The Skull of Quadruped and Bipedal Vertebrates. Djillali Hadjouis

The Skull of Quadruped and Bipedal Vertebrates - Djillali Hadjouis


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limbs in open environments or stocky animals evolving in soft environments with snowy or sandy territories.

      The vast sample that makes up the European forms of caballine horses (true quaternary horses) has allowed specialists to recognize about 10 species divided into three types. The first type includes stocky horses with small teeth and evolving in a temperate climate. The species that identify this type are Equus taubachensis, Equus germanicus and Equus palustris. The second type includes horses of medium to large size with a short and wide snout and frequenting cold fauna, represented by Equus chosaricus and Equus arcelini. The third type corresponds to medium to large animals, sometimes with shapes that have large teeth in both sizes. This type frequents cold or cool climates: species such as Equus mosbachensis, Equus achenheimensis, Equus steinheimensis and a small horse Equus antunesi, with a narrow snout and slender metapods. Subspecies close to this type have also been recognized in Tautavel (E. mosbachensis tautavelensis) and Lunel-Viel (E. mosbachensis palustris) (Prat 1968; Mourer-Chauviré 1972; Cregut 1980; Eisenmann et al. 1985; Eisenmann 1988, 1991).

      2.1.2. A fossil horse in Africa: paleogeographic and biostratigraphic distributions

      Equus algericus (Bagtache et al. 1984) recognized in the Warthog Aterian deposit (Algiers, Algeria) (Bagtache and Hadjouis 1983; Bagtache et al. 1984; Hadjouis 1993, 2001, 2003a, 2003d; Hadjouis and Le Bihan 2014) was a caballine-type horse, measuring about 1.44 m at the withers, with stocky metapods and teeth with a wide and angular lingual groove and a very asymmetrical double loop typically caballine. It was found in the deposits of Ain Taya and Ain-Benian near Algiers, Oued Djebbana near Tébessa (Hadjouis 1993), Columnata in the Tiaret region (Chaid-Saoudi 1984), and Tit Mellil not far from Rabat (Hadjouis 1993), in Sidi Bou Knadel near Rabat, in El Mughara El Aliya near Tangier (Zouhri and Aouragh 1997) and in the Zouhra Cave in El Harhoura south of Rabat (Aouragh and Débénath 1999; Aouragh 2001); the latter are all dated to the Upper Pleistocene (Hadjouis 2001). Its reported presence at the Moroccan site to Homo erectus in Ain Maarouf near El Hajeb on the basis of a single tooth seems doubtful, especially since all the other Equidae remains have been attributed to the Equus mauritanicus (Geraads and Amani 1997).

      This horse appeared during the Upper Pleistocene and probably corresponding culturally to the Moustero-Aterian periods (Middle North African Paleolithic –32,000 to –16,000). The Algerian horse (E. algericus) was certainly of Euro-Asian origin since no acceptable ancestor in Africa can be found at present; all the Plio-Pleistocene horses of this continent being Stenonian.

      Compared to the Equidae of the Zouhra Cave in Morocco, E. algericus from the Warthog deposit was smaller than the Moroccan form but with similar protoconic indices. As for the European species, we had already mentioned in a previous work (Bagtache and Hadjouis 1983) the similarity in proportions and size of the Algerian horse with Jaurens’ Equus gallicus (early recent Würm (Mourer-Chauviré 1980)), Solutrean (Prat 1968) and the horse from Torralba in Spain (Prat 1977). At the dental level, although the protocones are longer on P3/P4 than on M1/M2, its typological attribution (if this method were applied to vertebrates from Africa (Eisenmann 1991)) would be consistent with type 1, horses from temperate climates such as E. gallicus from Saint-Germain-de-la-Rivière, from Solutré and Combe-Grenal from Würm II (Guadelli 1987).

      2.1.3. The postural balance of Equidae


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