Creodonta

Creodonta
Temporal range: 63.3–8.8 Ma Early Paleocene to Late Miocene
Various creodonts of the Eocene of Colorado, United States. From top: Tritemnodon, Patriofelis, Machaeroides, and Sinopa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Mirorder: Ferae
Order: Creodonta
Cope, 1875[1]
Families
Synonyms
list of synonyms:
  • Creodontia
  • Creodontidae (Winkler, 1893)[2]
  • Creodontiformes (Kinman, 1994)[3]
  • Creodontina (Pearse, 1936)[4]
  • Creophaga (Kretzoi, 1945)[5]
  • Hyaenodontia (Romer, 1966)[6]
  • Paracarnivora (Kretzoi, 1929)[7]
  • Pseudocreodi (Matthew, 1909)[8]
  • Subdidelphia (Trouessart, 1879)[9]

Creodonta ("meat teeth") is a former order of extinct carnivorous placental mammals that lived from the early Paleocene to the late Miocene epochs in North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Originally thought to be a single group of animals ancestral to the modern Carnivora, this order is now usually considered a polyphyletic assemblage of two different groups, the Oxyaenids and the Hyenodonts, not a natural group. Oxyaenids are first known from the Palaeocene of North America, while hyaenodonts hail from the Palaeocene of Africa.[10]

Creodonts were the dominant carnivorous mammals from 55 to 35 million years ago, peaking in diversity and prevalence during the Eocene.[11] The first large, obviously carnivorous mammals appeared with the radiation of the oxyaenids in the late Paleocene.[12] During the Paleogene, "creodont" species were the most abundant terrestrial carnivores in the Old World.[13] In Oligocene Africa, hyaenodonts were the dominant group of large flesh-eaters, persisting until the middle of the Miocene.

"Creodont" groups had an extensive range, both geographically and temporally. They are known from the late Paleocene through the late Oligocene in North America, the early Eocene through late Oligocene in Europe, from the late Paleocene through late Miocene in Asia, and from the late Paleocene to the late Miocene in Africa.[14] While most were small-to-medium sized mammals, among their number was Sarkastodon, one of the largest mammalian land predators of all time, weighing an estimated 800 kg.[15]

Though often assumed to have been outcompeted by carnivorans, there is little empirical support for this. The last genus, Dissopsalis, became extinct about 11.1 million years ago.

Most modern paleontologists agree both "creodont" families are related to Carnivora, but are not their direct ancestors. It is still unclear how closely the two families are related to each other. In general, classification is complicated by the fact that relationships among fossil mammals are usually decided by similarities in the teeth, but the teeth of hypercarnivorous species may evolve similar shapes through convergent evolution, to deal with the mechanics of eating meat.[16]

"Creodonts" share with the Carnivora, and many other predatory mammal clades, the carnassial shear, a scissors-like modification of upper and lower cheek teeth that was used to slice muscle tissue. This adaptation is also seen in other clades of predatory mammals.

Systematics and history

"Creodonta" was coined by Edward Drinker Cope in 1875.[1] Cope included the oxyaenids and the viverravid Didymictis but omitted the Hyaenodontidae. In 1880. he expanded the term to include families Miacidae (including Viverravidae), Arctocyonidae, Leptictidae (now Pseudorhyncocyonidae), Oxyaenidae, Ambloctonidae and Mesonychidae.[17] Cope originally placed creodonts within the Insectivora. In 1884, however, he regarded them as a basal group from which both carnivorans and insectivorans arose.[18]

Hyaenodontidae was not included among the creodonts until 1909.[19] William Diller Matthew regarded Creodonta as a suborder of order Carnivora, divided in three groups:

  • "Inadaptive Creodonta" (Creodonta inadaptiva), group that includes "Pseudocreodi" (oxyaenids and hyaenodontids) and the mesonychids,
  • "Adaptive Creodonta" (Creodonta adaptiva), made up of the miacids and the taxa included in the wastebasket "Arctocyonidae",
  • and "Primitive Creodonta" (Creodonta primitiva), made up of Oxyclaenidae.

