Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper provides the first detailed description of the only known postcranial skeletal elements of “Miacis” uintensis. The morphology of the skeleton differs markedly from previously described “miacids” (a paraphyletic assemblage of early fossil carnivoramorphans), invalidating the notion that all “miacids” were very similar in their postcranial morphology and locomotor styles. The majority of the differences indicate an animal less well adapted to an arboreal lifestyle than has been inferred for other early “miacid” carnivoramorphans. A phylogenetic analysis clearly nests “Miacis” uintensis within the paraphyletic array of taxa previously referred to as the “Miacidae,” in a position closer to the crown clade Carnivora than is Vulpavus, a “miacid” whose postcranium has been previously described. When compared with the early canid Hesperocyon, this specimen shares many features thought to relate to the acquisition of a more terrestrial mode of life. This result indicates that, in contrast to prior models suggesting arboreality for all “miacids,” at least one independent ‘descent from the trees’ occurred much earlier within the array of stem carnivoramorphan taxa.

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