The swordfish dolphins no one told you about
Here's a group I wish was better known: these are “ππΆπ³π©πͺπ―π°π₯π¦ππ±π©πͺπ΄” π΄π’ππ¦π―π΅πͺπ―πΆπ΄ (skull) and π‘πͺπ±π©πͺπ°π₯π¦ππ±π©πͺπ΄ π’π£π¦ππͺ (rostrum), members of the longirostrine “swordfish” dolphins (Eurhinodelphinidae) from the Miocene of Lecce, Italy, displayed at the Museum of Paleontology of Naples (the label says "Rhabdosteidae", but this name is now considered problematic, see Fordyce and de Muizon, 2001). Many different odontocete lineages converged on a longirostrine, swordfish-like morphology, especially during the Miocene, but eurhinodelphinids were particularly swordfish-like, having a mandible that was much shorter than the rostrum. Approximately one-third of this long rostrum was formed by the premaxilla, which in at least some genera (including π‘πͺπ±π©πͺπ°π₯π¦ππ±π©πͺπ΄) had an elongated edentulous termination (McCurry and Pyenson 2019; Tosetto et al. 2023). Two competing ideas have been formulated to explain the function of this hyperelongate...