Over time, various groups and species were removed from this order. It stabilized in the mid-20th century as representing oxyaenids, hyaenodonts, mesonychids, and arctocyonids,[20] which were understood as the major groups of flesh-eating placental mammals that were not members of the Carnivora. It became increasingly clear that arctocyonids were a wastebasket taxon and mesonychids might be more closely related to ungulates. By 1969, Creodonta contained only the oxyaenids and the hyaenodontids.[21]

More recently, "Creodonta" had been considered to be a nonvalid polyphyletic assemblage of carnivorous placental mammals (and not a natural group), and members of Creodonta being sister taxa to Carnivoramorpha (carnivorans and their stem-relatives) within clade Pan-Carnivora (in mirorder Ferae), split in two groups: order Oxyaenodonta as one group and order Hyaenodonta plus its stem-relatives (family Wyolestidae and genera Altacreodus, Simidectes and Tinerhodon) in the other.[22][23][24][25][26] However, some phylogenetic analysis recover them as a natural group, such as a phylogenetic analysis of Paleocene mammals published in 2015 that supported the monophyly of Creodonta, and placed the group as relatives of clade Pholidotamorpha (pangolins and their stem-relatives).[27]

Polly has argued that the only available synapomorphy between oxyaenids and hyaenodontids is a large metastylar blade on the first molar (M1), but he believes that that feature is common for all basal eutheria.[28] Separating Oxyaenidae from Hyaenodontidae would also comport with biogeographic evidence, since the first oxyaenid is known from the North American early Paleocene and the first hyaenodontids are from very late Paleocene of North Africa.[12]

Complicating this arrangement is the tentative endorsement by Gunnell[14] of the erection of a third family, Limnocyonidae.[29] The group includes taxa that were once considered oxyaenids, such as Limnocyon, Thinocyon[19] and Prolimnocyon.[30] Wortman had even erected a subfamily of Limnocyoninae within the oxyaenids.[31] Van Valen nests the same subfamily (including Oxyaenodon) within Hyaenodontidae.[21] Gunnell is agnostic whether Limnocyonidae is a group within Hyaenodontidae (although a sister group to the rest of hyaenodontids) or entirely separate.[14]

According to Gunnell, the defining features of the oxyaenids include: A small braincase low in the skull. The occiput wide at base and narrowing dorsally (to give it a triangular shape). The lacrimal bone makes a semicircular expansion on the face. The mandibles have heavy symphysis. M1 and m2 form the carnassials, while M3/m3 are absent. The manus and pes are plantigrade or subplantigrade. The fibula articulates with the calcaneum, and the astragalus articulates with the cuboid bone. The phalanges are compressed and fissured at the tip.[14]

Likewise, Gunnell's list of defining features of hyaenodontids includes: Long, narrow skull with a narrow basicranium and a high narrow occiput. The frontal bones are concave between the orbital regions. M2 and m3 form the carnassials. M3 is present in most species, while m3 is always present. Manus and pes range from plantigrade to digitigrade. The fibula articulates with the calcaneum, while the astragalar-cuboid articulation is reduced or absent. Terminal phalanges are compressed and fissured at the tip.[14]

The limnocyonids had the following features according to Gunnell: M3/m3 were reduced or absent, other teeth were unreduced. The rostrum was elongated. The animals themselves were small to medium-sized.[14]

Morphology

Dentition

Among primitive creodonts the dental formula is 3.1.4.33.1.4.3, but later forms often had reduced numbers of incisors, premolars and/or molars.[32] The canines are always large and pointed. The lateral incisors are large, while the medial incisors are usually small.[14] Premolars are primitive, with one primary cusp and various secondary cusps.[13]

Creodonts have two or three pairs of carnassial teeth. One pair performed the largest cutting function (either M1/m2 or M2/m3).[14] This arrangement is unlike modern carnivorans, which use P4 and m1 for carnassials.[33] This difference suggests convergent evolution among meat-eaters, with a separate evolutionary history and an order-level distinction,[34] given that different teeth evolved as the carnassials both between creodonts and carnivorans, and between oxyaenids and hyaenodonts. Carnassials are also known in other flesh-eating mammal clades, such as in the extinct bat Necromantis, as well as highly unrelated taxa such as the flesh-eating marsupial Thylacoleo.

Different molars were involved in the two major groups of creodonts. In the Oxyaenidae, M1 and m2 that form the carnassials. Among the hyaenodontids, it is M2 and m3. Unlike most modern carnivorans, in which the carnassials are the sole shearing teeth, other creodont molars have a subordinate shearing functions.[19] The difference in which teeth form the carnassials is a major argument for the polyphyly of Creodonta.

