and Paleoparadoxia'' '' on display at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County The
type species Desmostylus hesperus was originally classified from a few teeth and
vertebrae as a sirenian by , but doubts arose a decade later when more complete fossils were discovered in Japan. also proposed that they belonged to the Sirenia. One of the most comprehensive collections of desmostylian teeth was amassed by paleontologist
John C. Merriam, who concluded on the basis of the
molar structure and repeated occurrence in marine beds that the animals had been aquatic, and were probably sirenian. In 1926, the Austrian palaeontologist
Othenio Abel suggested origins with
monotremes, like the
duck-billed platypus, and in 1933, he even created the order "Desmostyloidea", which he placed within the
Multituberculata. Abel died shortly after World War II, and his classification won few supporters and has been ignored since. Because desmostylians were originally known only from skull fragments, teeth, and bits of other bones, general agreement was that they had had flippers and a fin-like tail. The discovery of a complete skeleton from
Sakhalin Island in 1941, however, showed that they possessed four legs, with bones as stout as a
hippopotamus', and justified the creation of a new order for the desmostylians, described by . A major find was announced in October 2015 after scientists examined an extensive group of giant, tusked, quadruped, marine mammal fossils. This northernmost to date species discovery had been unearthed during excavation for the construction of a school in
Unalaska, in the
Aleutian Islands. A rendition of a group was drawn by Alaskan artist
Ray Troll. Despite their similarities to manatees and elephants, desmostylians were entirely unlike any living creatures.
Douglas Emlong's 1971 discovery of the new genus
Behemotops from
Oregon showed that early desmostylians had more proboscidean-like teeth and jaws than later ones. Despite this discovery, their relationships to manatees and proboscids remain unresolved. The analysis of Cooper
et al. (2014) indicates the similarities with manatees and elephants may be a result of
convergence and that they may instead be basal
perissodactyls. • Order
Desmostylia Reinhart, 1953 • Family Paleoparadoxiidae Reinhart, 1959 • Subfamily Behemotopsinae (Inuzuka, 1987) •
Behemotops Domning, Ray, and McKenna, 1986 •
Behemotops proteus Domning, Ray, and McKenna, 1986 (including
Behemotops emlongi Domning, Ray, and McKenna, 1986) •
Behemotops katsuiei Inuzuka, 2000b • Subfamily Paleoparadoxiinae (Reinhart, 1959) •
Archaeoparadoxia •
Archaeoparadoxia weltoni (Clark, 1991) •
Paleoparadoxia Reinhart, 1959 •
Paleoparadoxia tabatai (Tokunaga, 1939), (=
Paleoparadoxia media Inuzuka, 2005) •
Neoparadoxia Barnes, 2013 •
Neoparadoxia repenningi (Domning and Barnes, 2007) •
Neoparadoxia cecilialina Barnes, 2013 ==Description==