Oldest Horse Brains: More Advanced Than Previously Realized
- 5 November 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 194 (4265) , 626-627
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.790567
Abstract
Previous interpretations of early horse brains were based on an incorrectly identified fossil endocast, now believed to be from a condylarth. Newly prepared endocasts of Hyracotherium, the oldest horse and one of the earliest perissodactyls, reveal a relatively larger brain, with a more expanded neocortex, than existed in the condylarth ancestors of perissodactyls. Fifty million years ago, horse brains had suprasylvian, ectolateral, and lateral sulci, but the frontal lobe was undeveloped.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evolution of the Felid Brain; pp. 214–228Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 1975
- Evolution of the Canid Brain; pp. 169–185Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 1973
- Paleocene Hyracothere from Polecat Bench Formation, WyomingScience, 1969
- The Adaptive Radiation of the Phenacodontid Condylarths and the Origin of the PerissodactylaEvolution, 1966