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Rincon first spoke of the discovery at a symposium on scimitar-toothed cats in Pocatello, Idaho, in May. Rincon and other researchers say the find suggests scimitar-toothed cats
-- of the genus Homotherium -- crossed from North America to South America shortly after the continents grew together and became linked in modern-day Panama following a 65-million-year separation, a "moment of great exchange" between the continents. Another expert, Argentine paleontologist Francisco Prevosti, called the Venezuelan discovery of "utmost importance for South American paleontology." Prevosti and other experts say the now-extinct scimitar-toothed cat was previously confirmed to have inhabited Africa, Europe, Asia and North America
-- but not South America.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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