Forget Polar Bears: The Largest Bear To Live In North America Was The 3.3-Meter-Tall Short-Faced Bear

0
633

Forget Polar Bears: The Largest Bear To Live In North America Was The 3.3-Meter-Tall Short-Faced Bear

Forget Polar Bears: The Largest Bear To Live In North America Was The 3.3-Meter-Tall Short-Faced Bear

Short-faced bears went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene.

Eleanor Higgs headshot
Short faced bear skeleton showing huge teeth taken in a museum.

The short-faced bear was thought to measure over 3.3 meters tall on its hind legs.

Planet Earth is home to some pretty impressive predators, from mighty killer whales to polar bears and wolves. However one species puts even polar bears to shame and represents the largest mammalian carnivore to ever live in North America. Time to meet the giant short-faced bear. 

How big was the short-faced bear?

This giant short-faced bear (Arctodus simus) lived in the Pleistocene around 2 million years ago and was thought to have stood at over 3.3 meters (11 feet) tall on its hind legs. To put that in perspective, the world's living two largest bear species, the Kodiak bear and the polar bear, might just reach 3 meters (10 feet) tall on their hind legs. Similarly adult male polar bears can weigh around 600 kilograms (1,323 pounds), while the giant short-faced bear was thought to weigh as much as 1,000 kilograms (2,204 pounds).

green scale with purple bears in descending order of size: giant short-nosed bear, polar bear, spectacled bear, sun bear, and winnie the pooh

The IFLScience Bear Scale.

Image credit: Tiger Foto/Adilson Sochodolak/Ronnysteve/Catmando/Natalia Golovina/Shutterstock.com; modified by IFLScience.

It is even thought that the giant short-faced bear could run at speeds over over 60 kilometers per hour (40 miles per hour), despite weighing so much. The species had toes that pointed straight forwards – unlike modern bear species that have toes that face inwards – which could have helped it run at these speeds. 

What did the short-faced bear eat?

Often listed as the largest mammalian carnivore to have ever lived in North America, the short-faced bear probably would have eaten a range of foods including a high proportion of meat, depending on what was available, and was probably more of an omnivore and a scavenger rather than an active predator. The only living relative of the short-faced bear is the spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), a primarily herbivorous species found in South America that belongs to the same subfamily, Tremarctinae. 

How did the short-faced bear go extinct?

The short-faced bear went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene around 11,000 years ago, though it is not clear what caused their extinction. This was also around the time that mammoths, dire wolves, and giant sloths went extinct and the first humans began to appear in North America. It is thought that the extinction of larger herbivores, changing climate conditions, and the appearance of humans could have all contributed to their decline. 


ARTICLE POSTED IN


nature-icon

More Nature Stories

clock-icon36 minutes ago

clock-icon1 hour ago

clock-icon5 hours ago

share200

Site içinde arama yapın
Kategoriler
Read More
Rehber
Behind the Crown: The Darker Chapters of the British Royal Family’s History
Behind the Crown: The Darker Chapters of the British Royal Family’s History - History Collection...
By Test Blogger2 2025-07-06 10:00:09 0 843
Oyunlar
Brutal cyberpunk roguelike Kiborg improves with a punishing new endless mode
Brutal cyberpunk roguelike Kiborg improves with a punishing new endless mode As an Amazon...
By Test Blogger6 2025-06-15 16:00:20 0 1K
Oyunlar
The 15 best games like Diablo
The 15 best games like Diablo As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases and...
By Test Blogger6 2025-08-06 10:00:14 0 365
Science
Orange Dwarf Crocodiles Lurk In The Caves Of Central Africa
Orange Cave Crocodiles May Be Evolving Into a New SpeciesA deeply bizarre group of dwarf...
By test Blogger3 2025-08-13 17:00:07 0 358
Rehber
Lost American Lands: Territories the U.S. Used to Own
Lost American Lands: Territories the U.S. Used to Own - History Collection...
By Test Blogger2 2025-06-30 08:00:12 0 1K