Reichenbach (1847) erected
Basilosaurus kochii for the posterior skull fragment MB Ma.43248, found in the Late Eocene (middle-late
Priabonian)
Ocala Limestone of Clarksville, Louisiana. Meanwhile, Muller (1851) erected a new subspecies of
Zeuglodon brachyspondylus,
Z. brachyspondylus minor, for not only MB Ma.43248 but also MB Ma.43247, TM 8501 (holotype of
Zeuglodon hydrarchus Carus, 1849), and several vertebrae. In the late 19th century there was a debate whether large and small specimens attributed to
Zeuglodon brachyspondylus (declared a
nomen dubium by Uhen 2005) were separate species or not. Hoping to clarify things, restricted
Z. brachyspondylus to the large fossils (including the
Z. brachyspondylus lectotype) and created the subspecies
Z. brachyspondylus minor for the small specimens which had previously been synonymized with
Dorudon serratus. proposed the genus
Zygorhiza for the subspecies. Adopting True's generic name, synonymized this subspecies with
Basilosaurus kochii to form the new combination
Zygorhiza kochii. named and described the species
Zeuglodon wanklyni based on a skull collected by Dr. Arthur Wanklyn from the
Barton Clays in southern England. This skull, however, was never deposited at the
British Museum of Natural History and has not been since Seeley described it. , nevertheless, recombined it as
Zygorhiza wanklyni and referred a posterior cervical vertebra from the same location to it. Uhen 1998 declared it
nomen dubium. described an incomplete skull, four vertebrae, two teeth, and small fragments in early
Bartonian sediments in New Zealand which they tentatively identified as
Zygorhiza sp. This is the oldest known Dorudontinae and the oldest known cetacean from the Southern Hemisphere. In the U.S.,
Zygorhiza is known from the Gulf Coast, whilst
Dorudon is known from southeastern Atlantic Coast. Outside North America,
Zygorhiza has only been reliably identified in New Zealand, whereas
Dorudon only in Egypt. It is possible that these non-overlapping distributions indicate differences in habitat preferences. The mounted specimen in the Macon Museum of Arts and Sciences in
Macon is commonly referred to as "Ziggy". ==Anatomy==