Read Part 1 here for an introduction to whale and dolphin earbones (recommended before diving right in).
This is perhaps the part that most readers are looking for –
how to identify different dolphin periotic bones. For each family of cetaceans,
I’ll briefly list the approximate size reported as complete periotic length
(not specific measurements, this is from memory), some of the main attributes,
along with any unique features of the family or higher level features within
Odontoceti, similar periotic morphs they can be confused with, age, known
distribution, and established localities (e.g. localities, including rock unit,
where these are confirmed to have been found or are reliably known from).
This guide is not exhaustive, nor is it perfect: identifying isolated periotics has long been called a 'black art' even by seasoned whaleontologists. The attributes listed below should not be interpreted by professionals as synapomorphies - they are generalizations, which can help someone identify many isolated periotics to the family level. Some families are very obvious, but others range quite a bit in anatomy, overlapping with other families - this is particularly a problem within the Delphinoidea. Regardless, I have almost certainly glossed over some important details and missed some things - so if you want to help me improve this, let me know what I've screwed up! Also, I will likely expand this in the future. The specimens in this post are mostly in collections of the Mace Brown Museum of Natural History; genus-level identifications (upper right) for some of these should be taken with a grain of salt. All photographs are by me, unless otherwise stated.
Though many features and conditions vary considerably and have evolved and lost again and again, some major groups are united by some periotic features. Archaic dolphins generally have long anterior and posterior processes and some remnant of the suprameatal fossa, which is large and deep in basilosaurid whales. Many archaic dolphins, as well as platanistoids, have a small spur lateral to the posterior process called the articular process - in Platanista (Ganges river dolphin) it is long and hooked, and generally needs to be broken in order for the periotic to be removed from the skull. The anterior bullar facet is primitively shallow in the earliest dolphins, but deeply concave in many long-snouted early to middle Miocene dolphins (Eurhinodelphinidae, Eoplatanistidae), and the facet is lost entirely in Delphinoidea. Delphinoids also tend to have a proportionally huge pars cochlearis.
As with all other fossils, periotic bones have some degree of natural variation. Above are some photos of periotics of Parapontoporia sternbergi, reasonably interpreted by L.G. Barnes (1985) as a single species from the San Diego Formation of southern California (Pliocene). You'll notice that much of the variation is in the length and inflation of the anterior process and the particular shape of the posterior bullar facet. The cochlear morphology - especially ventrally - seems to vary the least, which according to my Ph.D. adviser Ewan Fordyce, is likely because it ossifies the earliest and is associated with the middle ear sinus. The dorsal side varies considerably as this continues to ossify during growth, so the shape and size of the body and the configuration of foramina and crests within the meatus, and the shape and size of the meatus itself, also can change during growth. What this means is that no two periotics of the same species will ever be identical, and I guarantee you will go mad picking out differences between specimens only to find out they represent different edges of the anatomical envelope of variation or juveniles v. adults. As a result, it's better to look for shared similarities and when possible, match a particular periotic morph to periotics found associated with a skull, though this is certainly more typically the realm of activities of a whaleontologist rather than an amateur collector as many such specimens needed for such comparisons are in museum collections. Image from Barnes (1985).
And, just for reference, here is the complete labeled figure of the periotic of a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) from Mead and Fordyce (2009).
Ashley Formation, Oligocene, Summerville, South Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Xenorophidae
Size: Small (~2.5-4 cm)
Attributes: Anterior process short and typically ‘hatchet’
shaped or rectangular in medial view, with bladelike tip in ventral view; pars
cochlearis large, boxy; low superior process present, along with a suprameatal
fossa (a deep, small, circular pit in some), short posterior bullar facet,
long, triangular lateral tuberosity. Anterior process bears shallow anterior
bullar facet and often is hatchet shaped or rectangular in medial view. A small
to medium articular process may be present anterolateral to the posterior process.
Confused with: Difficult to confuse these with other
odontocetes, perhaps agorophiid periotics.
Typically found genera: Albertocetus, Echovenator,
Xenorophus
Age: Oligocene
Distribution: South Carolina (mostly), some specimens from
North Carolina
Established Localities: Ashley and Chandler Bridge
formations, Charleston, South Carolina.
Abundance: Uncommon in Charleston, South Carolina.
Pysht Formation, Oligocene, Olympic Peninsula, Washington, USA, CCNHM collections.