Comparison of carnassial teeth of wolf and typical hyaenodontid and oxyaenid
Upper teeth of creodonts from Middle Eocene Bridger Basin, Wyoming
Sinopa fossils: (1) Right upper cheek teeth, P2-M2; (2) Left ramus of mandible (p2-m2); (3) Right ramus of mandible (c-m2)

Cranium

Creodonts had long, narrow skulls with small brains. The skull narrowed considerably behind the eyes, producing a distinct splanchnocranium and neurocranium segments of the cranium. They had large sagittal crests and usually broad mastoids (which were probably derived features for the group).[14] Many creodonts had proportionately large heads.[13] In primitive forms, the auditory bullae was not ossified. Generally the temporal fossae were very broad.[14]

Skull of oxyaenid Machaeroides eothen
Lateral outline and front view of skull of Sarkastodon mongoliensis
Head of Sarkastodon mongoliensis
Lateral (A) and dorsal (B) views of the skull of the hyaenodontid Apterodon macrognathus by Henry Fairfield Osborn

Postcranial skeleton

Creodonts had generalized postcranial skeletons. Their limbs were mesaxonic (with the axis of the foot provided by the middle of their five digits). Their method of locomotion ranged from plantigrade to digitigrade. The terminal phalanges were fused claws.[14]

Mount of oxyaenid Patriofelis ferox from the American Museum of Natural History
Reconstruction of Patriofelis ferox
Mounted skeleton of the hyaenodontid Sinopa rapax from Bridger Basin

Size

Creodonts ranged in size from the size of a small cat to the 800-kilogram (1,800 lb) Sarkastodon. The larger animals, however, were not known until late in the Paleocene with the radiation of the oxyaenids,[12] such as the puma-sized Dipsalidictis and the probably bone-crushing scavenger Dipsalodon.[35]

Certain creodonts (Arfia, Prolimnocyon and Palaeonictis) seem to have experienced the dwarfing phenomenon during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum seen in other mammal genera. A proposed explanation for this phenomenon is that the increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere directly affected carnivores through increased temperature and aridity and also indirectly affected them by reducing the size of their herbivorous prey through the same selective pressures.[36]

The largest North American creodont is Patriofelis. A specimen of P. ferox collected in the Bridger Basin of southern Wyoming was the size of a full-grown black bear with a head almost the size of an adult male lion.[37]

During the Central Asia Expedition of 1930 by the American Museum of Natural History, the largest creodont ever discovered was collected: Sarkastodon mongoliensis. Its dimensions were described as 50% greater than the Patriofelis to which it bore many similarities.[38] It has been estimated that Sarkastodon attained the body mass of twice the largest American lion.[15]

Biology

Diet and feeding

Early creodonts (both oxyaenids and hyaenodontids) displayed the tribosphenic molars common for basal therians. Small forms had somewhat strong postmetacrista-metastellar crests[39] suggesting that they were probably opportunistic feeders, eating such things as eggs, birds, small mammals, insects and possibly plant matter as well,[14] possibly like extant viverrids.[32] Larger forms had greater shearing capacity and the capacity increased over time. Arfia, one of the most common carnivorous mammals in early Eocene North America, developed a more open trigonid on M3 over the course of the Early Eocene, increasing the shearing ability of the carnassials.[39] A similar development can be seen by comparing Oxyaena, Prototomus and Limnocyon with the smaller, more generalized feeders among the creodonts.[14]

Extinction

Several theories have suggested that hyaenodonts and oxyaenids became extinct because they were outcompeted by the newly-evolved Carnivora. However, there is no direct evidence that the existence of large Carnivora caused the extinction of these taxa, and in many cases (in Africa throughout the Early and Middle Miocene, and in North America and Eurasia during much of the Oligocene), hyaenodonts thrived in environments in which large carnivorans such as nimravids and (later) larger amphicyonids were also present as competitors. Theories that suggest they were outcompeted by the Carnivora include that their smaller brains limited their intelligence, but carnivoran brain sizes have not always been consistently large throughout their evolution, and the importance of brain size as a factor in intelligence has been vastly overestimated in the past when these ideas were published. Other speculations focus on their limb structure, which limited leg movement to a vertical plane, as in ungulates; they were unable to turn their wrists and forearms inward to trip, slash, or grab prey as some modern carnivores can. Creodonts had to depend entirely on their jaws to capture prey, which may be why creodonts generally had a larger head size in relation to their bodies than carnivores of similar stature. However, many carnivorans, such as large canids, are also dependent on their jaws alone to capture prey yet do so effectively even in situations where they must tackle large prey alone, so this also fails to provide a satisfactory explanation.

