A new large pantherine and a sabre-toothed cat (Mammalia, Carnivora, Felidae) from the late Miocene hominoid-bearing Khorat sand pits, Nakhon Ratchasima Province, northeastern Thailand

被引:0
作者
L. de Bonis
Y. Chaimanee
C. Grohé
O. Chavasseau
A. Mazurier
K. Suraprasit
J.J. Jaeger
机构
[1] Université de Poitiers,Laboratoire Paléontologie Evolution Paléoécosystemes Paléoprimatologie (PALEVOPRIM, UMR 7262 CNRS INEE), Faculté Sciences Fondamentales et Appliquées
[2] Institut de Chimie des Milieux et Matériaux de Poitiers (IC2MP,Department of Geology, Faculty of Science
[3] UMR CNRS 7285),undefined
[4] Faculté Sciences Fondamentales et Appliquées,undefined
[5] Université de Poitiers,undefined
[6] Chulalongkorn University,undefined
来源
The Science of Nature | 2023年 / 110卷
关键词
Asia; Felidae; New taxon; Bone cracking; Late Miocene; Sabre-toothed cat; Pantherine;
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摘要
We describe two large predators from the hominoid-bearing Khorat sand pits, Nakhon Ratchasima Province, northeastern Thailand: a new genus of pantherine, Pachypanthera n. gen., represented by partial mandible and maxilla and an indeterminate sabre-toothed cat, represented by a fragment of upper canine. The morphological characters of Pachypanthera n. gen., notably the large and powerful canine, the great robustness of the mandibular body, the very deep fossa for the m. masseter, the zigzag HSB enamel pattern, indicate bone-cracking capacities. The genus is unique among Felidae as it has one of the most powerful and robust mandibles ever found. Moreover, it may be the oldest known pantherine, as other Asian pantherines are dated back to the early Pliocene. The taxa we report here are the only carnivorans known from the late Miocene of Thailand. Although the material is rather scarce, it brings new insights to the evolutionary history of Neogene mammals of Southeast Asia, in a geographic place which is partly “terra incognita.”
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