Eleutherornis
Eleutherornis Temporal range: Eocene
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E. cotei material from Switzerland | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Cariamiformes |
Family: | †Phorusrhacidae |
Subfamily: | † Psilopterinae
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Genus: | †Eleutherornis Schaub, 1940 |
Species: | †E. cotei
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Binomial name | |
†Eleutherornis cotei (Gaillard, 1936)
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Synonyms | |
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Eleutherornis cotei is a medium-sized (estimated to be 1.5 meters tall)
Discovery
The partial remains of this bird were discovered in France near Listeu, a municipality of the metropolis of Lyon and Switzerland in Egerkingen in the canton of Solothurn. They were reviewed and described in 2013 by Delphine Angst and his colleagues under the name of Eleutherornis.[2][1]
Description
It is a medium-sized phorusrhacid, with a height of about 1.50 meters that shows a combination of basal and derivative characters. Tarchlea of tarsometatarsus II is enlarged in its middle part as in psilopterines, while the pre-acetabulary of the ilium is more compressed laterally and more ventilated with neural spines of the synsacral vertebrae than in psilopterines, and thus recalls more the more evolved phorusrchacids.[1]
Geography
It is the only known phorusrhacid in Europe and one of the few species of this family identified outside the Americas,[3] although Lavocatavis described in 2011 from Algeria, but whose membership of this family is debated.[4]