- Quinkana
Taxobox
name = "Quinkana"
fossil_range = LateOligocene -Pleistocene
image_caption = "Quinkana fortirostrum"
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Sauropsida
ordo =Crocodilia
familia = Crocodylidae
subfamilia =Mekosuchinae
genus = "Quinkana"
genus_authority = Molnar, 1981
subdivision_ranks = Species
subdivision =
* "Q. fortirostrum" Molnar, 1981 (type)
* "Q. babarra" Willis & Mackness, 1996
* "Q. timara" Megirian, 1994
* "Q. meboldi" Willis, 1997"Quinkana" is an
extinct genus of mekosuchine crocodile that lived inAustralia from ~24 million years ago to ~40,000 years ago. By thePleistocene "Quinkana" had become on of the top terrestrial predators of Australia, possessing long legs and ziphodont teeth (lateromedially compressed, recurved and serrated). "Quinkana" comes from the "Quinkans", an legendary folk from Aboriginal myths.Species
The species within "Quinkana" include: the
type species "Q. fortirostrum" fromQueensland of thePliocene and Pleistocene, "Q. babarra" from Queensland of the Early Pliocene, "Q. timara" from theNorthern Territory of the MiddleMiocene , and "Q. meboldi" from Queensland of the LateOligocene .Appearance
The older species ("Q. meboldi" and "Q. timara") were small in size (about 2 meters) compared to the large Plio-Pleistocene species which evolved. "Quinkana fortirostrum" has been estimated to have exceeded 5 m in length, making it at the time one of Australia's largest predators, surpassed in size by the giant
monitor lizard , "Megalania " ("Varanus priscus").Closely related species
"Quinkana" is a genus within the subfamily
Mekosuchinae . Other genera included in this family are: "Australosuchus ", "Baru ", "Kambara ", "Mekosuchus ", "Pallimnarchus " and "Trilophosuchus ".References
* Willis, P.M.A. & Mackness, B. (1996). "Quinkana babarra", a new species of ziphodont mekosuchine crocodile from the early Pliocene Bluff Downs Local Fauna, Northern Australia, with a revision of the genus." "Proceedings and Journal of the Linnean Society of New South Wales" 116: 143-151
External links
* [http://www.lostkingdoms.com/facts/factsheet55.htm Australia's Lost Kingdoms]
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