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Palaeolagus Rabbit Jaw #1

$15.00

FOSSIL MAMMAL COLLECTION

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Description

  • Palaeolagus haydeni
  • Rabbit
  • Oligocene (25 Million Years Old)
  • Orella Member, Brule Formation
  • Dawes County, Nebraska
  • Specimen measures approx. 3/4″ and comes in the 1.25″ Gem Jar as Shown

Palaeolagus (‘ancient hare’) is an extinct genus of lagomorph.  Palaeolagus lived in the Oligocene period which was about 33-23 million years ago. The earliest leporids described from the fossil record of North America and Asia date to the upper Eocene some 40 million years ago.
The fossil remains of rabbits are scanty and those specimens that have been found are often too fragmentary to determine satisfactory the relationship with living forms. The bones of rabbits and hares are lightweight and fragile in structure, and so they are not easily preserved as fossils. Most of the species are inhabitants of uplands where conditions are not ideal for preservation. In a few deposits, rabbit remains seem numerous but many fossil species are known only from a few teeth and bones.