The earliest known pig from the Upper Eocene of Thailand

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The earliest known pig from the Upper Eocene of Thailand

  • Volume / Part: 41 / 1
  • Publication Date: January 1998
  • Page(s): 147 - 156
  • Authored By: S. Ducrocq, Y. Chaimanee, V. Suteethorn and J.-J. Jaeger

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Several dental remains of a new suid, Siamochoerus banmarkensis gen. et sp. nov., have been collected in the Late Eocene Krabi basin in southern Thailand. This species is morphologically close to but more primitive than Dubiotherium waterhousi (formerly Palaeochoerus waterhousi), and represents one of the oldest known suids. The date of origination of suids can therefore be placed back to the Late Eocene or even earlier, and the early evolution and diversification of the family might have occurred largely in the Oligocene of Asia.

Palaeontology - Volume 41 Part 1 Pages 147-156



Palaeontology - Volume 41 Part 1 Pages 147-156

Citations

DUCROCQ, S., CHAIMANEE, Y., SUTEETHORN, V., JAEGER, J. 1998. The earliest known pig from the Upper Eocene of Thailand. Palaeontology, 41, 1, 147–156.