Worthy, Trevor HenryTennyson, Alan J. D.Scofield, Richard Paul2013-02-042013-02-042011Journal fur Ornithologie, 2011; 152(3):669-6800021-8375http://hdl.handle.net/2440/75265A member of the New Zealand endemic family (Aves: Aptornithidae) is described from the Early Miocene St Bathans Fauna of Central Otago, South Island, New Zealand. The new species, based on two thoracic vertebrae, is provisionally referred to the highly distinctive Late Pleistocene–Holocene extinct genus Aptornis Mantell, 1848 (in Quart J Geol Soc Lond 4:225–238, 1848). It differs from both Recent species by slightly smaller size, greater pneumaticity of the corpus vertebrae and differences of the processus spinosus and processus transversi. We refer a distal femur, another vertebral fragment, a phalange and tentatively a tibial fragment, also from the St Bathans Fauna, to this new taxon.en© Dt. Ornithologen-Gesellschafte. V. 2011Aptornis; Aptornithidae; Early Miocene; Bannockburn Formation; New ZealandFossils reveal an early Miocene presence of the aberrant gruiform Aves: Aptornithidae in New ZealandJournal article002012209610.1007/s10336-011-0649-6