Ballusia
482482
Ballusia (Ballusia (Stehlin 1917))
Ballusia elmensis
Ballusia orientalis
Ballusia zhegalloi
Ballusia hareni
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Dimensions: length - 80 cm, height - 30-40 сm, weight - 9-25 kg
Temporal range: the Miocene of Europe and Asia (20.5-18 Ma)
Ballusia is a genus of primitive bear from the Early Miocene epoch. It was were smaller than most living bear species: fossil remains of the species B. orientalis indicate an animal about the size of a domestic cat with body proportions similar to a wolverine, while B. elmenensis were the size of a Eurasian lynx.
Fossil remains attributed to the genus have been uncovered in Europe and Asia. The genus Ballusia was established in 1998 on the basis of different fossils originally classified as various species of the genera Ursavus and Hemicyon, with B. elmensis as the type species. The exact relationship of Ballusia to "true" bears (subfamily Ursinae, which include modern bears) are not yet fully understood: many palaeontologists have classified it as a primitive member of Ursinae, but its known skeletal elements have some features in common with the extinct bear subfamily Hemicyoninae. Because of this, some researchers refer Ballusia as "Ursidae incertae sedis". Ginsburg and Morales regarded B. elmenensis as ancestral to Ursavus as did Marciszak and Lipecki, even though the temporal range of the two genera seems to have overlapped.
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Ballusia (Ballusia (Stehlin 1917))
Ballusia elmensis
Ballusia orientalis
Ballusia zhegalloi
Ballusia hareni
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Dimensions: length - 80 cm, height - 30-40 сm, weight - 9-25 kg
Temporal range: the Miocene of Europe and Asia (20.5-18 Ma)
Ballusia is a genus of primitive bear from the Early Miocene epoch. It was were smaller than most living bear species: fossil remains of the species B. orientalis indicate an animal about the size of a domestic cat with body proportions similar to a wolverine, while B. elmenensis were the size of a Eurasian lynx.
Fossil remains attributed to the genus have been uncovered in Europe and Asia. The genus Ballusia was established in 1998 on the basis of different fossils originally classified as various species of the genera Ursavus and Hemicyon, with B. elmensis as the type species. The exact relationship of Ballusia to "true" bears (subfamily Ursinae, which include modern bears) are not yet fully understood: many palaeontologists have classified it as a primitive member of Ursinae, but its known skeletal elements have some features in common with the extinct bear subfamily Hemicyoninae. Because of this, some researchers refer Ballusia as "Ursidae incertae sedis". Ginsburg and Morales regarded B. elmenensis as ancestral to Ursavus as did Marciszak and Lipecki, even though the temporal range of the two genera seems to have overlapped.