Latest Trending
Last Updated, Jun 18, 2023, 9:00 AM
A Bear That Looked Like a Raccoon and Had a Dangerous Appetite


Some 30 million years ago, a primitive bear roamed near a river in what is now North Dakota. A male, he probably looked like a raccoon and might have eaten like an otter. An inspection of the curious critter’s skeleton provides details of the animal’s brief, and likely painful, life and clues about the evolution of early carnivores.

Paleontologists excavated the fossil of the bear in 1982. “It’s a fabulous specimen that is just exquisitely preserved,” said Xiaoming Wang, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. The skeleton includes the baculum, a penis bone found in many mammals that is rarely preserved. In an article published earlier this month in The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Dr. Wang’s team noted details of the creature’s features from his teeth to the tips of his toes.

“This animal is really telling us a lot of stories,” he said, adding that his team also found five other members of this species in nearby sediments.

Based on comparisons with animals living and extinct, Dr. Wang’s team placed the creature early in the evolution of mammalian carnivores, a group that includes the dog family and catlike and bearlike animals. From this specimen’s relatively large molars, the scientists could tell that it belonged to the arctoids, a vast group of carnivores that includes bears, seals, skunks, raccoons, weasels and otters. The arctoids also share a common ancestor with dogs. This animal, though, was not the ancestor of modern bears. “It’s a small side branch, but it’s a very important side branch,” Dr. Wang said.

Dr. Wang’s team named the animal Eoarctos vorax. Referring to the lineage’s evolutionary antiquity, “Eoarctos” combines Greek words for dawn and bear. “Vorax” means voracious, nodding to an appetite that may have gotten the best of this creature.

From snout to tail, the Eoarctos vorax was about two feet long. Many of his skeletal features resemble those of raccoons, Dr. Wang said. With claws that were longer and sharper than the modern dumpster divers, Eoarctos would have been adept at climbing trees and perhaps at using that ability to escape from predators. Though its ancestors would have dwelled in trees, this creature was likely terrestrial. Its relatively flat feet would have allowed him to walk long distances.

In past decades, paleontologists thought that arctoids emerged in Europe. But researchers are “making a strong case that, in fact, these groups originated in North America,” said Blaire Van Valkenburgh, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who was not part of the study.

The Eoarctos seems to be one of the earliest carnivores capable of crushing hard objects, such as bones. A dental exam revealed the animal had broken teeth in the back of his mouth on the right side of his jaw, which most likely became infected. Then, before healing, he used the left side and damaged those teeth also. “Those are the broken off roots,” Dr. Van Valkenburgh said. Some of the other individuals also lost teeth in similar fashion. “They must have been eating very hard things,” she said.

Dr. Wang’s team suspects that Eoarctos munched on mollusks in prehistoric North Dakota’s rivers, crushing their shells as otters do. Because of his small skull, only around four inches long, the bones of potential prey seem unlikely to cause the sort of damage the Eoarctos sustained, though Dr. Van Valkenburgh wondered if he could have been eating fruit with hard pits.

The chomping of such hard foods seems like a rather specialized way of eating. “That in itself is kind of interesting,” Dr. Van Valkenburgh said. At the time of the dawn bear, mammals were starting to fill the holes in ecosystem roles left by the demise of dinosaurs 35 million years prior. It takes a long time for the diversity of organisms that we have today to evolve, she added.

Eating might have ultimately been what did this animal in. By analyzing the relatively unworn teeth of the complete Eoarctos specimen, Dr. Wang’s team could tell that this male died young, possibly because of a blood infection caused by his injuries. The double jaw injury would have been incredibly painful, Dr. Wang said, and the creature would have suffered for weeks or months.

“But for all of his suffering, he certainly made a huge contribution to science,” Dr. Wang said.

24World Media does not take any responsibility of the information you see on this page. The content this page contains is from independent third-party content provider. If you have any concerns regarding the content, please free to write us here: contact@24worldmedia.com

Latest Post

Common Mistakes When Using Athletic Field Tarps

Last Updated,Jun 5, 2024

High-Performance Diesel Truck Upgrades You Should Consider

Last Updated,May 14, 2024

Warehouse Optimization Tips To Improve Performance

Last Updated,May 6, 2024

Fire Hazards in Daily Life: The Most Common Ignition Sources

Last Updated,Apr 30, 2024

Yellowstone’s Wolves: A Debate Over Their Role in the Park’s Ecosystem

Last Updated,Apr 23, 2024

Earth Day 2024: A Look at 3 Places Adapting Quickly to Fight Climate Change

Last Updated,Apr 22, 2024

Millions of Girls in Africa Will Miss HPV Shots After Merck Production Problem

Last Updated,Apr 18, 2024

This Lava Tube in Saudi Arabia Has Been a Human Refuge for 7,000 Years

Last Updated,Apr 17, 2024

Four Wild Ways to Save the Koala (That Just Might Work)

Last Updated,Apr 15, 2024

National Academy Asks Court to Strip Sackler Name From Endowment

Last Updated,Apr 12, 2024

Ways Industrial Copper Helps Energy Production

Last Updated,Apr 11, 2024

The Ins and Out of Industrial Conveyor Belts

Last Updated,Apr 10, 2024