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Brains of early carnivores

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2016

Leonard Radinsky*
Affiliation:
Anatomy Department, University of Chicago; Chicago, Illinois 60637

Abstract

It is commonly believed that the brains of the ancestors of modern carnivores (miacids) were superior to (e.g., larger than) those of other early carnivores (creodonts and mesonychids). Examination of the fossil record of brains of early carnivores reveals no evidence to support that belief. Moreover, evolutionary trends towards increasing relative brain size and an expansion of neocortex are seen in both miacids and creodonts. The neocortex expanded in a different way in miacids than in creodonts and mesonychids (evidenced by different sulcal patterns), but the biological significance of the observed differences is unknown.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

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