- to all of these, a less
ambiguous vernacular term for this
group is '
rhinocerotoids'. The
family Paraceratheriidae contains the
largest land
mammals known...
-
Paraceratheriidae is an
extinct family of long-limbed,
hornless rhinocerotoids,
native to Asia and
Eastern Europe that
originated in the
Eocene epoch and...
-
Paraceratherium is an
extinct genus of
hornless rhinocerotoids belonging to the
family Paraceratheriidae. It is one of the
largest terrestrial mammals...
- the rest of the body. Hyracodon's
dentition resembled that of
later rhinocerotoids, but it was a much
smaller animal and
differed very
little in appearance...
- is a
genus of paraceratheriid, an
extinct group of large,
hornless rhinocerotoids,
which lived during the
middle and late
Oligocene of
northwest China...
-
Aralotherium is an
extinct genus of
hornless rhinocerotoids closely related to Paraceratherium, one of the
largest terrestrial mammals that has ever existed...
- The
Hyracodontidae are an
extinct family of
rhinocerotoids endemic to
North America, Europe, and Asia
during the
Eocene through early Oligocene, living...
-
Forstercooperia is an
extinct genus of
forstercooperiine paraceratheriid rhinocerotoids from the
Middle Eocene of Asia.
Forstercooperia is
known from a vast...
-
Pappaceras is an
extinct genus of
rhinocerotoids from the
Early Eocene of Asia
belonging to Paraceratheriidae. In 1963,
material including a
partial skull...
-
around 12
years of age, four
years after females start giving birth.
Rhinocerotoids diverged from
other perissodactyls by the
early Eocene.
Fossils of Hyrachyus...