'' skeleton Merycoidodontoidea is divided into two
families: the Merycoidodontidae (originally known as Oreodontidae) which contains all of the derived taxa, and the
Agriochoeridae, which contains the smaller and more basal taxa. Together they form the now-extinct
suborder Oreodonta. Oreodonts may have been distantly related to
pigs,
hippopotamuses, and the pig-like
peccaries. Indeed, some scholars place Merycoidodontidae within the pig-related suborder
Suina (Suiformes). Other scholars place oreodonts closer to
camels in the suborder
Tylopoda. Still, other experts put the oreodonts together with the short-lived
cainotheres in the
taxonomic suborder
Ancodonta comprising these two groups of extinct ancodonts. All scholars agree, however, that the oreodont was an early form of
even-toed ungulate, belonging to the order Artiodactyla. Today, most evidence points towards the oreodonts being tylopods, along with camels,
xiphodonts, and
protoceratids. Over 50
genera of Oreodonta have been described in the
paleozoological literature. However, oreodonts are widely considered to be taxonomically oversplit, and many of these genera may prove to be synonymous. The last researchers to fully review oreodont taxonomy, C. Bertrand Schultz and Charles H. Falkenbach, have been criticized for erecting excessive numbers of genera, based in part on apparent anatomical differences between different specimens that were actually
taphonomic deformations due to postburial forces. == Natural history ==