In the Carnivora, the last upper premolar and the first lower molar are the carnassials, allowing the rearmost molar teeth to evolve adaptations for feeding on non-meat foods. In creodonts, either the first upper and second lower molars, or the second upper and third lower molars, were the primary carnassials, and the rear teeth formed a carnassial series. This structure committed them to eating meat almost exclusively, which may have limited their ability to exploit mesocarnivore and omnivore ecological niches. These differences may have caused environmental changes to affect hyaenodonts and oxyaenids differently than they did many carnivorans, as the former would have been restricted to largely or entirely faunivorous diets, while many (though not all) carnivoran lineages were/are able to subsist on plant matter as well.

References

  1. ^ a b Cope, Edward Drinker (1875). On the Supposed Carnivora of the Eocene of the Rocky Mountains. Vol. 27. pp. 444–449. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ T. C. Winkler (1893.) "De Gewervelde Dieren van Het Verleden." Palaeontologische Studiën in Telyer's Museum 1-291
  3. ^ Kenneth E. Kinman (1994.) "The Kinman System: Toward a Stable Cladisto-Eclectic Classification of Organisms: Living and Extinct, 48 Phyla, 269 Classes, 1,719 Orders", Hays, Kan. (P. O. Box 1377, Hays 67601), 88 pages
  4. ^ Arthur Sperry Pearse, (1936) "Zoological names. A list of phyla, classes, and orders, prepared for section F, American Association for the Advancement of Science" American Association for the Advancement of Science
  5. ^ Miklos Kretzoi (1945) "Bemerkungen über das Raubtiersystem." Annales Historico-Naturales Musei Nationalis Hungarici, Budapest, vol. 38, pp. 59-83.
  6. ^ Romer, A. S. (1966.) "Vertebrate Paleontology." University of Chicago Press, Chicago; 3rd edition ISBN 0-7167-1822-7
  7. ^ Kretzoi, N. (1929.) "Materialien zur phylogenetischen Klassifikation der Aeluroïdeen. X Congres International de Zoologie, Budapest 1927., 2, 1293–1355.
  8. ^ W. D. Matthew (1909.) "The Carnivora and Insectivora of the Bridger Basin, middle Eocene." Memoirs of the American Museum of Natural History 9:289-567
  9. ^ Trouessart, E. L. (1879.) "Catalogue des mammifères vivants et fossiles. III. Insectivora." Rev. Mag. Zool. 3è ser. 7: 219 – 285.
  10. ^ Solé, F.; Lhuillier, J.; Adaci, M.; Bensalah, M.; Mahboubi, M.; Tabuce, R. (2013). "The hyaenodontidans from the Gour Lazib area (?Early Eocene, Algeria): implications concerning the systematics and the origin of the Hyainailourinae and Teratodontinae". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 12 (3): 303–322. doi:10.1080/14772019.2013.795196. S2CID 84475034.
  11. ^ Lambert, David; et al. (The Diagram Group) (1985). The Field Guide to Prehistoric Life. New York: Facts on File Publications. ISBN 978-0-8160-1125-4.
  12. ^ a b c Janis, Christine M.; Baskin, Jon A.; Berta, Annalisa; Flynn, John J.; Gunnell, Gregg F.; Hunt, Robert M. Jr.; Martin, Larry D.; Munthe, Kathleen (1998). "Carnivorous mammals". In Janis, Christine M.; Scott, Kathleen M.; Jacobs, Louis L. (eds.). Terrestrial Carnivores, Ungulates, and Ungulatelike Mammals. Evolution of Tertiary Mammals of North America. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 73–90. ISBN 978-0-521-35519-3.
  13. ^ a b c Rose, Kenneth David; Archibald, J. David (2005). The Rise of Placental Mammals: Origins and relationships of the major extant clades. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gunnell, Gregg F. (1998). "Creodonta". In Janis, Christine M.; Scott, Kathleen M.; Jacobs, Louis L. (eds.). Terrestrial Carnivores, Ungulates, and Ungulatelike Mammals. Evolution of Tertiary Mammals of North America. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 91–109. ISBN 978-0-521-35519-3.
  15. ^ a b Sorkin, Boris (December 2008) [10 April 2008]. "A biomechanical constraint on body mass in terrestrial mammalian predators". Lethaia. 41 (4): 333–347. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.2007.00091.x.
  16. ^ Muizon, Christian; Lange-Badré, Brigitte (2007-03-29). "Carnivorous dental adaptations in tribosphenic mammals and phylogenetic reconstruction". Lethaia. 30 (4): 353–366. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1997.tb00481.x.
  17. ^ Cope, E. D. (March–December 1880). "On the Genera of the Creodonta". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 19 (107): 76–82. JSTOR 982610.
  18. ^ Cope, E. D. (1884). The Vertebrata of the Tertiary Formations of the West. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. doi:10.3133/70038954.
  19. ^ a b c Matthew, William Diller (August 1909). "The Carnivora and Insectivora of the Bridger Basin, Middle Eocene". Memoirs of the American Museum of Natural History. 9: 289–576. hdl:2246/5744.
