Updated
Updated · Cowboy State Daily · Jun 27
Study Finds 53 Hell Pig Teeth Reveal Size-Driven Diet Split
Updated
Updated · Cowboy State Daily · Jun 27

Study Finds 53 Hell Pig Teeth Reveal Size-Driven Diet Split

1 articles · Updated · Cowboy State Daily · Jun 27

Summary

  • Dental microwear on 53 teeth from 13 Archaeotherium species showed a clear diet split: smaller hell pigs ate tougher, flesh-heavy food, while larger ones consumed a broader mix including harder items.
  • Brynn Wooten compared fossil tooth textures with modern animals and found some large-bodied specimens wore teeth like hyenas, while smaller-bodied ones resembled cheetahs—reversing the pattern usually seen in living mammals.
  • The analysis suggests the divide tracked species size rather than age, challenging the long-held assumption that these prehistoric mammals were simply pig-like omnivores.
  • Wooten said the pattern could reflect behavior such as kleptoparasitism, with larger hell pigs potentially displacing smaller hunters from kills, though she said more evidence is needed.
  • Hell pigs ranged across North America, Europe and Asia from 36 million to 19 million years ago; Wooten plans stable-isotope work next to refine whether different species were mainly carnivorous or more generalist feeders.

Insights

Why were smaller prehistoric 'Hell Pigs' the hunters while their giant relatives were bone-crushing thieves?
What can microscopic scratches on fossil teeth reveal about the brutal lives of North America's top predators?