Evidence for burrowing includes the robust limbs and short snout, which appears shovel-like.
Its skeleton resembled that of living lynxes, but it had shorter and more robust limbs, with a larger head and longer neck.
They were stocky, with short tails, small heads, robust limbs, and broad feet.
When compared to highly terrestrial baboons, Archaeolemur had shorter, more robust limbs, smaller digits, and a wider trunk.
Ostodolepids have elongated trunks, with small, robust limbs and shortened tails.
These impressions show, when alive, they had smooth skin, robust limbs with webbed feet, and a ridge of skin on their undersides.
It had shorter and more robust limbs than the ruffed lemurs, and the fore- and hindlimbs were closer in length (intermembral index of approximately 97).
The short, robust limbs, the long, laterally compressed claws, and the long, bushy tail indicate that it was an arboreal quadruped.
It had a large heavy tail, thick neck, robust limbs and teeth like a wolf.
It had a shorter and deeper snout than the extant Crocodylus niloticus, as well as relatively robust limbs.