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Digital Studios. A showdown took place on the plains of Wyoming
some thirty-four million years ago. For weapons, the fighters had only their strong
teeth and strange, powerful jaws. Walking on cloven hooves, they sized
each other up until finally, one of them lunged. It sank its teeth into the face of its rival,
carving deep scars into its snout and around its eye sockets. It even left a bite wound on the roof of its
opponent’s mouth and crushed the sinus cavities in its skull. We don’t know how this fight ended. But we know that it happened -- and it was
not an isolated incident. These ancient foes were animals known as Archaeotherium
, members of a fascinating group of mammals called the entelodonts. Because they were thought to look vaguely
like some kind of nightmarish hogs, entelodonts have been given one of the coolest nicknames
in all of paleontology: The “hell pigs.” But despite the name, we don’t know where
these so-called “hell pigs” belong in the mammalian family tree. In fact, once you get a close look at them,
you see that they don’t look that much like pigs, If anything, they kind of look like a bunch
of other animals put together. They had walked on hooves, like pigs do, but
had longer legs, almost like deer. They had hunched backs, a bit like rhinos
or bison. And everything above the neck on these animals
was just strange: huge canine teeth, ridiculously big heads and cheek bones that were just … what?! But as is often, if not always, the case,
there is some evolutionary method to this anatomical madness. The seemingly strange anatomy of the hell
pigs can actually help us understand their behavior and lifestyles, and lend insights
into the competitive environments in which they lived. Unlike the “true pigs” we know today,
these creatures were at times fierce hunters, resourceful foragers, canny scavengers, and
not above turning on each other to fight over food, territory, or sex. Their fossils tell a tale of hard times and
sometimes hellacious lives that made them truly worthy of their hellish nickname. Nobody knows what the hell pigs evolved from. The first of them appear abruptly in the fossil
record of China and Mongolia about 40 million years ago, around the middle of the Eocene
Epoch. But we do know that these early species -- like
Eoentelodon -- were artiodactyls, even-toed ungulates that today include deer, hippos,
and pigs. And paleontologists haven’t figured out
what their closest living relatives are. But according to two recent studies that compared
the anatomies of a wide range of artiodactyls, entelodonts may be more closely related to
hippos and whales, than they are to pigs. Because, yes, whales’ ancestors were themselves
hooved mammals that once walked on land. Now, by 35 million years ago, some entelodonts,
like Brachyhyops, had dispersed from Asia and into North America. And before long, hell pigs on both sides of
the Pacific started to get big. Like just really big. In Eurasia, there was Entelodon, whose range
stretched from Japan to France and stood about 1.3 meters high at the shoulder. Similar in size and shape was Archaeotherium,
which stalked North America from 34 million to about 25 million years ago. And just like Entelodon, it had a huge geographic
range. Fossils of Archaeotherium have been found
as far north as Saskatchewan and as far south as Texas. And as these hell pigs got larger and more
widespread, they began to develop perhaps their most peculiar trait -- long, massive
skulls. The skull of Archaeotherium, for example,
was a little under 60 centimeters long, more than a quarter of the animal’s entire length! But the largest of the entelodonts was Daeodon. This hulking beast was more than 2 meters
tall at the shoulder and may have weighed almost half a ton! And its head was almost a meter long, 35%
of its total body length! Now if you’ve got a big, giant head, you
need some sizable muscles to support it. Which probably explains another eye-catching
feature of entelodont anatomy. In many of the later hell pigs, the tall,
bony projections on the backs of their vertebrae, called neural spines, were unusually long
near the shoulders, creating a kind of hump. These spines probably served as attachment
points for the powerful muscles that held up the creatures’ giant heads. Now, even though the hell pigs had huge skulls,
their braincases were pretty small. And judging by the contours of this cavity,
scientists think that they may have had big olfactory lobes, suggesting that they had
an acute sense of smell. But the true purpose of the entelodonts’
giant heads might have just been that they allowed the hell pigs to eat … pretty much
