AI Article Synopsis

  • The Khok Sung site in Nakhon Ratchasima province contains over 1,000 fossils, making it Thailand's richest Pleistocene vertebrate fauna.
  • The mammalian fauna includes fifteen species across thirteen genera, featuring both extant and extinct species, notably the first record of the chital in Southeast Asia.
  • The findings suggest a late Middle to early Late Pleistocene age for the assemblage and support the idea that Thailand was a key migration route for species moving from South China to Java.

Article Abstract

The fluviatile terrace deposits of Khok Sung, Nakhon Ratchasima province, have yielded more than one thousand fossils, making this the richest Pleistocene vertebrate fauna of Thailand. The excellent preservation of the specimens allows precise characterization of the faunal composition. The mammalian fauna consists of fifteen species in thirteen genera, including a primate, a canid, a hyaenid, proboscideans, rhinoceroses, a suid, cervids, and bovids. Most species correspond to living taxa but globally (Stegodon cf. orientalis) and locally (Crocuta crocuta ultima, Rhinoceros unicornis, Sus barbatus, and Axis axis) extinct taxa were also present. The identification of Axis axis in Khok Sung, a chital currently restricted to the Indian Subcontinent, represents the first record of the species in Southeast Asia. Three reptilian taxa: Crocodylus cf. siamensis, Python sp., and Varanus sp., are also identified. Faunal correlations with other Southeast Asian sites suggest a late Middle to early Late Pleistocene age for the Khok Sung assemblage. However, the Khok Sung mammalian fauna is most similar to that of Thum Wiman Nakin, dated to older than 169 ka. The Khok Sung large mammal assemblage mostly comprises mainland Southeast Asian taxa that migrated to Java during the latest Middle Pleistocene, supporting the hypothesis that Thailand was a biogeographic pathway for the Sino-Malayan migration event from South China to Java.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5027644PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.613.8309DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The Khok Sung site in Nakhon Ratchasima province contains over 1,000 fossils, making it Thailand's richest Pleistocene vertebrate fauna.
  • The mammalian fauna includes fifteen species across thirteen genera, featuring both extant and extinct species, notably the first record of the chital in Southeast Asia.
  • The findings suggest a late Middle to early Late Pleistocene age for the assemblage and support the idea that Thailand was a key migration route for species moving from South China to Java.
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Background: The genus Gavialis comprises a single living but endangered species, G. gangeticus, as well as fossil species recorded in the Miocene to Pleistocene deposits of the Indian subcontinent. The genus is also represented in the Pleistocene deposits of Java by the species G.

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