Adcrocuta

A. eximia Adcrocuta is an extinct genus of large hyena that lived in Africa and Eurasia during the late Miocene epoch.

[1] Fossils of A. eximia are known from across Eurasia during the Vallesian-Turolian age of the Late Miocene (around 9.6-4.9 million years ago[2]), spanning from Europe, including Spain, North Macedonia, France, Romania, Greece, Hungary, Germany, Austria, Ukraine and Bulgaria,[3] and Asia including Turkey,[4][5] Kyrgyzstan,[6] Kazkahstan, Iran, China,[3] Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

[6] Adcrocuta was comparable in size to a living spotted hyena,[7] with a body mass of around 30–100 kilograms (66–220 lb).

[9] The teeth display adaptations to bone cracking, making it one of the earliest hyenas to display evidence of being adapted to this activity, though the shape of the upper carnassial tooth suggests that flesh also probably formed a considerable part of its diet.

[10] Based on the morphology of its brain cavity, it probably had a less sophisticated social system than modern bone-cracking spotted hyenas.