachiopods, bryozoans, cystoids, blastoids, graptolites, chalcicordates, nummulites, and others, see [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeOtherExtinctCreatures here]].
1441[[/folder]]
1442

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