Non-therian mammals Gobiconodonts (Gobiconodonta) '' The largest
gobiconodont and the largest well-known
Mesozoic mammal was
Repenomamus. The known adult of
Repenomamus giganticus reached a total length of around and an estimated mass of .
Gobiconodon was also a large mammal,
Monotremes (Monotremata) ] • The largest known
monotreme (egg-laying mammal) ever was the extinct
long-beaked echidna species known as
Murrayglossus hacketti, known from a couple of bones found in Western Australia. It was the size of a sheep, weighing probably up to . • The largest known
ornithorhynchid is
Obdurodon tharalkooschild. •
Kollikodon ritchiei was likely the largest monotreme in the
Mesozoic. Its body length could be up to a .
Metatherians (Metatheria) '' compared to a human • The largest non-marsupial
metatherian, as well as the largest carnivorous metatherian, was
Proborhyaena gigantea, which is estimated to have weighed weigh . Another large metatherian was
Thylacosmilus atrox, weighing , with one estimate suggesting .
Australohyaena is another large metatherian, weighing up to . •
Stagodontid mammal
Didelphodon was one of the largest
Mesozoic metatherians and all
Cretaceous mammals. Its skull could reach over in length and a weight of complete animal was .
Marsupials (Marsupialia) '' the largest marsupial • The largest known
marsupial, and the largest
metatherian, is the extinct
Diprotodon, about long, standing tall and weighing up to . Fellow
vombatiform Palorchestes azael was similar in length being around , with body mass estimates indicating it could exceed . • The largest known carnivorous marsupial was
Thylacoleo carnifex. Measurements taken from a number of specimens show they averaged in weight. The largest known koala is the
giant koala (
Phascolarctos stirtoni) which has an estimated weight of , which is the same weight as a large contemporary male koala. The largest ever member of the
Tasmanian devil genus was
Sarcophilus laniarius which were around 15% larger and 50% heavier than modern devils. • The largest known
kangaroo was an as yet unnamed species of
Macropus, estimated to weigh , larger than the largest known specimen of
Procoptodon, which could grow up to and weigh . Some species from the genus
Sthenurus were similar in size or a bit larger than the extant
grey kangaroo (
Macropus giganteus). The largest ever tree kangaroo,
Bohra, had an estimated body mass of . • The largest
potoroid ever recorded was
Borungaboodie, which was nearly 30% bigger than the largest living species and weighed up to . • The largest member of the
Thylacinidae is
Thylacinus megiriani, which is somewhat reasonably larger than the Tasmanian wolf (
Thylacinus cynocephalus), and bigger than its fellow Miocene relative
Thylacinus potens, usually being 57.3 kilograms in weight.
Non-placental eutherians s''
Cimolestans (Cimolesta) The largest known
cimolestan is
Coryphodon, high at the shoulder, long and up to of mass.
Barylambda was also a huge mammal, at .
Wortmania and
Psittacotherium from the group
Taeniodonta were among the largest mammals of the Early
Paleocene. Lived as soon as half a million years after
K–Pg boundary,
Wortmania reached in body mass.
Psittacotherium, which appeared two million years later, reached . Close European relatives from the same family
Pseudorhyncocyonidae had skulls of in length.
Even-toed ungulates (Artiodactyla) '' was one of the largest extinct land-dwelling
artiodactyl ungulates • The largest known land-dwelling
artiodactyl was
Hippopotamus antiquus, estimated to be 14.1 ft (4.3 m) in length and in weight. However, volumetric models suggests it was slightly smaller, weighing . other experts consider it to be smaller than
Hippopotamus antiquus. were the largest-known
entelodonts that ever lived, at long and high at the shoulder. The huge
Andrewsarchus from the
Eocene of
Inner Mongolia had a skull about long though the taxonomy of this genus is disputed. '' • The largest
bovine and
bovid was possibly
Bison latifrons. It reached a weight from to possibly , in length, shoulder height of , and had horns that spanned . The African giant buffalo (
Syncerus antiquus) may have rivaled
Bison latifrons in size. It reached weight from to , measured in length from muzzle to the end of the tail, in height at the
withers, in height at the hindquarters, and the distance between the tips of its horns was as large as . and horn span of . The
kouprey (
Bos sauveli), reaching in shoulder height, has existed since the
Middle Pleistocene and is also considered to be possibly extinct. • The long-legged
Megalotragus is possibly the largest known
alcelaphine bovid, bigger than the extant
wildebeest. The tips of horns of
M. priscus were located at a distance of about from each other. '' • The extinct
cervid Irish elk (
Megaloceros giganteus) reached over in height, in mass and could have antlers spanning up to across, about twice the maximum span for a moose's antlers. The
giant moose (
Cervalces latifrons) reached high and was twice as heavy as the Irish elk but its antler span at was smaller than that of
Megaloceros. North American
stag-moose (
Cervalces scotti) reached in length and a weight of . • The largest known
giraffid, aside from the extant giraffe, is
Sivatherium, with a body weight of . • The largest
protoceratid was
Synthetoceras, it reached long and in mass. • The largest known wild
suid to ever exist was
Kubanochoerus gigas, having measured up to and stood around tall at the shoulder.
