Skip to content
Category

Whippomorphs

page 1
Whippomorpha
Whippomorpha is a suborder of artiodactyls that contains all living cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises) and the hippopotamids. This makes it a crown group. Whippomorpha is a suborder within the order Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates). The placement of Whippomorpha within Artiodactyla is a matter of some contention, as hippopotamuses were previously considered to be more closely related to Suidae (pigs) and Tayassuidae (peccaries). Most contemporary scientific phylogenetic and morphological research studies link hippopotamuses with cetaceans, and genetic evidence has overwhelmingly sup
Indohyus
Indohyus (meaning "Indian pig", from Greek ινδός, indos, meaning 'Indian' and ὗς, hus, meaning 'pig' or 'swine') is an extinct genus of raoellid artiodactyl known from Eocene fossils in Asia. The fossils were discovered among rocks that had been collected in 1970 in Kashmir by the Indian geologist A. Ranga Rao, who found a few teeth and parts of a jawbone. He named the type and only species, Indohyus indirae, one year later.
Raoellidae
Raoellidae () is a family of extinct semiaquatic artiodactyls from the middle Eocene (early Lutetian) closely related to cetaceans. They are known primarily from northern India and Pakistan, especially in the Subathu Group of India, although potential remains of the raoellid Khirtharia have been found in northern China. They are relatively small animals; on average, raoellids were the size of a red fox. However, Khirtharia major, at about twice the size of an average-sized raoellid, would have been approximately the size of a coyote. Meanwhile, the smallest raoellid, Metkatius, was roughly the
Ancodonta
Ancodonta is an infraorder of artiodactyl ungulates including modern hippopotamus and all mammals closer to hippos than to cetaceans (whales). Ancodonts first appeared in the Middle Eocene, with some of the earliest representatives found in fossil deposits in Southeast Asia. Throughout their evolutionary history they have occupied different browsing and grazing niches in North America, Eurasia and Africa. The last continent is notable as they were among the first laurasiatherian mammals to have migrated to Africa from Europe, where they competed with the native afrothere herbivores for the sam