  20. ^ Russell, Loris S. (1954). "Evidence of Tooth Structure on the Relationships of the Early Groups of Carnivora". Evolution. 8 (2): 166–171. doi:10.2307/2405640. ISSN 0014-3820. JSTOR 2405640.
  21. ^ a b Van Valen, Leigh M. (1966). "Deltatheridia, a New Order of Mammals". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 132. hdl:2246/1126.
  22. ^ Borths, Matthew R; Stevens, Nancy J (2017). "Deciduous dentition and dental eruption of Hyainailouroidea (Hyaenodonta, "Creodonta," Placentalia, Mammalia)". Palaeontologia Electronica. 20 (3): 55A. doi:10.26879/776.
  23. ^ Solé, Floréal; Ladevèze, Sandrine (2017). "Evolution of the hypercarnivorous dentition in mammals (Metatheria,Eutheria) and its bearing on the development of tribosphenic molars". Evolution & Development. 19 (2): 56–68. doi:10.1111/ede.12219. PMID 28181377. S2CID 46774007.
  24. ^ Prevosti, F. J., & Forasiepi, A. M. (2018). "Introduction. Evolution of South American Mammalian Predators During the Cenozoic: Paleobiogeographic and Paleoenvironmental Contingencies"
  25. ^ Matthew R. Borths; Nancy J. Stevens (2019). "Simbakubwa kutokaafrika, gen. et sp. nov. (Hyainailourinae, Hyaenodonta, 'Creodonta,' Mammalia), a gigantic carnivore from the earliest Miocene of Kenya". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 39 (1): e1570222. Bibcode:2019JVPal..39E0222B. doi:10.1080/02724634.2019.1570222. S2CID 145972918.
  26. ^ Floréal Solé; Bernard Marandat; Fabrice Lihoreau (2020). "The hyaenodonts (Mammalia) from the French locality of Aumelas (Hérault), with possible new representatives from the late Ypresian". Geodiversitas. 42 (13): 185–214. doi:10.5252/geodiversitas2020v42a13. S2CID 219585388.
  27. ^ Halliday, Thomas J. D.; Upchurch, Paul; Goswami, Anjali (2015). "Resolving the relationships of Paleocene placental mammals" (PDF). Biological Reviews. 92 (1): 521–550. doi:10.1111/brv.12242. ISSN 1464-7931. PMC 6849585. PMID 28075073.
  28. ^ Polly, P. D. (1994). "What, if anything, is a creodont?". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 14: 42A. doi:10.1080/02724634.1994.10011592.
  29. ^ Gazin, Charles Lewis (January 17, 1962). "A further study of the lower Eocene mammalian faunas of southwestern Wyoming" (PDF). Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Museum. pp. 1–98.
  30. ^ Matthew, William Diller; Granger, Walter (1915). "A revision of the Lower Eocene Wasatch and Wind River faunas". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 34: 4–103. hdl:2246/1373. In this paper the authors rename Marsh's Limnocyon protenus as Didymictis protenus and include it among the miacids
  31. ^ Wortman, J. Lewis (July 1902). "Studies of Eocene Mammalia in the Marsh Collection, Peabody Museum". American Journal of Science. pp. 17–23.
  32. ^ a b Denison, Robert Howland (October 1937). "The Broad-Skulled Pseudocreodi". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 37 (1): 163–255. Bibcode:1937NYASA..37..163D. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1937.tb55483.x. S2CID 129936019. (Subscription or payment required.)
  33. ^ Feldhamer, George A.; Drickamer, Lee C.; Vessey, Stephen H.; Merritt, Joseph F.; Krajewski, Carey (2015). Mammalogy: Adaptation, Diversity, Ecology. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 356. ISBN 978-0-8018-8695-9.
  34. ^ Turner, Alan; Antón, Mauricio (2004). Evolving Eden: An Illustrated Guide to the Evolution of the African Large-Mammal Fauna. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-231-11944-3.
  35. ^ Gunnell, Gregg F.; Gingerich, Philip D. (September 30, 1991). "Systematics and evolution of late Paleocene and early Eocene Oxyaenidae (Mammalia, Creodonta) in the Clarks Fork Basin, Wyoming" (PDF). Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor: Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan. pp. 141–180.
  36. ^ Chester, Stephen G. B.; Bloch, Jonathan I.; Secord, Ross; Boyer, Doug M. (2010). "A New Small-Bodied Species of Palaeonictis (Creodonta, Oxyaenidae) from the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. pp. 227–243.
  37. ^ Wortman, Jacob L. (1894). "Osteology of Patriofelis, a Middle Eocene Creodont" (PDF). Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. pp. 129–164.
  38. ^ Granger, Walter (April 21, 1938). "A Giant oxyaenid from the Upper Eocene of Mongolia" (PDF). American Museum Novitates. pp. 1–5.
  39. ^ a b Gingerich, Philip D. (1989). "New Earliest Wasatchian Mammalian Fauna from the Eocene of Northwestern Wyoming: Composition and Diversity in a Rarely Sampled High-Floodplain Assemblage". Papers on Paleontology (28). Ann Arbor: Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan. hdl:2027.42/48628.

