Inglis quarry

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Citrus County, Florida location
Florida during the Pleistocene

The Inglis quarry or Inglis quarry sites 1A and 1C are assemblages of vertebrate fossils dating from the Pleistocene ~1.8 Mya—300,000 years ago, located in the phosphate quarries near the town of Inglis, Citrus County, northern Florida.

Inglis sites FCi-1, FCi-2, Inglis Formation, Florida Geological Survey C-11, Inglis Member, Moodys Branch Formation, and Dunellon Phosphate Company pit no. 5 are composed of a variety of bivalves, echinoderms, gastropods, crustaceans (mud shrimp), crinoids dating from the Eocene to Early Oligocene of ~48–33.9 Mya.

Species uncovered[edit]

Mammals[edit]

Bats[edit]

Carnivores[edit]

Canidae[edit]
Bears[edit]
Feliformia[edit]
Hyena[edit]
Mustelids[edit]

Herbivores[edit]

Even-toed ungulates[edit]
Odd-toed ungulates[edit]

Proboscidea[edit]

Xenarthra[edit]

Rabbits[edit]

Rodents[edit]

Moles and Shrews[edit]

Birds[edit]

Cariamiformes[edit]

See also[edit]

Other Citrus County sites:

References[edit]

  1. ^ Herbert Jr, Richard C (2010-09-30). "A New early Pleistocene tapir ( Mammalia : perissodactyla ) from Florida, with a review of Blancan tapirs from the state". Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History. 49 (3): 67-126.