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Type: Article
Published: 2014-05-08
Page range: 501–513
Abstract views: 30
PDF downloaded: 13

A new species of Shaanxispira (Bovidae, Artiodactyla) from the upper Miocene of China

Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100044, China
Hezheng Paleozoological Museum, Hezheng, Gansu 731200, China
Hezheng Paleozoological Museum, Hezheng, Gansu 731200, China
Linxia Basin China late Miocene Shaanxispira Ovibovini Bovidae

Abstract

A new species of the bovid Shaanxispira, from the upper Miocene deposits of the Linxia Basin, Gansu Province, China, is described here. Shaanxispira is endemic to Northern China and was previously known only from the Lantian area, Shaanxi Province, by two species, S. chowi and S. baheensis. The new species, S. linxiaensis nov. sp., is of early Bahean in age, slightly older than the species from the Lantian area. The horn-cores of the new species are more derived, with large wing-shaped antero-medial keels, suggesting the occurrence of a different lineage of Shaanxispira in the Linxia Basin. Although Shaanxispira has homonymously twisted horn-cores, it is not closely related to other late Miocene bovids with homonymously twisted horn-cores, like Oioceros and Samotragus. Its phylogenetic status is still in debate, but might be more closely related to the late Miocene “ovibovines.”