Mammutids Temporal range: Miocene - Holocene, 28.4–0.011 Ma |
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Mounted mastodon skeleton, Museum of the Earth | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Proboscidea |
Clade: | Elephantimorpha |
Suborder: |
†Mammutida Shoshani et al., 1998 |
Superfamily: |
†Mammutoidea Hay, 1922 |
Family: |
†Mammutidae Hay, 1922 |
Genera | |
†Eozygodon Tassy and Pickford, 1983 |
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The inferred range of the Mammutidae |
†Eozygodon Tassy and Pickford, 1983
†Losodokodon Rasmussen & Gutiérrez, 2009
†Zygolophodon Vacek, 1877
†Mammut Blumenbach, 1799
†Sinomammut Mothé et al., 2016
Mammutidae is an extinct family of proboscideans that first appeared during the Miocene epoch, and eventually died out by the start of the Holocene. The family was first described in 1922, classifying fossil specimens of the type genus Mammut (mastodons), and has since been placed in various arrangements of the order. The name 'mastodon' derives from Greek, μαστός "nipple" and ὀδούς "tooth", as with the genus, to indicate a characteristic that distinguishes them from allied families. The genus Zygolophodon has also been assigned to this family. Mammutids ranged very widely, as fossils are found in North America, Africa, and throughout Eurasia.
In August 2008, miners in Romania unearthed the skeleton of a 2.5-million-year-old mastodon, believed to be one of the best preserved in Europe. Ninety percent of the skeleton's bones were intact, with damage to the skull and tusks. In 2009, a family in Portland, Michigan, unearthed mastodon bones while excavating a new pond on their property. It is one of around 250 mastodons found in Michigan over the past century.
The first excavation to discover mastodon fossils in Elmacık village in Burdur province, Turkey, took place in 2006. As of July 2009, six mastodon fossils have been discovered in the village.
In August 2011, a skeleton of a mastodon was found near Tomislavgrad in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In November 2011, a mastodon skeleton was unearthed in Daytona Beach, Florida, during construction of a retention pond. The find is being studied by the Daytona Beach Museum of Arts and Sciences.