Eucinepeltus

Eucinepeltus (also often called, historically, Encinepeltus) is an extinct genus of glyptodont. It lived during the Early Miocene, and its fossilized remains were discovered in South America.

Description
Like all glyptodonts, this genus was characterized by its dorsal armor composed of numerous osteoderms fused together. Eucinepeltus was larger than other basal glyptodonts such as Propalaehoplophorus, with a skull reaching 20 centimeters in length, and wider than most of its relative species. The cephalic shield was composed of 11-15 large welded bony plates, presenting a central convexity often perforated. The skull was depressed and presented a rather elongated muzzle.

The dental characteristics of Eucinepeltus includes lower molars increasing in size from the first to the fifth molar ; a first and second lower molars elliptical, convex in the internal side and with a large notch and a corresponding perpendicular groove in the back ; bilobed third and fourth lower molars, with an anterior internal lobe much smaller than the following one ; the remaining molars were trilobed.

Classification
The genus Eucinepeltus was first described in 1891 by Florentino Ameghino, based on fossilized remains found in Early Miocene terrains from Argentina. The type species is Eucinepeltus petesatus, and the later described species E. complicatus may belong to the genus, although its real affinities are unclear.

Eucinepeltus is the largest genus belonging to the Propalaehoplophorini, a tribe of basal glyptodonts, typical of the Early Miocene, and also including the genera Propalaehoplophorus, Parapropalaehoplophorus and Asterostemma.

Modern cladistic analysis suggests that Propalaehoplophorini is a paraphyletic group. Cladogram after Barasoain et al. 2022: