''Uintatherium'' ("Beast of the
Uinta Mountains") is an extinct genus of
herbivorous mammal
Mammals () are a group of vertebrate animals constituting the class Mammalia (), characterized by the presence of mammary glands which in females produce milk for feeding (nursing) their young, a neocortex (a region of the brain), fur or ...
that lived during the
Eocene epoch. Two species are currently recognized: ''U. anceps'' from the
United States during the Early to Middle
Eocene (56–38 million years ago) and ''U. insperatus'' of Middle to Late
Eocene (48–34 million years ago)
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
.
Description
''Uintatherium'' was a large
browsing animal. With a skull long, tall at the shoulder,
body length of about and a weight up to 2
tonnes, it was similar to today's
rhinoceros, both in size and in shape. Its legs were robust to sustain the weight of the animal and were equipped with hooves.
Moreover, a Uintathere's
sternum was made up of horizontal segments, unlike today's rhinos, which have compressed vertical segments.
Skull

Its most unusual feature was the
skull, which is both large and strongly built, but simultaneously flat and concave: this feature is rare and, apart from some
brontotheres, not regularly characteristic of any other known mammal. Its
cranial cavity
The cranial cavity, also known as intracranial space, is the space within the skull that accommodates the brain. The skull minus the mandible is called the ''cranium''. The cavity is formed by eight cranial bones known as the neurocranium that in ...
was exceptionally small due to the walls of the cranium being exceedingly thick. The weight of the skull was mitigated by numerous
sinuses permeating the walls of the cranium, like those in an
elephant's skull.
The large upper
canine teeth might have served as formidable defensive weapons,
[ and superficially resembled those of saber-toothed cats. Sexually dimorphic, the teeth were larger in males than in females. However, they also might have used them to pluck the aquatic plants from marshes that seem to have comprised their diet.
The skulls of the males bore six prominent knob-like ossicones that grew from the frontal region of the skull at high.][ The function of these structures is unknown. They may have been of use in defense and/or sexual display.
]
Discovery and taxonomy
Fossils of ''Uintatherium'' were first discovered in the Bridger Basin
Bridger may refer to:
*Bridger (name)
*Bridger Aerospace (company), headquartered in Montana, United States
Places
In the United States:
* Bridger, Montana, town in Carbon County
* Bridger, Gallatin County, Montana, census-designated place
** Br ...
near Fort Bridger by Lieutenant W. N. Wann in September 1870 and were later described as a new species of ''Titanotherium'', ''Titanotherium anceps'', by Othniel Marsh in 1871. The specimen (YPM 11030) only consisted of several skull pieces, including the right parietal horn, and fragmentary postcrania. The following year, Marsh and Joseph Leidy collected in the Eocene Beds near Fort Bridger while Edward Cope, Marsh's competitor, excavated in the Washakie Basin. In August 1872, Leidy named ''Uintatherium robustum'' based on a posterior skull and partial mandibles (ANSP 12607). Another specimen discovered by Leidy's crews consisting of a canine was named ''Uintamastix atrox'' and was thought to have been a saber-toothed and carnivorous.
Eighteen days after the description of ''Uintatherium'', Cope and Marsh both named new genera of Uinta Dinoceratans, Cope naming ''Loxolophodon'' in his "garbled" telegram and Marsh dubbed ''Tinoceras''. Due to ''Uintatherium'' being named first, Cope and Marsh's genera are synonymous with ''Uintatherium''. Cope described two genera in his telegram, ''Loxolophodon'' and '' Eobasileus''; the latter is currently considered separate from ''Uintatherium''. ''Tinoceras'' was a new genus made for ''Titanotherium anceps'' by Marsh. Several days later, Marsh erected the genus ''Dinoceras''. ''Dinoceras'' and ''Tinoceras'' would receive several additional species by Marsh throughout the 1870s and 1880s, many based on fragmentary material. Several complete skulls were found by Cope and Marsh crews, leading to theories like Cope's proboscidean assessment. Because of Cope and Marsh's rivalry, the two would often publish scathing criticisms of each other's work, stating their respective genera were valid. The trio would name 25 species now considered synonymous with Marsh's original species, ''Titanotherium anceps'', which was placed in Leidy's genus, ''Uintatherium''.
Many additional discoveries of ''Uintatherium'' have since occurred, making ''Uintatherium'' one of the best-known and popular American fossil mammals. Princeton University launched expeditions to the Eocene beds of Wyoming in the 1870s and 1880s, discovering several partial since skulls and naming several species of Uintatheres that are now considered synonyms of ''U. anceps''. Major reassesment came in the 1960s by Walter Wheeler who synonymized and re-described many of the ''Uintatherium'' fossils discovered during the 19th century A cast of a ''Uintatherium'' skeleton
A skeleton is the structural frame that supports the body of an animal. There are several types of skeletons, including the exoskeleton, which is the stable outer shell of an organism, the endoskeleton, which forms the support structure inside ...
is on display at the Utah Field House of Natural History State Park. The skeleton of ''Uintatherium'' is also on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC. A new species was named based on almost intact skull, ''U. insperatus,'' found in the lower part of the Lushi Formation of the Lushi Basin in Henan Province, China.
References
Further reading
Academy of Natural Sciences
Wood, Horace Elmer 1923, The problem of the Uintatherium molars, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History ; v. 48, article 18
{{Taxonbar, from=Q131558
Dinoceratans
Eocene mammals of North America
Fossil taxa described in 1872
Taxa named by Joseph Leidy
Paleontology in Wyoming
Paleontology in Utah
Paleontology in Henan
Prehistoric placental genera