anything they wanted. And the proof of that is in their teeth. Entelodonts had long incisors, sturdy canines,
and sharp serrated premolars. And they had blunt, square molars that are
the hallmarks of a true omnivore. But, we talked to an expert in hell-pig research,
Dr. Scott Foss of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. And he pointed out to us that the weird thing
about entelodont teeth is that they were coated in a layer of enamel that he described as
“freakishly thick.” And with these well-protected teeth, Dr. Foss
said, entelodonts could probably crack open bones, like today’s hyenas do. Now, if you’re going to bite through bones,
you need some powerful jaw muscles. And the hell pigs most certainly had those. Ok put your fingers on your temples and bite
down a couple of times. What you feel moving around are your temporalis
muscles. They start on the sides of your skull, pass
under your cheekbones, and attach to the lower jaw. Now, entelodonts had absolutely massive cheekbones
that stuck out of the sides of their faces. And paleontologists think that these features
allowed for some truly huge jaw muscles, which gave the animals incredibly strong bites. So, unlike some other artiodactyls -- which developed specialized teeth for eating different
kinds of plants -- it seems the hell pigs ate whatever they could find, from plant matter
-- like roots, nuts, and fruit -- to carrion and maybe even live prey. For example, in eastern Wyoming, there’s
a 33 million year-old bonebed that includes the jumbled skeletons of small American camels
known as Poebrotherium And the camels’ skulls, necks, and ribs
are covered in bite marks that line up precisely with the teeth of Archeotherium. So, some paleontologists have suggested that
hell pigs chased down a bunch of these little camels and dragged them back to this site to eat
later, creating a sort of ancient “meat locker.” Scientists have also recovered fossils of
chalicotheres and rhinos with bite marks on them that, again, perfectly match the teeth
of entelodonts, which could be evidence of scavenging, predation, or both. And, as we saw in that ancient showdown in
Wyoming, the hell pigs were also known to go after each other. Not as prey, but as rivals. In 2001, Dr. Foss and his colleagues reviewed
170 hell pig skulls and found that at least 7 percent of them had healed bite marks on
their snouts and faces. Based on their shape and placement, these
wounds were most likely made by other entelodonts, in competition over mates, food, or territory. And in combat, too, those powerful jaws probably
came in handy. Paleontologists have found that hell pigs
could open their mouths really wide -- as much as 109 degrees in Archeotherium. This enormous gape would’ve not only helped
in eating big, hard foods, like roots, but it also would’ve allowed the entelodonts
to jaw-wrestle -- lunging at opponents with open mouths -- much like hippos do today. After millions of years of hard living, the
last of the entelodonts died out about 17 million years ago, in the Miocene Epoch. And the reasons for their extinction remain
a bit mysterious. Because animals like hell pigs, that can eat
almost anything, are usually quite good at adjusting to environmental changes. Part of their downfall might have been fueled
by competition, like from the up-and-coming carnivores known as the bear dogs. And in some places where hell pig fossils
have been found, scientists have observed an interesting pattern. At two fossil sites in South Dakota and Nebraska,
large numbers of entelodonts have been found at features that appear to be watering holes
that dried up. We know that droughts became much more common
in the middle Miocene, as the climate of North America became drier. So, it could be that hell pigs were especially
vulnerable to droughts, and many of them met their end waiting for rains that would never
come. And yet they persisted for 25 million years,
leaving behind their strange remains that hint at an equally odd mixture of adaptations
and behaviors. Like bears and pigs, they probably ate almost
anything, from roots to meat. Like rhinos, they used specialized backbones
to hold up their giant heads. They fought like hippos, and, like hyenas,
they had heavily-enameled teeth that they could’ve used to crack open bones. In the end, life is never easy for any organism. But the hell pigs turned out to be well-equipped
enough to survive millions of years of hard times, from periods of drought to showdowns
on the high plains. Thanks to CuriosityStream for supporting PBS
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