In 1945,
George Gaylord Simpson used traditional
taxonomic techniques to group these spectacularly diverse mammals in the superorder he named Paenungulata ("almost
ungulates"), but there were many loose threads in unravelling their genealogy. For example, hyraxes in his Paenungulata had some characteristics suggesting they might be connected to the
Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates, such as horses and rhinos). Indeed, early taxonomists placed the Hyracoidea closest to the rhinoceroses because of their dentition. When genetic techniques were developed for inspecting
amino acid differences among
haemoglobin sequences the most
parsimonious cladograms depicted Simpson's Paenungulata as an authentic
clade and as one of the first groups to diversify among the placental mammals (
Eutheria). The amino acid sequences reject a connection between extant paenungulates and
perissodactyls (odd-toed ungulates). However, a
2014 cladistic analysis placed
anthracobunids and desmostylians, two major extinct groups that have been considered to be non-African afrotheres, close to each other within
Perissodactyla. ==Phylogeny==