Hyracodontidae
Hyracodontidae is an extinct family of rhinoceroses endemic to North America, Europe, and Asia during the Eocene through early Miocene living from 55.8—20 mya, existing for approximately 35.8 million years.
They are typified as having long limbs and having no horns. These animals were initially modest in size and fast moving, having evolved from smaller members of Rhinocerotoidea during the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene. They later evolved into gigantic forms that included the largest terrestrial mammals ever to have lived (the Indricotheriinae or Paraceratheriinae).
Hyracodonotidae thrived in the rainforests of Kazakhstan, Pakistan, and southwest China, a former coastal region.
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Paraceratherium
phylum | Chordata | Paraceratherium, also commonly known as Indricotherium or Baluchitherium is an extinct genus of gigantic hornless rhinoceros-like mammals, endemic to Eurasia and Asia during the Oligocene epoch. It is regarded as the largest land mammal known and was first discovered in 1910 in Balochistan of what is now Pakistan.
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class | Mammalia | |
infraclass | Eutheria | |
order | Perissodactyla | |
family | Hyracodontidae | |
genus | Paraceratherium | |
Temporal range | Oligocene |