Victoriaceros is an extinct genus of elasmotheriine rhinoceros known from the Miocene of Maboko Island, Kenya.
GENUS
via GBIF
Victoriaceros is an extinct genus of elasmotheriine rhinoceros known from the Miocene of Maboko Island, Kenya.
==Discovery== Victoriaceros is known from the holotype, an almost perfectly preserved skull, which characterized mainly by the large nasal horn, an orbit located very anteriorly and with a prominent border, and very broad zygomatic arches. Numerous limb bones, probably belonging to only a few individuals, are also known. Specimens of Victoriaceros were collected in the middle Miocene site of Maboko located in Lake Victoria in Kenya, from the Maboko beds, dating to about 15 million years ago. Victoriaceros represents the most common taxon in the Maboko beds, which has yielded one of the best collections of rhinoceroses in Africa. Teeth and skull morphology suggest that Victoriaceros belongs to subfamily Elasmotheriinae, whose might be not monophyletic. A second species, Victoriaceros hooijeri, was named in 2016 from the Kisiringi locality in Western Kenia.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).