Helohyidae


Helohyidae are a group of extinct artiodactyl mammals. They lived mainly in the mid-to-upper Eocene, although some fossils were found in land in the upper Oligocene.

Description

These animals had to look vaguely like small, slim-bodied pigs. They possessed prominent canines and molars with bunodont cuss; the dental wreaths were bulging and the enamel was wrinkled. The upper molars were usually squared, due to the enlargement and displacement of the metaconule, but there was also a small hypoconno, but there was also a small hypoconsque; the paracholo was reduced and there was no mesostil. The lower molars increased the size as they proceeded to the bottom of the jaw, and the paraconid was small or absent. Some forms possessed small diathemes that separated the premolars from each other. The snout was usually elongated, but in some forms ascribed to this family it was very short. Compared to other primitive artiodactyls such as dichobunids, the eloids possessed higher sagittali ridges; the genus Achaenodon, in particular, possessed a large sagittal crest and its size was much larger than those of other eloiids.

Classification

The Helohyidae family was established by Marshall in 1877, to accommodate some forms of early artiodactyl mammals of the American Eocene. In addition to the genus Helohyus, the North Americans Dyscritochoerus, Parahyus and Achaenodon were later ascribed to this family. Other forms come from the Upper-Middle-East Eocene of Asia.
Eloiids have been variously classified as relatives of archaic dichobunids or as close to the origin of anthrachotheds. The current opinion is to classify them as relatives of the dichobunids.