Megalochoerus could be similar in size, possibly weighing or . • The largest
tayassuid extinct
Platygonus species were similar in size to modern peccaries especially
giant peccary, at around in body length, and had long legs, allowing them to run well. They also had a
pig-like snout and long
tusks which were probably used to fend off predators. • The largest
camelid was
Titanotylopus from the
Miocene of North America. It possibly reached and a shoulder height of over . The
Syrian camel was twice as big as the modern camels. and tall.
Camelops had legs 20% longer than that of the
dromedary and was about tall at the shoulder, weighing about . • The
anoplotheriid Anoplotherium is thought to have been capable of reaching up to in the case of
A. commune and in the case of
A. latipes.
A. latipes in particular could have measured more than in length and in shoulder height. Because it was probably capable of
facultative bipedalism, it could have been capable of standing over tall.
Cetaceans (Cetacea) '' was the heaviest
archeocete , B. cetiodes
(dark blue) and B. isis'' '' was a huge ancient sperm whale, the largest of the
macroraptorial sperm whales. • The heaviest
archeocete was
Perucetus, with weight estimated at , while length is estimated at . However, Motani and Pyenson in 2024 argued that it is extremely difficult for Perucetus to rival or exceed the blue whale in weight. They discussed that since Perucetus is much shorter than the blue whale in length, it should be at least 3.375 times denser or 1.83 times fatter to weigh heavier, which is impossible for vertebrates whose whole-body density range from 0.75 to 1.2. Motani and Pyenson tested the hypotheses of Bianucci and colleagues by performing various body mass estimation methods: the regression-based and volumetric mass estimation resulted in for a length range of , though the likely body mass range would fall within . They also claimed that the previous estimation is inflated by assumed isometry, and that the effect from pachyostosis on the estimation of body mass is not negligible as it resulted in underestimation. Paul and Larramendi (2025) further downsized Perucetus to 15-16 meters in length and 35-40 tonnes in weight. The longest of known Eocene archeocete whales was
Basilosaurus at in length. • The largest
squalodelphinid was
Macrosqualodelphis at in length. • Some
Neogene rorquals were comparable in size to modern huge relatives.
Parabalaenoptera was estimated to be about the size of the modern
gray whale, about long. Some balaenopterids perhaps rivaled the
blue whale in terms of size, • The largest
macroraptorial sperm whale is
Livyatan, with an estimated length of 44–57 ft (13.5–17.5 m) and an estimated weight of 62.8 short tons (57 tonnes) based on the 17.5m estimate.
Odd-toed ungulates (Perissodactyla) , †Elasmotherium'',
white rhino,
Indian rhino,
black rhino and
Sumatran rhino compared to a human '' • One of the largest known
perissodactyls, and the second largest land mammal (see
Palaeoloxodon namadicus) is an unnamed species of
Dzungariotherium which may have been even larger than has been thought, estimated to be around . Its more famous relative,
Paraceratherium, also grew to large sizes. The largest individual known from the species
Paraceratherium transouralicum, was estimated at tall at the shoulders, in length from nose to rump, and in weight. • Some prehistoric horned
rhinos also grew to large sizes. The biggest
Elasmotherium reached up to long, high and weighed . or , at the shoulder height and in length. •
Metamynodon, an
amynodontid, reached in length, comparable to
Hippopotamus in measurement and shape. • The
giant tapir (
Tapirus augustus) was the largest tapir ever, at about and tall at the shoulders. Earlier, this mammal was estimated even bigger, at tall, and assigned to the separate genus
Megatapirus. • One of the biggest
chalicotheres was
Moropus. It stood about tall at the shoulder. • Late Eocene perissodactyls from the family
Brontotheriidae attained huge sizes. The North American
Megacerops (also known as
Brontotherium in length, and in weight.
Embolotherium from Asia was equal in size. • The largest prehistoric horse was
Equus giganteus of North America. It was estimated to grow to more than and at the shoulders. The largest
anchitherine equid was
Hypohippus at , comparable to large modern
domestic horses.
Megahippus is another large anchitheriine. With the body mass of it was much heavier than most of its close relatives. Previously until the naming of
P. giganteum in 1994,
P. magnum was considered the largest species of
Palaeotherium, potentially reaching in shoulder height and in length. Another palaeothere
Cantabrotherium is estimated to have weighed about . and weighed up to .
Dinoceratans (Dinocerata) '' was the largest of the
Dinoceratans The largest known
dinoceratan was
Eobasileus with skull length of , tall at the back and tall at the shoulder. Another huge animal of this group was
Uintatherium, with skull length of , tall at the shoulder, Another huge bear was the giant North American short-faced bear (
Arctodus simus), with the average weight of and the maximum estimated at . There is a guess that the largest individuals of this species could reached even larger mass, up to . The largest males of the possibly disrupted subspecies of
brown bear (
Ursus arctos),
steppe brown bear (
Ursus arctos priscus), is also estimated to have weighed . Another large bear was
Agriotherium africanum, this species was estimated to have initially estimated to have weighed , but more recent estimates suggest it could've weighed . • The biggest
odobenid and one of the biggest
pinnipeds to have ever existed is
Pontolis magnus, with a skull length of (twice as large as the skulls of modern male
walruses) Only the modern male
elephant seals (
Mirounga) reach similar sizes. The second largest prehistoric pinniped is
Gomphotaria pugnax with a skull length of nearly . • One of the largest of prehistoric
otariids is
Thalassoleon, comparable in size to the biggest extant
fur seals. An estimated weight of
T. mexicanus is no less than . • The biggest known
mustelid to ever exist was likely the giant otter,
Enhydriodon omoensis. It exceeded in length, and would have weighed in at around , much larger than any other known mustelid, living or extinct. There were other giant otters, like
Siamogale, at around and
Megalenhydris, which was larger than a modern-day giant river otter.
Megalictis was the largest purely terrestrial mustelid (although
Enhydriodon had recently been mentioned as the largest mustelid that also happens to be a terrestrial predator Other huge mustelids include
Perunium and
hypercarnivorous Eomellivora, both from the
Late Miocene. • The heaviest
procyonid was possibly the South American
Chapalmalania. It reached in body length with a short tail and , comparable in size to an
American black bear (
Ursus americanus). Another huge procyonid was
Cyonasua, which weighted about , about the same size as a medium-sized dog. • The largest
canid of all time was
Epicyon haydeni, which stood tall at the shoulder, had a body length of and weighed , with the heaviest known specimen weighing up to . The largest
wolf (
Canis lupus) subspecies ever existed in Europe is the
Canis lupus maximus from the
Late Pleistocene of
France. Its long bones are 10% larger than those of extant
European wolves and 20% longer than those of
C. l. lunellensis. The Late Pleistocene
Italian wolf was morphometrically close to
C. l. maximus. • The largest
amphicyonid (bear-dogs) was a species of
Pseudocyon weighing around , representing a very large individual.
Feliformia giganteus'' and the modern
domestic cat '' at the La Brea Tar Pits Museum • The largest
barbourofelinae, as well as the largest
nimravid, was
Barbourofelis fricki, with the shoulder height of and could've weighed . However, a 2024 study estimated a slightly smaller mass of .
Including supplementary materials The largest
nimravinae was
Quercylurus major as its fossils suggest it weighed similar in size to the modern-day
lion and was
scansorial. The closely related
Dinailurictis bondali was slightly smaller weighing , making it as large as a lioness.
Eusmilus adelos is considered the largest member of the
hoplophonine subfamily, reaching a weight of , comparable to a small
African lion. While it was assumed that
Hoplophoneus occidentalis could've weighed , A 2012 study suggested this species could've weighed . • The largest
machairodont (saber-toothed cats)
felid was
Amphimachairodus kabir, with the males possibly reaching .
