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Abstract: We report here additional remains referred to Egatochoerus jaegeri from the late Eocene locality of Ban Mark in the Krabi basin, Thailand. The new material described, comprising upper and lower cheek teeth, deciduous premolars and partial cranial remains, makes E. jaegeri the best‐documented Eocene representative of Old World Suoidea at present. Detailed study and comparison of their cheek teeth structure reveal a homogeneity of the molar crest and groove patterns of Old World and New World Palaeogene suoids.  相似文献   
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The proboscidean fauna of the middle Miocene of Thailand consists of five taxa, including four elephantoids and one deinothere. The Thai association is dominated by the genera Stegolophodon and Gomphotherium. Stegolophodon is represented by S. nasaiensis and S. praelatidens. The latter species, considered invalid and possibly conspecific with S. latidens, is re‐erected. Its phylogenetic relationships are discussed. The Thai Gomphotherium matches with G. browni from the middle Miocene of Indo‐Pakistan. However, the open nomenclature is employed for the Thai material because it differs from G. browni in terms of curvature of the upper tusk. Intraspecific molar size variation observed in G. cf. browni and Stegolophodon praelatidens is attributed to sexual dimorphism. The Thai proboscidean asssemblage is mainly endemic compared with other contemporaneous Asian faunas although the recognition of Gomphotherium cf. browni denotes faunal affinities with Pakistan. The biostratigraphical implications of the taxa are examined in a regional context. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 155 , 703–721.  相似文献   
3.
Abstract: Two new primitive macroscelideans, Eotmantsoius perseverans gen. et sp. nov. and Nementchatherium rathbuni sp. nov. from the late Middle or Late Eocene locality of Dur At‐Talah, Libya, are described. Eotmantsoius is known from a single tooth and is characterized by low crown height, isolated conules, and lack of a preprotocrista and prehypocrista. Based on these characters, it appears to be more plesiomorphic than Chambius (late Early Eocene, Chambi, Tunisia), which was, to date, universally accepted as the oldest and most basal macroscelidean. Eotmantsoius appears, however, somewhat derived in having an entostyle, a pericone, a shorter mesial cingulum and larger intercusp valleys. The phylogenetic position of Eotmantsoius is unclear. The second new species, N. rathbuni, allows a reassessment of Nementchatherium. We suggest that it is the most derived of the herodotiines in having long preprotocrista and prehypocrista, reduced M2/m2, a robust entostyle twinned with the hypocone on M1 and the posterior aspect of the root of the maxillary jugal process placed along the length of M2. Nementchatherium rathbuni appears more derived than N. senarhense, from the Eocene locality of Bir El Ater, Algeria, in having smaller m2‐3 with no paraconid, a smaller hypoconulid on m2 and a more reduced talonid on m3 (with smaller hypoconid and entoconid). Nementchatherium rathbuni also has, distal to the m3, a coronoid canal. This character has commonly been proposed as a synapomorphy for paenungulates (e.g. proboscideans, sirenians and hyracoids); we investigate the possibility that it unites macroscelideans and paenungulates, as the superordinal clade Afrotheria suggests. Comparisons reveal that a coronoid canal also occurs in several nonafrotherian orders (lagomorphs, xenarthrans, artiodactyls and perissodactyls), suggesting that is not an exclusive synapomorphy for paenungulates plus macroscelideans. Moreover, the homology of the character within paenungulates is doubtful.  相似文献   
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Three fragmentary maxillae and an isolated upper molar from the Upper Eocene locality of Wai Lek (Krabi Basin, South Thailand) belonging to the small anthracotheriid Siamotherium krabiense display strongly abnormal morphologies that are particularly unusual among the dental anomalies recorded in both extant and fossil mammals. Variation and atavism can be ruled out, and the other hypothetical origins of these anomalies, particularly the occurrence of odontomes and inbreeding, are discussed. Dental anomalies, Anthracotheriidae, Asia, atavism, variation, inbreeding.
Stéphane Ducrocq and Jean-Jacques Jaeger, Laboratoire de Paléontologie, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution, Case Courrier 064, Université Montpellier II, Place Eugéne Bataillon, F-34095 Montpellier Cédex 5, France (SD's current address: Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde, Rosenstein 1, D-70191 Stuttgart, Germany); Yaowalak Chaimanee and Varavudh Suteethorn, Department of Mineral Resources, Geological Survey, Rama VI Road, Bangkok 10400, Thailand; 14th November, 1994; revised 27th July. 1995.  相似文献   
5.
ABSTRACT. Membrane protein phosphorylation in Plasmodium berghei-infected erythrocytes was studied by incubating intact cells with (32P)orthophosphate and incubating isolated membrane with (γ-32P)ATP. Phosphorylated proteins were detected by autoradiography after sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis or isoelectric focusing followed by gel electrophoresis. New phosphorylated proteins were found in membrane from infected erythrocytes, including a protein with electrophoretic mobility identical to band 5, with M, 43,000. The molar ratio of phosphate to protein ranged between 0.1 and 0.5. Isoelectric focusing-SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, peptide mapping, extractability properties, and reduction of susceptibility to DNase I inhibition suggested that this protein is phosphorylated actin. In contrast, spectrin phosphorylation in infected erythrocytes was mostly unchanged.  相似文献   
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