Further reading

Read other articles:

M ShopDiluncurkan10 Desember 2012Ditutup1 Maret 2023JaringanMNC ChannelsPemilikMNC Sky Vision (2012-2019)MNC GS Home Shopping (2019-2023)MNC Vision Networks (2019-2023)SloganHome Shopping TepercayaKantor pusatMNC Tower II Lantai 3-5, Jl. Raya Perjuangan No.1, Kebon Jeruk, Jakarta 11350Nama sebelumnyaMNC Shop (10 Desember 2012-7 Desember 2019)Saluran seindukRCTIMNCTVGTViNewsIDX ChannelSitus webwww.mshop.id PT MNC GS HomeshoppingNama dagangM ShopJenisPerusahaan patunganIndustriMediaDidirikan13 Jul…

Gimnasium Universitas Pertanian ChinaGimnasium saat Olimpiade Musim Panas 2008.LokasiUniversitas Pertanian ChinaPemilikUniversitas Pertanian ChinaKapasitas6,000KonstruksiDibuka2007ArsitekInstitut Desain Arsitektur Universitas Teknologi Cina SelatanPemakaiUniversitas Pertanian China Gimnasium Universitas Pertanian China (Hanzi sederhana: 中国农业大学体育馆; Hanzi tradisional: 中國農業大學體育館; Pinyin: Zhōngguó Nóngyè Dàxué Tǐyùguǎn) adalah arena dalam ruan…

Amir KolahdouzInformasi pribadiNama lengkapAmir Kolahdouz HaghTinggi1.71 mBerat60 kgCatatan membalapTim sekarangAzad University Cross TeamDisiplinJalan besarPosisiPembalapKategoriPendaki Amir Kolahdouz Hagh (lahir 7 Januari 1993) adalah seorang pembalap sepeda Iran, yang saat ini bergabung dengan tim Dunia UCI Mes Sungun – Azad. Prestasi utama 2011 1 Time trial, Kejuaraan Sepeda Asia Junior Tur Mazandaran Keseluruhan ke-1 Tahap 1 babak 4 2012 Klasifikasi Pegunungan ke-1 Tour of Azerbaijan 2013…

Budhi Achmadi Panglima Komando Operasi Udara IIPetahanaMulai menjabat 2 Oktober 2023 PendahuluAndi KustoroPenggantiPetahanaKepala Staf Komando Gabungan Wilayah Pertahanan III ke-6Masa jabatan27 April 2023 – 2 Oktober 2023 PendahuluIzak PangemananPenggantiDeni Hasoloan SimanjuntakWaasops Panglima TNIMasa jabatan28 September 2022 – 27 April 2023 PendahuluKustonoPenggantiBonang Bayuaji GautamaKomandan Komando Sektor II Koopsud IIMasa jabatan29 Juli 2022 – 28…

كرة القدم في الألعاب الأولمبية الصيفيةالهيئة الإداريةالاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدمالمنافسات2 (رجال: 1; سيدات: 1)الألعاب 1896 1900 1904 1908 1912 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020 قائمة الفائزين بالميداليات المسابقات (رجال・نساء) كرة القدم في دورة الألعاب …

