- Source: Panochthus
Panochthus is an extinct genus of glyptodont, which lived in the Gran Chaco-Pampean region of Argentina (Lujan, Yupoí and Agua Blanca Formations), Brazil (Jandaíra Formation), Bolivia (Tarija and Ñuapua Formations), Paraguay and Uruguay (Sopas and Dolores Formations) during the Pleistocene epoch.
It could reach 3 metres (9.8 ft) in length and a weight up to 1,500 kilograms (3,300 lb) the upper skull and the body were protected by hemispherical armor composed of hundreds of rounded scales. The tail, short and wedge-shaped, consisted of small bony bands with small spikes used for defense. Preserved tracheal rings are known from one specimen.
Gallery
See also
Doedicurus
References
Further reading
Dinosaur Encyclopedia by Jayne Parsons
Guimarães de Lima, Fábio Cunha; de Oliveira Porpino, Kleberson (2018), "Ectoparasitism and infections in the exoskeletons of large fossil cingulates", PLoS ONE, 13 (10): e0205656, Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1305656D, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0205656, PMC 6193641, PMID 30335796
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Glyptodontidae
- Panochthus
- Glyptodon
- Doedicurus
- Glyptodont
- Glyptotherium
- Cingulata
- Hoplophorus
- Smilodon
- Late Pleistocene extinctions
- Sopas Formation