Smilodon populator was a close contender, with males weighing . is estimated to weigh . Another contender was
Nimravides catocopis with the largest specimen weighing up to . An unnamed species of
Xenosmilus thought to have weighed between . • The heaviest known
pantherine felids were the extinct leonines
Panthera fossilis, which has been estimated to have maximum weight of , the
American lion (
Panthera atrox), weighing up to , and the
Natodomeri lion of eastern Africa, which was comparable in size to large members of
P. atrox. The
Ngangdong tiger (
Panthera tigris soloensis), was estimated to have weighed up to , however this has been contested with some estimates suggesting the largest individuals weighed . • The largest
feline felid was
Acinonyx pleistocaenicus, with the largest specimen weighing . Its close relative,
giant cheetah (
Acinonyx pardinensis), reached , approximately twice as large as the modern
cheetah. The North American
Pratifelis was larger than the extant
cougar. • The largest
viverrid known to have existed is
Viverra leakeyi, which was around the size of a
wolf or
small leopard at . • The largest known extinct
hyena was the
percrocutid hyena
, Dinocrocuta gigantea. It was originally estimated to have weighed . However, recent weight estimates may suggest it may have weighed less. An individual with a skull length of , is estimated to have weighed . One specimen is reported to have a skull length of .
Pachycrocuta brevirostris was another large extinct hyena. It's estimated at at the shoulder and weight.
Crocuta hyenas have also been known large sizes, even larger than the extant spotted hyena, most notably the extinct
spotted hyena subspecies, the
cave hyena, with average individuals weighing .
Crocuta eturno was another large
Crocuta species with estimates suggesting this species could've weighed . • The extinct
giant fossa (
Cryptoprocta spelea) had a body mass in range from to , much larger than the modern
fossa weighs (up to for adult males).
Hyaenodonts (Hyaenodonta) • The largest
hyainailourid, as well as the largest
hyaenodont was
Megistotherium osteothlastes at .
Hyainailouros was another large hyainailourid. The largest species in the genus,
H. bugtiensis, which could've weighed between .
Oxyaenids (Oxyaenidae) '' The largest known
oxyaenid was
Sarkastodon weighing in at . and
Ankalagon from North America. Another large mesonychian is
Harpagolestes with a skull length of a half a meter in some species. • One of the largest known fossil bats overall was
Archaeopteropus from Italy. With an estimated wingspan of , it rivalled the modern
spectral bat and many
flying foxes in size.
Hedgehogs, gymnures, shrews, and moles (Eulipotyphla) '' skeleton The largest known animal of the group
Eulipotyphla was
Deinogalerix, measuring up to in total length, with a skull up to long.
Rodents (Rodentia) (
Castoroides ohioensis) • Several of the extinct South American
dinomyids were much bigger than modern rodents.
Josephoartigasia monesi was the largest-known
rodent of all time, approximately weighing an estimated .
Phoberomys pattersoni weighed . Another huge dinomyid,
Telicomys gigantissimus had a minimal weight of . • The largest old world porcupine are the
Hystrix refossa was larger than living porcupines. It was approximately 20% larger than its closest relative, the living
Indian porcupine (
H. indica), reaching lengths of over .
Rabbits, hares, and pikas (Lagomorpha) The biggest known prehistoric
lagomorph is the
Minorcan giant rabbit
Nuralagus rex at .
Pangolins (Pholidota) The largest pangolin was the extinct
Manis palaeojavanica Its total length is measured up to .
Primates (Primates) '' • The largest known non-hominid
primate is
Gigantopithecus blacki. Studies estimate heights around tall, weighing . Some suggested that it would not exceed tall with a bipedal posture. Another giant ape was
Meganthropus palaeojavanicus at in body height, although it is known from very poor remains. • During the
Pleistocene, some
archaic humans were close in sizes or even larger than
early modern humans.
