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The largest land mammal that ever lived


Written for everyone fascinated by the huge beasts that once roamed the earth, this book introduces the giant hornless rhinoceros, Indricotherium. These massive animals inhabited Asia and Eurasia for more than 14 million years, about 37 to 23 million years ago. They had skulls 6 feet long, stood 22 feet high at the shoulder, and were twice as heavy as the largest elephant ever recorded, tipping the scales at 44,100 pounds. Fortunately, the big brutes were vegetarians. Donald R. Prothero tells their story, from their discovery just a century ago to the latest research on how they lived and died.


Preface
1. Quicksand!
2. 30 Million Years Ago in Asia
3. "New Conquest of Central Asia"
4. Rhinoceroses without Horns
5. Building a Giant
6. What's in a Name?
7. Life among Giants
Bibliography
Index

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Date de parution

09 mai 2013

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780253008268

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

2 Mo

Rhinoceros Giants
Life of the Past
James O. Farlow, editor
Rhinoceros Giants
The Paleobiology of Indricotheres
Donald R. Prothero
Indiana University Press
Bloomington and Indianapolis
This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press
601 North Morton Street
Bloomington, Indiana 47404-3797 USA
iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders 800-842-6796
Fax orders 812-855-7931
2013 by Donald R. Prothero
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Prothero, Donald R.
Rhinoceros giants : the paleobiology of Indricotheres / Donald R. Prothero.
pages cm. -- (Life of the past)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-253-00819-0 (cloth : alk. paper) -- ISBN 978-0-253-00826-8 (eb) 1. Indricotherium--Asia, Central. 2. Paleobiology--Asia, Central. 3. Paleontology--Eocene. I. Title.
QE882.U6P76 2013
569 .66--dc23
2012036059
1 2 3 4 5 17 16 15 14 13
This book is dedicated to the memory of
Dr. Malcolm C. McKenna
and
Dr. Richard H. Tedford
for all their contributions to our understanding of the evolutionary history of mammals.
Frontispiece. The life-sized reconstruction of Paraceratherium, here shown on display at Morrill Hall at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln (the reconstruction now resides in Gering, Nebraska). To the right are modern African elephants for scale, and in the center is a reconstruction of the running rhino Hyracodon, from which indricotheres evolved. (Photo courtesy University of Nebraska State Museum.)
Behold now the behemoth that I have made with you; he eats grass like cattle. Behold now his strength is in his loins and his power is in the navel of his belly. His tail sways like a cedar; the sinews of his thighs are knit together. His limbs are as strong as copper, his bones as a load of iron.
- Job 40:15-18
CONTENTS
Preface
1. Quicksand!
The New Conquest of Central Asia
The Real Indiana Jones ?
Osborn and Granger
Into the Gobi Desert
2. Giant Hunters
Pilgrim s Progress
Forster Cooper s Finds
Borissiak and the Russian Giants
Monsters of the Middle Kingdom
The Giant Hunting Continues
3. Lands of the Giants
Beasts of Baluchistan
Monsters of Mongolia
Mysteries of Kazakhstan
Talking Turkey
4. Rhino Roots
Rhinos without Horns
Rhino Radiation
Hyracodonts and Indricotheres
5. What s in a Name?
Systematics and Taxonomy
Rules of the Road
How Many Different Kinds of Giants Were There?
6. Building a Giant
Dry Bones
Putting Flesh on the Skeletons
Constraints on Giants
Weight Problems
7. Paradise Lost
Greenhouse of the Dinosaurs
The Big Chill
La Grande Coupure
Remodeling Mongolia
Where Have All the Giants Gone?
Bibliography
Index
Preface
This book is the culmination of over thirty-five years worth of research on fossil rhinoceroses, beginning with my first introduction to the Frick and American Museum collections in 1976. I thank Dr. Earl Manning for introducing me to the fossil rhino collections at the American Museum and Dr. Michael O. Woodburne and the late Drs. Malcolm C. McKenna and Richard H. Tedford for all they have taught me over the years. I thank my colleagues Drs. Spencer Lucas, Pierre-Olivier Antoine, Mikael Fortelius, Kurt Heissig, Claude Gu rin, and Deng Tao for all their help and efforts in understanding rhinoceros evolution and Drs. Brian Kraatz and Jonathan Geisler for their new insights into Gobi stratigraphy.
The idea for this book emerged from discussions with Dr. James Farlow. I thank Bob Sloan, Angela Burton, Mary Blizzard, and Michelle Sybert at Indiana University Press for all their help in producing the book. I thank Carl Buell for his gorgeous cover art. I thank many colleagues for lending me images; they are acknowledged in the appropriate places throughout the book. I thank Pierre-Oliver Antoine, Mikael Fortelius, James Farlow, Spencer Lucas, and Juha Saarinen for their helpful reviews of the manuscript. The author designed and laid out the entire book in QuarkXpress 9.3.1 software.
Finally, I thank my amazing wife, Dr. Teresa LeVelle, and my wonderful sons, Erik, Zachary, and Gabriel, for their love and support during the writing of this book on my sabbatical in 2011.
Donald R. Prothero La Crescenta, California August 2012
Rhinoceros Giants
Figure 1.1. The American Museum Mongolian expedition, with its Dodge cars and hundreds of camels, near the Flaming Cliffs of Mongolia. (From Andrews, 1932, Plate LV.)

