Allodesmus kelloggi mounted skeleton measures 120 inches or 10 feet. Allodesmus kelloggi mounted skeleton is museum quality polyurethane cast. Made in the USA. Allodesmus uraiporensis is the scientific name. Our percise skeleton can be used as a teaching tool, museum skeleton exhibit, home decor skeleton, or office decor skeleton. Crate required for shipment. Please call 509-951-3557 for shipping quote.
Allodesmus kelloggi or Allodesmus uraiporensis is an extinct genus of pinniped from the middle to late Miocene of California and Japan that belongs to the extinct pinniped family Desmatophocidae.
Allodesmus or Allodesmus uraiporensis measured about 8 feet long and weighed up to 800 pounds. Miocene Pinniped from Californias Sharks Tooth Hill. Buena Vista Museum of Natural History.
Miocene Sea mammal. California’s Shark’s Tooth Hill. Buena Vista Museum of Natural History. Buena Vista Museum of Natural History. Miocene Pinniped from Californias Sharks Tooth Hill.
Allodesmus or Allodesmus uraiporensis had the specific anatomical features found in modern polygynous pinnipeds: strong canines for fights between bulls and teeth with well-defined growth zones, a result from periodic fasting (in order to defend their harem, males would not take to the sea to feed during the breeding season). Miocene sea mammal from Caliornias Sharks Tooth Hill Bob Ernst Collection.
The fossil record of Allodesmus kelloggi or Allodesmus uraiporensis pinnipeds (seals, fur seals and walruses) is globally distributed, spanning from the late Oligocene to the Holocene.
This record shows a complex evolutionary history that could not otherwise be inferred from their extant relatives, including multiple radiations and iterative ecomorphological specializations among different lineages, many of which are extinct.
Allodesmus sinanoensis and A. packardi were previously assigned separate genera, Megagomphos and Brachyallodesmus, respectively, but many authors questioned this generic distinction, and the cladistic analysis by Boessenecker and Churchill (2018) found no support for this generic scheme.
Atopotarus, referred to Allodesmus kelloggi or Allodesmus uraiporensisby some authors (e.g. Mitchell 1966), is distinct from Allodesmus by the absence of a prenarial shelf and M2, double-rooted cheek teeth, a small, triangular postorbital process, and a mastoid process projecting ventral to the postglenoid process.
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