This page is a copy of a previously deleted hoax article. It is almost definitely incorrect or misleading in many parts, if not in its entirety. It has been copied here solely for the purpose of documenting hoaxes on Wikipedia, in order to improve our detection and understanding of them. Please do not create hoaxes on Wikipedia. If you do, you may be blocked from editing. |
Mustelodon is an extinct
carnivore, which belongs to the family
Viverravidae, a group of stem
Carnivoramorpha. This genus contains only one species, Mustelodon primerus. Fossils of this
mammal were found in the 57 million years old deposits of Lago Nandarajo, near the northern border of
Panama in
Central America.
Mustelodon had a length of approximately 80 cm (head to tail) and this carnivore superficially resembled the modern mongooses. Mustelodon fed on fruits, insects and smaller mammals like shrews. It is closely related to the more famous Protictis from the Paleocene of the United States (Wannagan Creek - South Dakota, San Juan Basin - New Mexico).
[[Category:Viverravids]]
[[Category:Paleocene mammals]]
[[Category:Paleocene mammals of North America]]
=
{{paleo-carnivora-stub}}
This page is a copy of a previously deleted hoax article. It is almost definitely incorrect or misleading in many parts, if not in its entirety. It has been copied here solely for the purpose of documenting hoaxes on Wikipedia, in order to improve our detection and understanding of them. Please do not create hoaxes on Wikipedia. If you do, you may be blocked from editing. |
Mustelodon is an extinct
carnivore, which belongs to the family
Viverravidae, a group of stem
Carnivoramorpha. This genus contains only one species, Mustelodon primerus. Fossils of this
mammal were found in the 57 million years old deposits of Lago Nandarajo, near the northern border of
Panama in
Central America.
Mustelodon had a length of approximately 80 cm (head to tail) and this carnivore superficially resembled the modern mongooses. Mustelodon fed on fruits, insects and smaller mammals like shrews. It is closely related to the more famous Protictis from the Paleocene of the United States (Wannagan Creek - South Dakota, San Juan Basin - New Mexico).
[[Category:Viverravids]]
[[Category:Paleocene mammals]]
[[Category:Paleocene mammals of North America]]
=
{{paleo-carnivora-stub}}