1
Quicksand!
The New Conquest of Central Asia
In 1922, the American Museum of Natural History in New York City sponsored one of the most ambitious scientific expeditions ever attempted. Led by the legendary explorer Roy Chapman Andrews (1884-1960), the expedition traveled to China and Mongolia with a huge caravan of seventy-five camels (each carrying 180 kg or 400 pounds of gasoline and other supplies), three Dodge touring cars and two Fulton trucks, and a large party of scientists, guides, and helpers ( Fig. 1.1 ). The party included not only Andrews, but also paleontologist Walter Granger (1872-1941), a veteran of many fossil-hunting expeditions in the U.S. and elsewhere, who had prior experience hunting fossils in China. There were also two geologists (Charles P. Berkey and Frederick K. Morris) and many other assistants to drive the trucks and cars and camels, cook the food and set up the camp, and act as guides and interpreters.
The expedition was sent by famous paleontologist and American Museum Director Henry Fairfield Osborn (1857-1935) to find important fossils from Central Asia. Osborn believed that Asia was the center of origin of most mammal groups, including humans, and could contain the legendary Missing Link that was long predicted by biologists and paleontologists. Osborn used this argument not only to authorize the expedition, but also to raise funds from his many rich friends who were donors or trustees of the Museum. Osborn told Andrews, The fossils are there. I know they are. Go and find them.
Andrews provided a colorful and detailed account of all the expeditions in his massive volume with a very un-politically correct imperialist title, The New Conquest of Central Asia. One of the most incredible finds of all occurred in the third field season (1925), as described by Andrews (1932, pp. 279-280):
The credit for the most interesting discovery at Loh belongs to one of our Chinese collectors, Liu Hsi-ku. His sharp eyes caught the glint of a white bone in the red sediment of the steep hillside. He dug a little and then reported to Granger who completed the excavation. He was amazed to find the foot and lower leg of a Baluchitherium STANDING UPRIGHT, just as if the animal had carelessly left it behind when he took another stride. Fossils are so seldom found in this position that Granger sat down to think out the why and wherefore. There was only one possible solution. Quicksand! It was the right hind limb that Liu had found; therefore, the right front leg must be farther down the slope. He took the direction of the foot, measured off about nine feet, and began to dig. Sure enough, there it was, a huge bone, like the trunk of a fossil tree, also standing erect. It was not difficult to find the two limbs of the other side, for what had happened was obvious. When all four legs were excavated, each one in a separate pit, the effect was extraordinary [ Fig.1.2 ]. I went up with Granger and sat down upon a hilltop to drift in fancy back to those far days when the tragedy had been enacted. To one who could read the language, the story was plainly told by the great stumps. Probably the beast had come to drink from a pool of water covering the treacherous quicksand. Suddenly it began to sink. The position of the leg bones showed that it had settled slightly back upon its haunches, struggling desperately to free itself from the gripping sands. It must have sunk rapidly, struggling to the end, dying only when the choking sediment filled its nose and throat. If it had been partly buried and died of starvation, the body would have fallen on its side. If we could have found the entire skeleton standing erect, there in its tomb, it would have been a specimen for all the world to marvel at.
I said to Granger, Walter, what do you mean by finding only the legs? Why don t you produce the rest? Don t blame me, he answered, it is all your fault. If you had brought us here thirty-five thousand years earlier, before that hill weathered away, I would have the whole skeleton for you! True enough, we had missed our opportunity by just about that margin. As the entombing sediment was eroded away, the bones were worn off bit by bit and now lay scatted on the valley floor in a thousand useless fragments. There must have been great numbers of baluchitheres in Mongolia during Oligocene times, for we were finding bones and fragments wherever there were fossiliferous strata of that age.
Although Andrews storytelling skills are vivid, his account of the quicksand is a bit too much like the Hollywood movie version, rather than one based on reality. Fake quicksand in movies sucks the victim down in minutes until he or she is completely submerged. Real quicksand is a slurry of sand and water that remains fairly firm and solid until you disturb it. Then the water between the sand grains is mobilized, and it becomes what is known as a flui

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