Equus conversidens
Equus conversidens, or the Mexican horse, is a dubious Pleistocene species of horse, now extinct, that inhabited North America. The holotype of Equus conversidens, a partial palate, was unearthed in Pleistocene deposits northeast of Mexico City, Mexico. In January 1963, a partial skeleton was found in the city of Canyon, Texas in a white clay bed during the excavation of a basement, and was referred to E. conversidens by Dalquest and Hughes (1965), who interpreted the species as medium to small-sized, and added additional records of the species from Texas (including a skeleton from Slaton), Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas and Florida, synonymizing Equus francisci, Equus tau, E. littoralis, E. achates, and E. barcenaei with E. conversidens. However, Winans (1985) and MacFadden (1992)
American Horse (disambiguation)Asinus conversidensEquus (Hemionus) conversidensEquus alaskaeEquus barcenaeiEquus barcenoeiHaringtonhippusKiangList of Perissodactyla taxaList of mammals of North AmericaList of the Cenozoic life of CaliforniaList of the Cenozoic life of ColoradoList of the Cenozoic life of KansasList of the Cenozoic life of MontanaList of the Cenozoic life of NebraskaList of the Cenozoic life of TexasList of the Cenozoic life of UtahList of the Cenozoic life of WyomingList of the prehistoric life of ColoradoList of the prehistoric life of KansasList of the prehistoric life of MontanaList of the prehistoric life of NebraskaList of the prehistoric life of New MexicoList of the prehistoric life of TexasList of the prehistoric life of UtahList of the prehistoric life of WyomingMexican HorseMexican horseOnager zoyatalisPaleobiota of the La Brea Tar PitsPrehistoric PredatorsQuaternary extinctionTimeline of extinctions in the HoloceneWild_New_World
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Equus conversidens
Equus conversidens, or the Mexican horse, is a dubious Pleistocene species of horse, now extinct, that inhabited North America. The holotype of Equus conversidens, a partial palate, was unearthed in Pleistocene deposits northeast of Mexico City, Mexico. In January 1963, a partial skeleton was found in the city of Canyon, Texas in a white clay bed during the excavation of a basement, and was referred to E. conversidens by Dalquest and Hughes (1965), who interpreted the species as medium to small-sized, and added additional records of the species from Texas (including a skeleton from Slaton), Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas and Florida, synonymizing Equus francisci, Equus tau, E. littoralis, E. achates, and E. barcenaei with E. conversidens. However, Winans (1985) and MacFadden (1992)
has abstract
Equus converdidens, edo Mexiko ...... diren fosilak topatu dituzte.
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Equus conversidens Owen 1869, ...... ra de tamaño medio a pequeño.
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Equus conversidens ist eine du ...... ie Beibehaltung des Artstatus.
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Equus conversidens, or the Mex ...... nostic besides its small size.
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Het Mexicaans paard (Equus con ...... oceen leefde in Noord-Amerika.
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Wikipage page ID
31,695,000
page length (characters) of wiki page
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1,020,405,517
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authority
Owen, 1869
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extinct
yes
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genus
Equus
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parent
Incertae sedis/Equus
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species
conversidens
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synonyms
*Asinus conversidens
*Equus b ...... Onager zoyatalis (Mooser 1959)
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wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
hypernym
type
comment
Equus converdidens, edo Mexiko ...... diren fosilak topatu dituzte.
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Equus conversidens Owen 1869, ...... ra de tamaño medio a pequeño.
@es
Equus conversidens ist eine du ...... se Ansicht, andere argumentier
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Equus conversidens, or the Mex ...... s (1985) and MacFadden (1992)
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Het Mexicaans paard (Equus con ...... oceen leefde in Noord-Amerika.
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label
Equus conversidens
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Equus conversidens
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Equus conversidens
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Equus conversidens
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Mexicaans paard
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