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  • Hassianycteris messelensis SMITH & STORCH, 1981


    Images:

    oilshale

    Taxonomy

    Bat

    Kingdom: Animalia
    Phylum: Chordata
    Class: Mammalia
    Order: Chiroptera
    Family: Hassianycterididae
    Genus: Hassianycteris
    Species: Hassianycteris messelensis
    Author Citation SMITH & STORCH, 1981

    Geological Time Scale

    Eon: Phanerozoic
    Era: Cenozoic
    Period: Paleogene
    Sub Period: None
    Epoch: Eocene
    International Age: Lutetian

    Stratigraphy

    Messel Formation

    Provenance

    Collector: T. Bastelberger
    Date Collected: 06/01/1970
    Acquired by: Field Collection

    Dimensions

    Length: 5.5 cm
    Width: 4 cm

    Location

    Messel Pit
    Messel near Darmstadt
    Hesse
    Germany

    Comments

     

    Prepped by transfer method found in: Toombs, Harry; Rixon, A. E. (1950). "The use of plastics in the ‘transfer method’ of preparing fossils". The Museums Journal. 50: 105–107.

    Picture 1: Body.

    Picture 2: Close up of skull and ear.

    Four bat genera with a total of 8 species are currently known from Messel: Palaeochiropteryx tupaiodonPalaeochiropteryx spiegeliArchaeonycteris trigonodonArchaenycteris pollexTrachypteron franzeniHassianycteris messelensis; Hassianycteris magna and Hassianycteris? revilliodi. The genus Palaeochiropteryx is the most common and smallest bat from Messel with a wingspan of around 26 to 29 cm. Archaeonycteris is rarer and somewhat larger, the wingspan is about 37 cm. The largest bat in Messel is Hassianycteris magna with a wingspan of almost 50 cm.

    Taxonomy according to Fossilworks.

    Diagnosis for Hassianycteris messelensis is from SMITH & STORCH, 1981: “Overall size large (Tab. 1); dental formula I 2/3  C 1/1  P 2(3)/3  M 3/3  = 36 (38), first upper premolar (P 2/ ) absent in messelensis n. sp. and reduced to a tiny spicule in magna n. sp.; third lower premolar (P /4) not molariform, metaconid lacking and taloned short; dentition massive and high; naso-maxillary branch of premaxillary moderately broad, palatal branch not well developed, premaxillaries not fused; nasals long; phalangeal formula (manus) 2, 2, 3, 3, 3; index finger not terminating with claw; fifth metacarpal markedly short compared to third and fourth metacarpals; radius extremely long and characteristically bowed.”

    1444282950_HassianycterisTab1.JPG.a7ec7111bee94900edeedb0ea32a1837.JPG

    Identified by SMITH & STORCH, 1981 (reference number Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg SMF 80/1381; this is one of the paratypes in their publication).

    Reference:

    Smith, J. D. & Storch, G. (1981): New Middle Eocene bats from “Grube Messel” near Darmstadt, W-Germany. Senckenbergiana biologica, 61 (3/4): 153-167. 

    Richter, G. & Storch, G. (1980): Beiträge zur Ernährungsbiologie eozäner Fledermäuse aus der "Grube Messel". Natur und Museum, 110 (12), p. 353-367.




    User Feedback


    All fossils from Eocene German lagerstatte, are, ohne Ausnahme, awesome.

    Thx for the pix!!

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    Holy cow!  What a fossil!!!

     

    RB

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    Those teeth are very nicely preserved!

    @Tidgy's Dad weren't you the bat-lover? :P 

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    Tidgy's Dad

    Posted

    That is astonishing! 

    One of my favourite fossils ever! :wub::wub::wub:

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    Tidgy's Dad

    Posted

    1 minute ago, Foozil said:

    Those teeth are very nicely preserved!

    @Tidgy's Dad weren't you the bat-lover? :P 

    Yup. 

    Love 'em. :wub:

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    12 minutes ago, Tidgy's Dad said:

    Yup. 

    Love 'em. :wub:

    That makes two of us! :D

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    Miocene_Mason

    Posted

    Those messed pits are truly extraordinary! Amazing fossil!

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    I never cease to be amazed at the fine quality of the samples in your collection! It just goes on and on...

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