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LOT 0030

Smit Original Early Drawing of a Hyænodon

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SMIT, Joseph (1836-1929).
Hyænodon.
Original Illustration in pen, ink and grey wash, heightened in white.
c.1905-1912.
10 5/8" x 7 1/4" sheet.

Original artwork for Henry R. Knipe's Nebula to Man. Illustrated on page 133.

Hyaenodon ("hyena-tooth") is the type genus of the Hyaenodontidae, a family of extinct carnivorous fossil mammals from Eurasia, North America, and Africa, with species existing temporally from the late Eocene until the middle Miocene, existing for about 26.1 million years.

The various species of Hyaenodon competed with each other and with other hyaenodont genera (including Sinopa, Dissopsalis, and Hyainailurus), and played important roles as predators in ecological communities as late as the Miocene in Africa and Asia and preyed on a variety of prey species such as primitive horses like Mesohippus and early camels. Species of Hyaenodon have been shown to have successfully preyed on other large carnivores of their time, including a nimravid ("false sabretooth cat"), according to analysis of tooth puncture marks on a fossil Dinictis skull found in North Dakota.

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USA, New York, NY
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[ translate ]

SMIT, Joseph (1836-1929).
Hyænodon.
Original Illustration in pen, ink and grey wash, heightened in white.
c.1905-1912.
10 5/8" x 7 1/4" sheet.

Original artwork for Henry R. Knipe's Nebula to Man. Illustrated on page 133.

Hyaenodon ("hyena-tooth") is the type genus of the Hyaenodontidae, a family of extinct carnivorous fossil mammals from Eurasia, North America, and Africa, with species existing temporally from the late Eocene until the middle Miocene, existing for about 26.1 million years.

The various species of Hyaenodon competed with each other and with other hyaenodont genera (including Sinopa, Dissopsalis, and Hyainailurus), and played important roles as predators in ecological communities as late as the Miocene in Africa and Asia and preyed on a variety of prey species such as primitive horses like Mesohippus and early camels. Species of Hyaenodon have been shown to have successfully preyed on other large carnivores of their time, including a nimravid ("false sabretooth cat"), according to analysis of tooth puncture marks on a fossil Dinictis skull found in North Dakota.

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Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
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Time, Location
12 Jun 2021
USA, New York, NY
Auction House
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