Gunung IyaTitik tertinggiKetinggian637 m (2.090 kaki)Masuk dalam daftarRibuKoordinat8°53′49″S 121°38′42″E / 8.897°S 121.645°E / -8.897; 121.645Koordinat: 8°53′49″S 121°38′42″E / 8.897°S 121.645°E / -8.897; 121.645 GeografiGunung IyaLokasi Gunung Iya di Nusa Tenggara TimurLetakFlores, IndonesiaGeologiJenis gunungStratovolcanoBusur/sabuk vulkanikBusur Sunda / Sabuk alpidaLetusan terakhir1969 Gunung Iya adalah gunung bera…

Jean HeuclinJean Heuclin en 2017FonctionsDoyen de la faculté des lettres et sciences humaines de Lille1995–2011BiographieNaissance 1949Cousolre (Nord, Hauts-de-France, France)Nationalité françaiseActivités Historien, enseignant, médiévistemodifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Jean Heuclin, né en 1949, est un médiéviste français. Biographie Né à Cousolre en 1949 dans une famille d'industriels marbriers et de commerçants, il fait ses études secondaires à l'Institution Sa…

Las Tunas Province Province Negara  Kuba Capital Victoria de Las Tunas Area 6.587,75 km2 (2.544 sq mi) Population 529.850 (2004) Density 80,4 / km² (208 / sq mi) Zona waktu EST (UTC-5) Area code +53-31 Location of Las Tunas Province in Cuba Provinsi Las Tunas adalah sebuah provinsi di timur negara Kuba. Ibu kotanya adalah Victoria de Las Tunas. Kota lainnya adalah Puerto Padre dan Amancio. Provinsi ini memiliki penduduk sebesar 529.850 jiwa. Pranala luar (Inggr…

45th season of the UEFA club football tournament 1999–2000 UEFA Champions LeagueThe Stade de France in Saint-Denis held the finalTournament detailsDatesQualifying:13 July – 25 August 1999Competition proper:14 September 1999 – 24 May 2000TeamsCompetition proper: 32Total: 71Final positionsChampions Real Madrid (8th title)Runners-up ValenciaTournament statisticsMatches played157Goals scored442 (2.82 per match)Attendance5,495,112 (35,001 per match)Top scorer(s)Raúl (Real Madrid…

Tim MillerMiller pada 2015LahirTimothy MillerKebangsaanAmerika SerikatPekerjaanSutradara, artis efek visual, animatorTahun aktif1995–sekarangDikenal atasDeadpool Timothy Miller adalah seorang sutradara film dan artis efek visual asal Amerika. Ia membuat debut penyutradaraan film fiturnya dengan Deadpool (2016). Miller juga merancang cuplikan-cuplikan utama The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo dan Thor: The Dark World. Referensi Pranala luar Tim Miller (sutradara) di IMDb (dalam bahasa Inggris)…

Jalanan di Watertown, New York Watertown adalah sebuah kota di negara bagian New York AS dan ibu kota kabupaten Jefferson County . Hal ini terletak sekitar 25 mil (40 km) selatan Kepulauan Seribu, dan di sepanjang Sungai Hitam sekitar 5 mil (8 km) timur mulutnya di Danau Ontario . Itu terletak 180 mil (290 km) laut Albany, ibu kota negara bagian, dan 328 mil (530 km) laut Kota New York . Pada sensus 2020, memiliki populasi 24.685. Pos Tentara AS Fort Drum berada di dekat kota…

Blue Spring RideSampul volume pertama dari Ao Haru Rideアオハライド(Aoharaido)GenreComing-of-age,[1] drama,[2] romance[2][3] MangaPengarangIo SakisakaPenerbitShueishaPenerbit bahasa InggrisNA Viz MediaPenerbit bahasa IndonesiaM&C!ImprintMargaret ComicsMajalahBessatsu MargaretDemografiShōjoTerbit13 Januari 2011 – 13 Februari 2015Volume13 Novel ringanPengarangAkiko AbeIlustratorIo SakisakaPenerbitCobaltImprintCobalt SeriesTerbit27 Desember 2011 – 2 Ju…

