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Post by brobear on Dec 17, 2020 4:01:33 GMT -5
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemicyon Hemicyon was about 1.5 metres (5 ft) long, and 70 centimetres (28 in) tall, with somewhat tiger-like proportions and carnassal blades on its teeth for cutting meat. Hemicyon is widely accepted to have been hypercarnivorous and highly predaceous. Unlike modern bears, Hemicyon walked on its toes; it was not plantigrade, but digitigrade, with long metapodials. This suggests that Hemicyon must have been an active hunter and a good runner, and presumably hunted by pursuing prey on open ground. In life, the genus would have looked something like a combination of a dog and a bear.
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Post by brobear on Aug 16, 2021 0:43:05 GMT -5
Life reconstruction of Hemicyon sansaniensis
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Post by brobear on Feb 12, 2023 9:17:23 GMT -5
Hemicyon www.prehistoric-wildlife.com/species/h/hemicyon.html Not to be confused with the bear dogs which were dog-like mammals that resembled bears; Hemicyon was what is loosely termed a dog bear, which is a bear that is more dog-like. In simple terms, Hemicyon was more closely related to bears than dogs. Hemicyon had a very important difference between it and other ancestors of the bears and this is that it was digitigrade. This means that Hemicyon walked on its toes with the foot bones serving to extend the length of the leg. Bears today by contrast are plantigrade which means that the full foot is always in contact with the ground as they walk. The advantage of being digitgrade is that with the leg effectively being longer it can cover more ground with each stride, something that suggests that Hemicyon would have been a proportionately faster animal than other primitive bear forms. This speed may have helped it to chase down primitive horses like Merychippus and Hipparion, which were reasonably fast herbivores that had become adapted to the plains environments that were spreading across most of the major continents during the Miocene. With a broad distribution that covered most of the northern hemisphere and a temporal range that covers most of the Miocene period, Hemicyon was undoubtedly a successful genus, but also one that was inevitably doomed to extinction. Just as the bear dogs and dog bears replaced creodonts like Hyaenodon as the dominant predators, they themselves would have been replaced by the more advanced and quite possibly more intelligent ancestors of true dogs as well as big cats that together would have specialised to fill all predatory niches in Cenozoic ecosystems.
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