Miomaci is known from dental remains of one individual including a left
maxilla with P3-M2, left upper
canine, 2 left
incisors, right M1, right M2, right p1, fragment of right
mandible with p3-m1, left hemimandible with alveoli with p1-p4, m1 (separated), m2-m3. The material is stored in the Geological Museum of the Geological and Geophysical Institute of Hungary. The specimens are known from the
Edelény Formation near the town of
Rudabánya, Hungary and date to the
Vallesian age of the
late Miocene. The generic name is derived from '
Miocene' and '
Maci, the
Hungarian word for 'little bear' or 'teddy bear'. The specific name,
pannonicum, is Latin for 'comes from
Pannonia', the Roman province in which
Rudabánya is located. ==References==