Fig. 124.—Head of Horned †Toxodont (†Trigodon gaudryi). Pliocene of Monte Hermoso. Restored from a skull in the Ameghino collection.
2. Miocene
North America.—Upper Miocene beds cover extensive areas of the Great Plains region and are scattered from Montana far into Mexico. The rich fauna is an outgrowth and development of that of the middle Miocene, with but few immigrant additions and, on the other hand, passes so gradually into that of the lower Pliocene, that any line of separation between them is very difficult to draw. The rodents, numerous as they are among the fossils, are almost certainly very incompletely represented in the collections; the families are almost all still in existence, but nearly every genus is extinct, and thus the vernacular names used to designate them must be understood in a broad sense. Hares, mice, pocket-gophers, squirrels, marmots, beavers and the extraordinary †mylagaulids were all abundant.
In even more strongly marked sense must the broad meaning for the vernacular names of the other mammals be emphasized, for we have to deal almost exclusively with extinct genera, which differed much from their modern descendants. Many of the Carnivora have been obtained; there were numerous dogs, some rivalling the largest of existing bears in size, true felines and †sabre-tooth tigers, which were smaller and lighter animals than the great beasts of the Pleistocene; weasels, martens, otters and raccoons, but no bears. The bears, a family of Old World origin, are not certainly known in America before the Pleistocene, but had probably reached this continent in the Pliocene.
As is so very generally true, the commonest and best-preserved of the fossils are those of the hoofed animals. The †mastodons were of the four-tusked kind (†Gomphotherium or †Trilophodon), the skull and teeth of which differed so markedly from those of the true elephants. The relatively small, low-crowned and simple grinding teeth were common to all the †mastodons, but the tusks were different from those of the larger members of the group. The upper tusks were comparatively short and nearly straight and retained a band of enamel, while the lower tusks were still shorter, chisel-shaped and so worn as to prove that they were regularly used, no doubt in cropping leaves; the shortness of these lower tusks was compensated for by the great elongation of the lower jaw. The head was proportionately broad and low and, for Proboscidea, these were small animals, not more than five or six feet high at the shoulder. The body, limbs and feet had already attained substantially their modern grade of structure, advance among the Proboscidea being chiefly restricted to the teeth and skull.
Fig. 125.—†Teleoceras fossiger, a short-legged rhinoceros, with small nasal horn; lower Pliocene and upper Miocene of Nebraska. Restored from a skeleton in the American Museum of Natural History.
Four families of Perissodactyla were represented in the upper Miocene. The rhinoceroses, which were very abundant, were present in considerable variety; some were hornless, others had a single small horn on the end of the nose. Among these rhinoceroses there was much difference in bodily proportions, some being extremely heavy, with very short legs and feet, and these were the commonest, while others had longer legs and less massive bodies. Tapirs, on the contrary, would seem to have been scantily represented; at least, they are rare among the fossils. The extraordinary, aberrant †chalicotheres, perissodactyls with claws instead of hoofs, still persisted, but are far better known from the lower Miocene, in connection with which they will be described. The dominant perissodactyl family was that of the horses, of which no less than five genera are already known. There were some with very low-crowned teeth, which must have fed principally by browsing upon leaves and such soft diet; but the grazing kinds, which had high-crowned, cement-covered and very complex grinding teeth, had come to the fore. Still retaining three toes in each foot, with the middle toe so enlarged as to bear nearly the entire weight, save in snow or soft ground, these eminently cursorial animals, which had the slender limbs of a deer, must have roamed the plains in great herds.