When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: cat with saber teeth found in car camera

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Smilodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smilodon

    [25] [26] Smilodon is most famous for its relatively long canine teeth, which are the longest found in the saber-toothed cats, at about 28 cm (11 in) long in the largest species, S.populator. [25] The canines were slender and had fine serrations on the front and back side. [27] The skull was robustly proportioned and the muzzle was short and broad.

  3. Machairodontinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machairodontinae

    Machairodontinae is an extinct subfamily of carnivoran mammals of the family Felidae (true cats). They were found in Asia, Africa, North America, South America, and Europe, with the earliest species known from the Middle Miocene, with the last surviving species (belonging to the genera Smilodon and Homotherium) becoming extinct around Late Pleistocene-Holocene transition (~13-10,000 years ago).

  4. Saber-toothed predator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saber-toothed_predator

    Saber-toothed predator. A saber-tooth (alternatively spelled sabre-tooth) is any member of various extinct groups of predatory therapsids, predominantly carnivoran mammals, that are characterized by long, curved saber -shaped canine teeth which protruded from the mouth when closed. Saber-toothed mammals have been found almost worldwide from the ...

  5. Megantereon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megantereon

    The skull, designated D2280, indicates wounds to the occipital matching the dimensions of the sabre-teeth of Megantereon. From the position of the bite marks, it can be inferred that the hominid was attacked from the front and top of the skull, and that the bite was likely placed by a cat which saw the hominid as a threat.

  6. Nimravidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nimravidae

    Nimravidae. Nimravidae is an extinct family of carnivorans, sometimes known as false saber-toothed cats, whose fossils are found in North America and Eurasia. Not considered to belong to the true cats (family Felidae), the nimravids are generally considered closely related and classified as a distinct family in the suborder Feliformia.

  7. Homotherini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homotherini

    Homotherini (Machairodontini) is a tribe (or subtribe) [1] of saber-toothed cats of the family Felidae (true cats). The tribe is commonly known as scimitar-toothed cats.These saber-toothed cats were endemic to North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America [2] from the Miocene to Pleistocene living from c. 23 Ma until c. 12,000 years ago. [3]

  8. Xenosmilus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenosmilus

    Unlike most other saber-toothed cats, all of Xenosmilus ' s teeth were serrated, not just its fangs and incisors. Xenosmilus differs from Homotherium and most other cats in the lack of a gap separating the last incisor tooth and the canine, as well as the loss of the p3 tooth. Notably only the later species of Smilodon have also lost the p3 tooth.

  9. Homotherium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homotherium

    The first fossils of this genus were described in 1846 by Richard Owen as the species Machairodus latidens. [3] The name Homotherium (Greek: ὁμός (homos, 'same') and θηρίον (therion, 'beast')) was proposed by Emilio Fabrini (1890), without further explanation, for a new subgenus of Machairodus, whose main distinguishing feature was the presence of a large diastema between the two ...