Neanderthals (
Homo neanderthalensis) reached and in average weight for males and females, respectively, larger than the parameters of modern humans (
Homo sapiens) ( and for males and females, respectively). A
tibia from
Kabwe (
Zambia) indicates an indeterminate
Homo individual of possibly in height. It was one of the tallest humans of the
Middle Pleistocene and noticeably large even compared to recent humans. The tallest
Homo sapiens individuals from the Middle Pleistocene of
Spain reached and for males and females, respectively. • The heaviest known
Old World monkey is the prehistoric baboon
Theropithecus oswaldi which have weighed , some even suggested to reach . A male specimen of
Dinopithecus projected to weigh an average of and up to , exceeds the maximum weight record of the
chacma baboon, the largest extant baboon. • The largest
omomyids were
Macrotarsius and
Ourayia from the
Middle Eocene. Both reached in weight. • Some prehistoric
lemuriform primates grew to huge sizes as well.
Archaeoindris was a
sloth lemur that lived in
Madagascar and weighed , as large as an adult male
gorilla.
Palaeopropithecus from the same family was also heavier than most modern
lemurs, at .
Megaladapis is another large extinct lemur at in length and an average body mass of around . Other estimates suggest but its still much larger than any extant lemur. In 2024, Biswas, Chang and Tsai estimated a maximum shoulder height of over 4.5 metres (15 ft) and suggested that the body mass for 5 measured specimens ranged from 13.2 to 18.5 tonnes (29,000 to 41,000 lb) from specimens from
Taiwan. The largest individual reported individual of the
steppe mammoth of
Eurasia (
Mammuthus trogontherii) was estimated to reach at the shoulders and in weight.
Stegodon zdanskyi, the biggest species of
Stegodon, was in body mass. •
Deinotherium was the largest proboscidean in
Deinotheriidae family. Bones retrieved in
Crete confirm the existence of specimen tall at the shoulders and more than in weight. The weight of Steller's sea cows is estimated to be . Its direct ancestor, the
Cuesta sea cow was around 9 m (30 ft) long and possibly 10 tonnes (11 short tonnes) in weight.
Embrithopods (Embrithopoda) '' The largest known embrithopod was the
arsinoitheriid Arsinoitherium.
A. zitteli would have been tall at the shoulders, and long.
A. giganteum reached even larger size than
A. zitteli.
Hyraxes (Hyracoidea) Some of the prehistoric
hyraxes were extremely large compared to modern small relatives. The largest hyracoid ever evolved is
Titanohyrax ultimus. With the mass estimation in rage of to over it was close in size to
Sumatran rhinoceros. Another enormous hyrax is
Megalohyrax which had skull of in length and reached the size of tapir. More recent
Gigantohyrax was three times as large as the extant relative
Procavia capensis, although it is noticeably smaller than earlier
Megalohyrax and
Titanohyrax.
Desmostylians (Desmostylia) '' skeletal diagram The largest known
desmostylian was a species of
Desmostylus, with skull length of and comparable in size to the
Steller's sea cow.
Paleoparadoxia is also known as one of the largest desmostylians, with body length of .
Glyptodonts, armadillos and pampatheres (Cingulata) The largest
cingulate known is
Doedicurus, at long, high and reaching a mass of approximately . The largest species of
Glyptodon,
Glyptodon clavipes, reached in length which is as big as a bull
African bush elephant. However, many studies have gotten lower estimates, with one study suggesting that was the most accurate size estimate for an adult. The closely related ground sloth,
Megatherium americanum, was slightly smaller, measuring in length, and weighed based on volumetric models. • The largest known
mylodontoid was
Lestodon armatus, estimated to have measured in length, and weighed . • The largest extinct
anteater was
Neotamandua borealis, which is estimated to have weighed between .
Astrapotherians (Astrapotheria) The largest
astrapotherian was
Hilarcotherium miyou, with an estimated weight of . Other large astrapotherians that weighed weighed about , such as the genus
Granastrapotherium and some species of
Parastrapotherium (
P. martiale).
Litopterns (Litopterna) The largest known
litoptern was
Macrauchenia, which had three hoofs per foot. It was a relatively large animal, with a body length of around .
Notoungulates (Notoungulata) s The largest
notoungulate known of complete remains is
Toxodon. It was about in body length, and about high at the shoulder and resembled a heavy rhinoceros. Although incomplete, the preserved fossils suggest that
Mixotoxodon were the most massive member of the group, with a weight about .
Pyrotherians (Pyrotheria) The largest mammal of the South American order
Pyrotheria was
Pyrotherium at in length and in weight. == Reptiles (Reptilia) ==