Gareth Barry Barry con la maglia dell'Everton nel 2015 Nazionalità  Inghilterra Altezza 183 cm Peso 80 kg Calcio Ruolo Centrocampista Termine carriera 27 agosto 2020 Carriera Giovanili 1991-1997 Brighton1997-1998 Aston Villa Squadre di club1 1997-2009 Aston Villa365 (41)2009-2013 Manchester City132 (6)2013-2017 Everton131 (5)2017-2020 West Bromwich52 (2) Nazionale 1997-1998 Inghilterra U-166 (0)1998 Inghilterra U-185 (0)1998-2002 Inghilterra U-2127 (2)2007 Ing…

Prva makedonska fudbalska liga 2023-2024 Competizione Prva Liga Sport Calcio Edizione 32ª Organizzatore FFM Date dal 6 agosto 2023al 19 maggio 2024 Luogo Macedonia del Nord Partecipanti 12 Formula Girone all'italiana Sito web https://ffm.mk/en/first-macedonian-football-league Cronologia della competizione 2022-2023 2024-2025 Manuale La Prva makedonska fudbalska liga 2023-2024 è la 32ª edizione della massima serie del campionato macedone di calcio, iniziata il 6 agosto 2023 e con termi…

Stasiun Sawah Besar B04 Stasiun Sawah Besar bersama kantor pusat PT KAPM (KAI Properti)LokasiJalan Krekot JayaPasar Baru, Sawah Besar, Jakarta Pusat, 10710IndonesiaKoordinat6°9′44″S 106°49′33″E / 6.16222°S 106.82583°E / -6.16222; 106.82583Koordinat: 6°9′44″S 106°49′33″E / 6.16222°S 106.82583°E / -6.16222; 106.82583Ketinggian+15 mOperator KAI Commuter Letakkm 3+836 lintas Jakarta-Manggarai-Bogor/Nambo[1] Jumlah peronD…

PotoronoKalurahanPeta lokasi Desa PotoronoNegara IndonesiaProvinsiDaerah Istimewa YogyakartaKabupatenBantulKecamatanBanguntapanKode pos55798Kode Kemendagri34.02.12.2006 Luas3,90 km² Potorono (Jawa: Patarana) adalah sebuah kalurahan yang terletak di kapanewon Banguntapan, Bantul, Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Sejarah Kalurahan Desa Potorono dibentuk pada tahun 1946, nama Potorono merupakan pemberian dari lurah pertama H.M. Chamim. Potorono merupakan wilayah Kapanewon Gondowulun…

GeNX atau General Electric NeXt generation adalah sebuah mesin pesawat high-bypass yang diproduksi oleh GE Aviation.Kelebihan Mesin ini adalah irit bahan bakar sebanyak 15% dan lebih senyap sebanyak 65%. Mesin ini digunakan dalam aplikasi pesawat Boeing 787 dan Boeing 747-8. GeNX di Paris Air Show Pengembangan Teknologi GEnx dan Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 dipilih oleh Boeing untuk mengikuti putaran kedua antara tiga produsen mesin besar. GEnx menggunakan teknologi beberapa dari GE90 turbofan, termas…

2022 conflict between Israel and Gaza 2022 Gaza–Israel clashesPart of the Israeli–Palestinian conflictTargeted killing of Tayseer al-Jabari, commander in the Islamic Jihad Movement in PalestineDate5–7 August 2022LocationGaza Strip and West BankResult Ceasefire on 23:30 (UTC+3), 7 August 2022Combatants  Israel  Israel Defense Forces  Israeli Air Force Gaza Strip[1][2][3][4] Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine (PIJ)[5][6][7&#…

Durban Light InfantrySANDF Durban Light Infantry emblemActiveMay 1854 to presentCountrySouth AfricaAllegiance  Union of South Africa  Republic of South Africa Branch  South African Army  South African Army TypeInfantryRoleMotorised infantrySizeOne battalionPart ofSouth African Infantry FormationArmy Conventional ReserveGarrison/HQDLI Avenue, Durban 29°50′50″S 31°0′57″E / 29.84722°S 31.01583°E / -29.84722; 31.01583Motto(s)Primus in Afri…

Part of a series onPsychology Outline History Subfields Basic psychology Abnormal Affective neuroscience Affective science Behavioral genetics Behavioral neuroscience Behaviorism Cognitive/Cognitivism Cognitive neuroscience Social Comparative Cross-cultural Cultural Developmental Differential Ecological Evolutionary Experimental Gestalt Intelligence Mathematical Moral Neuropsychology Perception Personality Psycholinguistics Psychophysiology Quantitative Social Theoretical Applied psychology Anom…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya