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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › DoedicurusDoedicurus - Wikipedia

    Doedicurus was a glyptodont, most closely related to modern armadillos, thus a member of the superorder Xenarthra (along with sloths and anteaters) endemic to South America. Glyptodonts were classified into the family Glyptodontidae.

  2. Jul 31, 2019 · Name: Glyptodon (Greek for "carved tooth"); also known as the Giant Armadillo; pronounced GLIP-toe-don. Habitat: Swamps of South America. Historical Epoch: Pleistocene-Modern (two million-10,000 years ago) Read More. Doedicurus: The Giant Prehistoric Armadillo. By Bob Strauss. Size and Weight: About 10 feet long and one-ton. Diet: Plants.

  3. Jun 21, 2018 · The Glyptodon Was A Prehistoric Armadillo So Big That Early Humans Used Its Shells For Shelters. By William DeLong | Edited By John Kuroski. Published June 21, 2018. Updated November 19, 2018. The glyptodon may seem like just a big armadillo, but it was the size of a car and could crush early humans with its clubbed tail.

  4. Feb 2, 2011 · By Riley Black. February 02, 2011. • 7 min read. Killing a glyptodont was no easy task. Prehistoric, bad-ass cousins of modern armadillos, these large mammals were protected by bony shielding on...

  5. www.amnh.org › permanent › primitive-mammalsGlyptodonts | AMNH

    Floor 4. For millions of years, enormous, plant-eating glyptodonts lumbered across the Americas. Some species were as large as cars: up to 10 feet long. They were covered with thick armor, made from bone that grew from within their skin. Glyptodont shells, or carapaces, were incredible heavy.

  6. Glyptodont | extinct mammal | Britannica. Contents. glyptodont. extinct mammal. Also known as: Glyptodontidae. Learn about this topic in these articles: classification. In xenarthran: Cingulata. Members of extinct families include glyptodonts and huge North American armadillos. Read More.

  7. New research using a novel technique to recover ancient DNA reveals that the evolutionary history of glyptodontshuge, armored mammals that went extinct in the Americas at the end of the last ice age—is unexpectedly brief.

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