Notiomastodon Temporal range: , 1.81–0.78 Ma |
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Restoration | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Proboscidea |
Family: | Gomphotheriidae |
Genus: |
†Notiomastodon Cabrera, 1929 |
Species | |
N. platensis |
N. platensis
Notiomastodon is an extinct genus of proboscidean endemic to South America during the from 1.810 Ma—780,000 years ago, living for approximately 1.019 million years.
Notiomastodon platensis is known from MECN 82, a 35-year-old male that was 2.52 metres (8.3 ft) tall and weighed 4.4 tonnes (4.3 long tons; 4.9 short tons). It had two tusks on either side of a trunk like other members of Gomphotheriidae. Its apparent range was the central to southern continent with fossils recovered in Tarija Province, Bolivia. It would have probably shared its habitat with Haplomastodon based on genus age of existence and geography.
Their diet consisted mainly of C3 and C4 grass.
Notiomastodon was named by Cabrera (1929). It is not extant. It was assigned to Gomphotheriidae by Carroll (1988).