Epiaceratherium


Epiaceratherium is an extinct genus of rhinocerotid from the mid-late Eocene, Oligocene and Early Miocene of Europe, Asia, and North America.

Taxonomy

The genus was named by paleontologist Othenio Abel in 1910, with the type species being Epiaceratherium bolcense. This species is exclusively known from remains found at Monteviale in northern Italy, dating to the earliest Oligocene. The species Epiaceratherium magnum named by Uhlig, 1999, is known from remains found in Germany, France, Czechia and Switzerland, dating to the Early Oligocene to early Late Oligocene. Remains similar to this species have also been reported from Pakistan, dating to the Early Oligocene. In 2013 the species Epiaceratherium naduongense was described from Na Duong Basin in northern Vietnam, dating to the mid-late Eocene. In 2021, the species Molassitherium delemontense originally described in 2013 from late Early–early Late Oligocene deposits in Germany, Switzerland, France, was reassigned to Epiaceratherium. The species E. itjilik was described in 2025 from remains found in Haughton crater on Devon Island in the high Canadian Arctic, likely dating to the early Miocene, around 24-21 million years ago.
While sometimes considered to be a member of Rhinocerotinae, recent phylogenetic studies have recovered Epiaceratherium as primitive basal rhinocerotid, outside the split between Aceratheriinae, Elasmotheriinae and crown group Rhinocerotinae. The phylogenetic analysis of Paterson et al., incorporating data from tooth enamel protein sequences recovered from Haughton crater specimens, which are the currently oldest sequenced proteins, support placement of Epiaceratherium as a member of a rhinocerotid lineage that diverged before the Rhinocerotinae–Elasmotheriinae split. Cladogram after Lu, Deng and Pandolfi, 2023:

Description

Epiaceratherium is distinctive from other basal rhinocerotids in lacking a lower third incisor as well as a lower canine, among a number of other characters of the premolar and molar teeth. Species of the genus lacked horns. The genus was relatively small in comparison to modern rhinoceroses with Epiaceratherium magnum and Epiaceratherium bolcense estimated to weigh and respectively in a 2015 study. The hindfeet had three digits with hooves, while the forefeet had four, unlike modern rhinoceros.