Dorudon

Door-oo-don.
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Cassidy Wood

Paleoentomologist

Cassidy Wood uncovers the tiny yet significant world of prehistoric insects. Her research on amber-preserved specimens has revealed intricate details about ancient ecosystems.

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Name

Dorudon ‭(‬Spear tooth‭)‬.

Phonetic

Door-oo-don.

Named By

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Mammalia,‭ ‬Cetacea,‭ ‬Archaeoceti,‭ ‬Basilosauridae.

Diet

Carnivore.

Species

D.‭ ‬atrox,‭ ‬D.‭ ‬serratus

Size

Around‭ ‬5‭ ‬meters long.

Known locations

Egypt and the USA,‭ ‬together hinting at a broad distribution.

Time Period

Bartonian to Priabonian of the Eocene.

Fossil representation

Multiple specimens,‭ ‬including juveniles.

In Depth

       Dorudon is a good example of some of the many primitive whales that were swimming in the world‭’‬s oceans during the Eocene period.‭ ‬As an early cetacean,‭ ‬Dorudon was a dedicated predator of other marine creatures that may have included everything from fish to other marine mammals.‭ ‬Dorudon itself does bear a strong resemblance to the much larger Basilosaurus that was also swimming in the same waters and at the same time as Dorudon.‭ ‬This led to early speculation about Dorudon actually representing juvenile specimens of Basilosaurus‭; ‬however more in depth study as well as the discoveries of actual Dorudon juveniles has since quashed this theory.

       Juvenile Dorudon‭ (‬which would have been called calves like other juvenile whales‭) ‬fossils have been seen to have tooth marks on them that seem to have been caused by the much larger Basilosaurus.‭ ‬This is evidence for a clear predator prey relationship where while Dorudon were predators,‭ ‬they in turn where preyed upon by other bigger predators.‭ ‬This relationship was well illustrated in the episode Whale Killer of the BBC documentary series Walking with Beasts.‭ ‬Basilosaurus was not the only threat to Dorudon however as giant sharks like ‭ C. ‬angustidens were also hunting in the world‭’‬s oceans.

Further Reading

– Description of the teeth of a new fossil animal found in the Green Sand of South Carolina. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 2(9):254-256 – R. W. Gibbes – 1845. – On the fossil genus Basilosaurus, Harlan, (Zeuglodon, Owen,) with a notice of specimens from the Eocene Green Sand of South Carolina – Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1 – Robert Wilson Gibbes – 1847. – A Descriptive Catalogue of the Tertiary Vertebrata of the Fay�m, Egypt. – London: British Museum (Natural History). 26 pp. 255–257. – C. W. Andrews – 1906. – Marine Mammals (Cetacean and Sirenia) from the Eocene of Gebel Mokattam and Fayum, Egypt: Stratigraphy, Age, and Paleoenvironments – University of Michigan Papers on Paleontology 30: 1–84 – P. D. Gingerich – 1992. – Form, Function, and Anatomy of Dorudon atrox (Mammalia, Cetacea): An Archaeocete from the Middle to Late Eocene of Egypt – Papers on Paleontology (University of Michigan) 34. – Mark D. Uhen – 2004.

SPECIES SPOTLIGHT