''. ''. There were many genera, and some of these are very well known (e.g.,
Rodhocetus). Known protocetids had large fore- and hindlimbs that could support the body on land, and it is likely that they lived amphibiously: in the sea and on land. It is unclear at present whether protocetids had flukes (the horizontal tail fin of modern cetaceans). However, what is clear is that they are adapted even further to an aquatic life-style. In
Rodhocetus, for example, the
sacrum – a bone that in land-mammals is a fusion of five vertebrae that connects the
pelvis with the rest of the
vertebral column – was divided into loose vertebrae. However, the pelvis retain a
sacroiliac joint. Furthermore, the nasal openings are now halfway up the snout; a first step towards the telescoped condition in modern whales. Their supposed amphibious nature is supported by the discovery of a pregnant
Maiacetus, in which the fossilised fetus was positioned for a head-first delivery, suggesting that
Maiacetus gave birth on land. The
ungulate ancestry of these early whales is still underlined by characteristics like the presence of hooves at the ends of toes in
Rodhocetus. ==Taxonomy==