Machichnus is an ichnogenus. It was erected by Mikuláš et al. (2006) for shallow, thin, discrete, parallel to subparallel, smooth-bottomed scratches, occurring on bone tissue in small groups or series. According to modern analogues, the series of scratches represent marks of teeth of carnivorous or scavenging reptilians and mammals. Such traces are quite frequent in the fossil record since the mid-Mesozoic, but they have seldom been described in detail.

Machichnus
Trace fossil classification Edit this classification
Ichnofamily: Machichnidae
Ichnogenus: Machichnus
Mikuláš et al., 2006
Type ichnospecies
Machichnus regularis
Mikuláš et al., 2006
Ichnospecies[1]
  • M. regularis Mikuláš et al., 2006
  • M. bohemicus Mikuláš et al., 2006
  • M. multilineatus Mikuláš et al., 2006
  • M. normani Chumakov et al., 2013
  • M. harlandi Chumakov et al., 2013
  • M. jeansi Chumakov et al., 2013
  • M. fatimae de Araújo-Júnior et al., 2017

The type species/specimen of Machichnus comes from the Miocene of the Czech Republic. In this case, crocodiles are suspect as tracemakers.[2]

Machichnus originally contained three ichnospecies: Machichnus regularis, Machichnus multilineatus, and Machichnus bohemicus. The ichnogenera Brutalichnus and Nihilichnus were described in the same paper.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Wisshak, M.; Knaust, D.; Bertling, M. (2019). "Bioerosion ichnotaxa: review and annotated list". Facies. 65 (2): 24. doi:10.1007/s10347-019-0561-8.
  2. ^ a b Mikuláš R., Kadlecová E., Fejfar O., Dvořák Z. (2007): Three New Ichnogenera of Biting and Gnawing Traces on Reptilian and Mammalian Bones: A Case Study from the Miocene of the Czech Republic. Ichnos, 13, p. 113–127.