Simocetidae
Size: Small (~2.5-4 cm)
Attributes: Long subrectangular anterior process with
bladelike anterior tip (in medial view), broad shallow suprameatal fossa with
low, rounded superior process lateral to it, triangular and bladelike lateral
tuberosity, dorsoventrally shallow pars cochlearis frequently with anteromedial
bony spurs giving it a subrectangular shape, transversely narrow and
dorsomedially facing internal acoustic meatus, low articular process, ventrally
deflected posterior process with flat to sinuous smooth to grooved and
leaf-shaped posterior bullar facet.
Confused with: Perhaps Xenorophidae and Waipatiidae.
Typically found genera: none are ‘typically’ found, but some
named simocetid-grade dolphins from the Pacific Northwest include Simocetus
and Olympicetus.
Age: Oligocene
Distribution: North Pacific.
Established Localities: Alsea Formation, Oregon; Pysht
Formation, Washington.
Abundance: Rare, but Olympicetus is locally common in
the Pysht Formation.
Chandler Bridge Formation, Oligocene, Summerville, South Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Agorophiidae
Size: Medium to large (3-5cm).
Attributes: Elongate periotics with long anterior and posterior
processes, anterior process lozenge-shaped with blunt apex, and shallow
anterior bullar facet; trough-like suprameatal fossa, small, hemispherical pars
cochlearis, long and tapering posterior bullar facet with deep grooves at very
end but otherwise flat. Periotics of Ankylorhiza are large with dorsally
expanded and slightly flattened anterior process that is triangular and
somewhat ventrally deflected in medial view; posterior bullar facet is
proportionally smaller.
Confused with: Waipatiidae, Squalodontidae. Squalodontids
possess a large tubercle on the medial side of the anterior process and a
posterior bullar facet that is ‘folded over’ into two facets, rather than the
flat facet in Agorophiidae. Periotics of the giant dolphin Ankylorhiza
in particular can be confused with Squalodon.
Typically found genera: Agorophius, Ankylorhiza
Age: Oligocene.
Distribution: North Atlantic and Paratethys (eastern
Europe).
Established Localities: Ashley and Chandler Bridge
Formations of South Carolina.
Abundance: Locally common in Charleston, South Carolina.
Chandler Bridge Formation, Oligocene, Summerville, South Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Waipatiidae
Size: medium (~3-4 cm)
Attributes: Periotics with long, cylindrical anterior
processes (with shallow to moderately deep anterior bullar facet) that are
generally not bent medially or ventrally with triangular shape in medial view,
small hemispherical pars cochlearis, bump-like lateral tuberosity, a
suprameatal fossa developed as a sulcus or furrow, and medium to long posterior
processes that can be ventrally deflected. A small articular process may be
present anterolateral to the posterior process. Often has U or C-shaped
parabullary sulcus on lateral side of anterior process.
Confused with: Squalodontidae, Agorophiidae. Very similar to
the latter, differs from former in smaller size and by (typically) lacking a
tubercle on medial side of anterior process.
Typically found genera: Waipatia, Ediscetus, Otekaikea;
many unnamed taxa from Charleston, SC
Age: Oligocene, earliest Miocene.
Distribution: New Zealand, North Atlantic, Mediterranean,
Paratethys?
Established Localities: Oligocene Kokoamu Greensand and
Otekaike Limestone of New Zealand, with some likely (but unpublished)
waipatiids from the Ashley and Chandler Bridge formations of South Carolina.
Abundance: Common in Charleston, South Carolina, and
Oligocene of New Zealand.
Pungo River Limestone, Miocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Squalodontidae
Size: Medium to large (3.5-5 cm).
Attributes: Long, robust anterior process with shallow
anterior bullar facet and process with a triangular apex in medial view;
massive body lacking suprameatal fossa or superior ridge, and lateral surface
transversely expanded, often with oblique striations, proportionally small and
hemispherical pars cochlearis, internal acoustic meatus usually transversely
narrow, large tubercle present on medial side of anterior process, and
posterior bullar facet folded over into two surfaces at approximately a 90
degree angle; hinge of posterior bullar facet transitions into posteriorly
elongate apex of posterior process. A small articular process may be present
anterolateral to the posterior process.
Confused with: Waipatiidae, Agorophiidae.
Typically found genera: Eosqualodon, Squalodon
Age: latest Oligocene?, mostly early to middle Miocene.
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Calvert Formation, Maryland/Virginia;
Pungo River Limestone, North Carolina; Belluno Sandstone, Italy.
Abundance: Uncommon.
?Yorktown Formation or Pungo River Limestone, Mio-Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Physeteridae
Size: Medium to Large (3-5+ cm)
Attributes: Proportionally small,
ventrally curving anterior process; proportionally enormous pars cochlearis;
internal acoustic meatus is frequently narrow, keyhole-shaped and transversely
oriented rather than oblique or anteroposteriorly; massive, hemispherical
lateral tuberosity; meatus lacks transverse crest; body of periotic
dorsoventrally deep and frequently bears triangular peak (dorsal and posterior
margins forming a corner); large accessory ossicle frequently fused to anterior
process.
Confused with:
Kogiidae, perhaps Ziphiidae.
Typically found genera: Aulophyseter, Orycterocetus.
Age: early Miocene to Pliocene (recent).
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Calvert Formation,
Maryland/Virginia; Sharktooth Hill, California.
Abundance: Rare.
Both from Yorktown Formation, Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Kogiidae
Size: Small to Large (2-4.5 cm)
Attributes: Anteromedially directed anterior process with
rectangular outline in ventral and medial view, anterior process often bilobate
with sulcus dividing it into dorsal and ventral partitions; accessory ossicle
often fused in place; transversely oriented internal acoustic meatus like
Physeteridae, crista transversa occasionally elevated; pars cochlearis small
and somewhat anteroposteriorly compressed with fenestra rotundum; small lateral
tuberosity; large to enormous posterior bullar facet with flat posterior bullar
facet that is posteriorly flattened and bladelike in posterior view; body of
periotic swollen and smooth posteriorly.
Confused with: Physeteridae.
Typically found genera: None; most kogiid periotics found
isolated have not been identified to the genus level.
Age: late Miocene to Pliocene (recent).
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Yorktown Formation, Lee Creek Mine,
North Carolina, USA; Bone Valley Formation, Florida.
Abundance: uncommon.
?Yorktown Formation, ?Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
?Pungo River Limestone, ?Miocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Ziphiidae
Size: Medium to Large (2.5-5+ cm)
Attributes: Short transversely inflated anterior process
with blunt apex, separated from pars cochlearis by deep, dorsally facing
anterior incisure; shallow to deep anterior bullar facet; large pars cochlearis
and body together form proportionally enormous smoothly convex subspherical to
ovoid shape; oval internal acoustic meatus with deeply recessed transverse
crest; pars cochlearis markedly deeper than anterior process in medial view;
small posterior process with equidimensional and smooth posterior bullar facet,
typically curving or deflected ventrally.
Confused with: perhaps Physeteridae.
Typically found genera: Mesoplodon.
Age: middle Miocene to Pliocene (recent).
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Yorktown Formation, Lee Creek Mine.
Abundance: Rare.
Unknown stratum, ?Miocene, Charleston lowcountry, South Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Eoplatanistidae
Size: Small, 2-3 cm.
Attributes: Small overall size with proportionally large and
hemispherical pars cochlearis, absurdly small anterior process, and ‘peaked’
body with acute angle formed between body and posterior process in medial view,
ventrally deflected and proportionally small posterior bullar facet. Only a
single genus is assigned to Eoplatanistidae, Eoplatanista, and its periotics
are quite distinctive. Body lacks suprameatal fossa and superior ridge.
Confused with: Eurhinodelphinidae. Eurhinodelphinid
periotics differ mostly by having a wider angle formed by the dorsal and
posterior margins in medial view and by having a much larger and longer
anterior process.
Typically found genera: Eoplatanista
Age: Early Miocene.
Distribution: Mediterranean, Western North Atlantic?
Established Localities: Belluno Sandstones of Italy.
Abundance: Locally uncommon in Charleston, South Carolina
(only).
Pungo River Limestone, Miocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Eurhinodelphinidae
Size: Small to medium (2.5-4 cm)
Attributes: Long, narrow, cylindrical anterior process (straight
in ventral view) bearing distinctly concave, elongate and oval to rectangular anterior
bullar facet, proportionally small and hemispherical pars cochlearis, and
relatively small, short, leaf-shaped posterior bullar facet that is directed
ventrally; body lacks suprameatal fossa and superior ridge. Hemispherical
lateral tuberosity. A distinctive U or V-shaped sulcus (parabullary sulcus) is
present on the ventrolateral surface of the anterior process.
Confused with: Eoplatanistidae.
Typically found genera: Eurhinodelphis, Schizodelphis,
Xiphiacetus
Age: Early to middle Miocene, possibly late Oligocene.
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Calvert and Choptank formations,
Maryland and Virginia; Pungo River Limestone, North Carolina; early to middle
Miocene strata of Belgium; Chilcatay Formation, Peru; Belluno Sandstone, Italy.
Abundance: Common on Atlantic coast; rare in North Pacific.
Pungo River Limestone, Miocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Squalodelphinidae
Size: Medium (3-4 cm)
Attributes: Long cylindrical and straight to medially bent
anterior process, often with a medial tubercle, proportionally small and
rectangular pars cochlearis with large and dorsomedially facing aperture for
the cochlear aqueduct, small body with triangular gap between posterior process
and lateral tuberosity, small square to trapezoidal and roughly equidimensional
(short) posterior bullar facet.
Confused with: Pomatodelphine platanistoids.
Typically found genera: Notocetus, Phocageneus,
Medocinia
Age: Early to middle Miocene, possibly late Oligocene.
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: Calvert and Choptank formations,
Maryland and Virginia; Pungo River Limestone, North Carolina; Chilcatay
Formation, Peru; Gaiman Formation, Argentina; Belluno Sandstone, Italy.
Abundance: Common to uncommon in North Atlantic; rare on
Pacific coast.
Round Mountain Silt, Miocene, Sharktooth Hill, California, USA. Image from
Kimura and Barnes (2016).
Allodelphinidae
Size: medium (3-4 cm)
Attributes: Large, inflated anterior process; large
hemispherical pars cochlearis; small, tear-drop shaped internal acoustic meatus
with raised rim; dorsal side of periotic with remnant suprameatal fossa
developed as long sulcus; lateral surface of periotic transversely expanded
(like Squalodontidae) at level of posterior pars cochlearis; highly reduced
posterior process with posteroventrally facing, convex, smooth, and small
posterior bullar facet.
Note: these features characterize Zarhinocetus, the only
allodelphinid likely to be discovered by collectors. Ninjadelphis has a long
posterior process, Allodelphis is similar to this, but these taxa are unlikely
to be encountered as they are known by singleton specimens.
Confused with: Squalodelphinidae, Platanistidae
Typically found genera: Zarhinocetus
Age: early to late Miocene
Distribution: North Pacific
Established Localities: Sharktooth Hill Bonebed, California;
Monterey Formation, California; Santa Margarita Sandstone, California.
Abundance: rare.
Bone Valley Formation, Miocene, Florida, USA.
Image from Case (1934).
Pomatodelphinae (subfamily of Platanistidae)
Size: Medium to Large (3-5 cm)
Attributes: Long, highly inflated cylindrical and straight
to medially bent anterior process, large and deep anterior bullar facet,
hemispherical to rectangular pars cochlearis with endocranial opening of facial
canal shifted lateral rather than anterior to vestibulocochlear opening
(resulting in an internal acoustic meatus that has a nearly transverse rather
than anteroposterior long axis), large articular rim, small, triangular to
trapezoidal posterior bullar facet.
Confused with: Squalodelphinidae. Differs based on more
grossly inflated anterior process and more acutely triangular gap between
posterior process.
Typically found genera: Pomatodelphis, Zarhachis
Age: middle to late Miocene.
Distribution: North Atlantic.
Established Localities: Calvert Formation, Maryland and
Virginia; Bone Valley Formation, Florida.
Abundance: Common.
Yorktown Formation, Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Pontoporiidae
Size: Very Small (1.5-2 cm).
Attributes: Compact, small periotics with tiny anterior
process and small, oval to square posterior bullar facet and proportionally enormous
hemispherical pars cochlearis.
Confused with: Some Delphinidae, perhaps Phocoenidae.
Typically found genera: Pontoporia, Auroracetus
Age: Middle Miocene to Pliocene.
Distribution: North and South Atlantic.
Established Localities: Yorktown Formation, North Carolina;
St. Marys Formation, Maryland/Virginia; Bone Valley Formation, Florida;
Pliocene deposits, Belgium/Netherlands.
Abundance: Rare.
San Diego Formation, Pliocene, San Diego, California, USA, UCMP collections.
Lipotidae
Size: Medium (2.5-3.5 cm).
Attributes: Massive anterior process, triangular in ventral
view, and bearing tubercle medially; proportionally large hemispherical pars
cochlearis, small posteror process with tiny, deeply concave posterior bullar
facet; body dorsoventrally deep, together with pars cochlearis forming
trapezoidal shape; deep, large aperture for the vestibular aqueduct. Sword-like
“styloid” process projecting from tip of anterior process (almost always broken
in loose periotics). Ventral surface of anterior process deeply concave in lateral
view; anterior bullar facet present.
Confused with: None, owing to location, but similar to some
Kentriodontidae; differs from kentriodontids, and Delphinoidea, in possessing
anterior bullar facet.
Typically found genera: Parapontoporia
Age: Late Miocene to Pliocene
Distribution: North Pacific
Established Localities: Purisima, San Diego, San Mateo, and
Capistrano formations of California, and Almejas Formation of Baja California,
Mexico.
Abundance: Common in California deposits. Most common odontocete
in Purisima Formation at Santa Cruz.
Pungo River Limestone, Miocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Kentriodontidae
Size: Small to large (1.5-5+ cm)
Attributes: Inflated anterior process typically with blunt
apex and lacking anterior bullar facet; proportionally small and hemispherical
pars cochlearis; lateral surface smooth and convex, lacking suprameatal fossa
or groove; long posterior bullar facet concave, short to long. Generally
differentiated from Delphinidae by longer anterior/posterior processes and
proportionally smaller pars cochlearis; very difficult to differentiate from
extinct genera Phocoenidae. Diverse family and diverse periotics, identifying
to genus level frequently easier than to family, given that Kentriodontidae is
probably paraphyletic or even polyphyletic.
Confused with: Delphinidae, Phocoenidae
Typically found genera: Delphinodon, Kentriodon,
Liolithax, Hadrodelphis, Nannolithax; many additional
named taxa
Age: late early Miocene to early late Miocene
Distribution: Worldwide
Established Localities: Calvert through St. Mary’s formations,
Calvert Cliffs and beyond, Maryland/Virginia; Pungo River Limestone, Lee Creek
Mine, North Carolina; Temblor Formation, Sharktooth Hill, California; Santa
Margarita Sandstone, Santa Cruz, California; Astoria Formation,
Oregon/Washington.
Abundance: Uncommon to common.
All from Yorktown Formation, Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Delphinidae
Size: Small to very large (2-5+ cm)
Attributes: Proportionally small and blunt anterior process
lacking anterior bullar facet; proportionally large to enormous circular (and
frequently dorsoventrally shallow) pars cochlearis, sometimes with
posteromedial bulge; smoothly convex and featureless dorsal surface of body
lacking suprameatal fossa or groove, but occasionally possessing longitudinal
ridge adjacent to dorsolaterally facing facet; internal acoustic meatus
typically teardrop-shaped with anterolateral fissure for hiatus fallopii, and
crista transversa deeply recessed into meatus;
posterior process short with equidimensional, concave posterior bullar
facets with deep (and lateral to posterolaterally directed) grooves/ridges for posterior
process of bulla; posterior process with apex positioned laterally.
Confused with: Kentriodontidae, Monodontidae, Phocoenidae.
Typically found genera: Delphinus, Tursiops, Stenella,
Globicephala, Pseudorca
Age: late Miocene through Pliocene (recent).
Distribution: Worldwide.
Established Localities: San Diego and San Mateo Formations,
San Diego County, California; Yorktown Formation, Lee Creek Mine, North
Carolina; Pliocene strata of Belgium & Netherlands; Plio-Pleistocene Red
and Coralline Crag of UK; Pliocene of Australia/NZ.
Abundance: Rare to uncommon in North Pacific; common in
North Atlantic.
Yorktown Formation, Pliocene, Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Monodontidae
Size: Medium to large (3-5 cm)
Attributes: Short, reduced, and blunt anterior process;
proportionally enormous and anteriorly thrusted pars cochlearis; dorsoventrally
thick body of periotic (elevated far dorsal to meatus) with transversely convex
dorsolateral margin; in dorsal view, body of periotic widens posteriorly; large
and transversely elongated internal acoustic meatus with high crista
transversa; flat, ventrally facing small-medium sized leaf-shaped posterior
bullar facet with anteroposteriorly (not posterolaterally) directed (and deep)
ridges; entire periotic has triangular posterior margin as both the lateral and
posterodorsal edges converge toward the posteriorly positioned apex of the posterior
bullar facet.
Note: this is chiefly based on the beluga, Delphinapterus,
and fossil monodontid periotics that seem similar to Delphinapterus; the
narwhal, Monodon, possesses a much more delphinid-like periotic, and
such examples are not yet known from the fossil record.
Confused with: Delphinidae, Albireonidae
Typically found genera: Delphinapterus, Bohaskaia,
Denebola
Age: Late Miocene through Pliocene (recent)
Distribution: North Pacific and North Atlantic.
Established Localities: Almejas Formation, Baja California,
Mexico; San Diego Formation, San Diego, California; Yorktown Formation, Lee
Creek Mine, North Carolina.
Abundance: Rare in North Pacific; uncommon in North
Atlantic.
Almejas Formation, Miocene, Isla Cedros, Baja California, Mexico.
Image from Murakami and Koda (2013).
Albireonidae
Size: Medium (3-4 cm)
Attributes: Large, somewhat long and inflated/blunt anterior
process, proportionally large, inflated, and hemispherical to subrectangular pars
cochlearis (not anteriorly thrusted), large fenestra rotunda with a large
nodule/expanse of bone posteromedial, often a posteromedial eminence on pars
cochlearis; pars cochlearis (unlike Monodontidae) and body dorsoventrally deep (similar
to Monodontidae); posterior process dorsoventrally quite deep (unlike
Phocoenidae), deeper than Monodontidae; long, leaf-shaped posterior bullar
facet.
Confused with: Phocoenidae, Monodontidae, Kentriodontidae
Typically found genera: Albireo
Age: late Miocene to Pliocene
Distribution: North Pacific
Established Localities: Almejas Formation, Baja California,
Mexico.
Abundance: Very rare. Locally uncommon in Purisima Formation
at Santa Cruz, but unpublished.
Unknown stratum, Pliocene/Pleistocene?, Folly Beach, South Carolina, USA, CCNHM collections.
Purisima Formation, Pliocene, Santa Cruz, California, USA, UCMP collections.
Phocoenidae
Size: Small to medium (2-3 cm).
Attributes: Extant genera: Dorsoventrally narrow anterior
process; low pars cochlearis; small, anteroposteriorly elongate posterior
process that in medial view tapers posteriorly into a triangular point, similar
to Monodontidae. Extinct forms approach the morphology of kentriodontids and
delphinids and can be difficult to differentiate; tend to have proportionally
large and anteriorly thrusted pars cochlearis, small posterior bullar facet.
Identification to particular published genera is typically easier for extinct
forms than identification to family. All phocoenids lack an anterior bullar
facet, and all periotics smaller than Albireonidae. Tend to have longer
anterior process and proportionally smaller pars cochlearis than Delphinidae.
Note: Phocoenids typically occur in strata that are younger
entirely than kentriodontids, and tend to be rare where delphinids are common,
such as the Atlantic coast Pliocene. Phocoenids are anomalously diverse in
North Pacific and eastern South Pacific marine mammal assemblages.
Confused with: Albireonidae
Typically found genera: mostly unnamed, Piscolithax,
?Haborophocoena, ?Numataphocoena
Age: late Miocene to Pliocene
Distribution: North and South Pacific, North Atlantic (rare)
Established Localities: Numerous late Miocene and Pliocene
localities in California (Purisima, Capistrano, San Diego, San Mateo
formations), Almejas Formation of Baja California, Mexico; late
Miocene-Pliocene localities in Japan; Pisco Formation of Peru
Abundance: Common in late Neogene Pacific localities; rare
in Atlantic.
Others - Miscellaneous unusual periotics
I've added these mostly for folks to keep an eye out - these are unusual periotics from unusual dolphins that may or may not be found. Since they are unlikely to be found, I'll keep the commentary to a minimum.
Yaquinacetus meadi is a squaloziphiid dolphin from the earliest Miocene Nye Mudstone of Oregon. Squaloziphiids are a completely extinct family of longirostrine dolphins with homodont teeth known only from early Miocene rocks of the Pacific Northwest;
Squaloziphius emlongi was reported from the coeval Clallam Formation of Washington. Late occurring squaloziphiids might be expected further south or potentially in the North Atlantic. In the Pacific Northwest all known specimens are from concretions. Image from
Lambert et al. 2019.
Inticetus vertizi is a strange longirostrine "platanistoid" dolphin with archaeocete-like teeth from the late early Miocene Chilcatay Formation of Peru. Similar teeth in the tooth-taxon
Phococetus are known from the late early Miocene of France as well as the Lee Creek Mine of North Carolina, and
Phococetus is likely an inticetid. Though the teeth are extremely rare - four or five known altogether from the North Atlantic, including one in a private collection - periotics might be found. They roughly resemble squalodontid, waipatiid, and some aspects of eurhinodelphinid periotics. Image from
Lambert et al. 2018.