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Stephanorhinus

Stephanorhinus is an extinct genus of two-horned rhinoceros native to Eurasia and North Africa that lived during the Pliocene to Late Pleistocene. Species of Stephanorhinus were the predominant and often only species of rhinoceros in much of temperate Eurasia, especially Europe, for most of the Pleistocene. The last two species of StephanorhinusMerck's rhinoceros (S. kirchbergensis) and the narrow-nosed rhinoceros (S. hemitoechus) – went extinct during the last glacial period.

Stephanorhinus
Temporal range: Pliocene to Late Pleistocene 5–0.04 Ma
Stephanorhinus etruscus skeleton
Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis skeleton
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Rhinocerotidae
Tribe: Dicerorhinini
Genus: Stephanorhinus
Kretzoi, 1942
Type species
Rhinoceros etruscus
Falconer, 1868
Species
  • S. etruscus
    (Falconer, 1868) Etruscan rhinoceros
  • S. hemitoechus
    (Falconer, 1859) Narrow-nosed rhinoceros
  • S. hundsheimensis
    (Toula, 1902) Hundsheim rhinoceros
  • S. jeanvireti
    (Falconer, 1859)
  • S. kirchbergensis
    (Jäger, 1839) Merck's rhinoceros
  • S. lantianensis
    (Hu and Qi, 1978)
  • S. yunchuchenensis
    (Chow, 1963)

Etymology Edit

The first part of the name, Stephano-, honours Stephen I, the first king of Hungary.[1] (The genus name was coined by Kretzoi, a Hungarian.) The second part is from rhinos (Greek for "nose"), a typical suffix of rhinoceros genus names.

Taxonomy Edit

The taxonomic history of Stephanorhinus is long and convoluted, as many species are known by numerous synonyms and different genera – typically Rhinoceros and Dicerorhinus – for the 19th and most of the early 20th century. The genus was named by Miklós Kretzoi in 1942.[2] It is thought that Stephanorhinus is more closely related to the Sumatran rhinoceros and woolly rhinoceros than to all other living rhino species. A complete mitochondrial genome of S. kirchbergensis obtained from a 70,000–48,000-year-old skull preserved in permafrost in arctic Yakutia showed that it was more closely related to the woolly rhinoceros than the Sumatran rhinoceros, with the three species forming a clade to the exclusion of other living rhinoceros species.[3] In 2019 a study of dental proteomes proposed that Stephanorhinius was paraphyletic as currently defined, with the proteome sequence obtained from the enamel of a 1.77 million year old Stephanorhinus tooth from Dmanisi belonging to an indeterminate species found outside the clade containing the woolly rhinoceros and S. kirchbergensis, with the authors positing that the genus Coelodonta was derived from an early diverging lineage within Stephanorhinus.[4] A 2021 study based on nuclear genomes including those of S. kirchbergensis found the same result as the mitochondrial genome study, with strong support, with the estimated split between the woolly rhinoceros and S. kirchbergensis occurring around 5.5 million years ago, with their closest living relatives being Dicerorhinus.[5] A 2023 morphological study recovered Stephanorhinus as monophyletic.[6]

Placement of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis among recent and subfossil rhinoceros species based on nuclear genomes (Liu, 2021):[5]

Elasmotheriinae

Elasmotherium sibiricum

Rhinocerotinae

Black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis)

White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum)

Indian rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis)

Javan rhinoceros (Rhinoceros sondaicus)

Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)

Woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis)

Merck's rhinoceros (Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis)

Bayesian morphological phylogeny (Pandolfi, 2023) Note: This excludes living African rhinoceros species.[6]

Hyrachyus eximius

Tapirus terrestris (South American tapir)

Rhinocerotidae

Trigonias osborni

Ronzotherium filholi

Aceratheriini

Plesiaceratherium mirallesi

Aceratherium incisivum

Hoploaceratherium tetradactylum

Teleoceratina
Rhinocerotina
Dicerorhinus

Dicerorhinus gwebinensis

Dicerorhinus fusuiensis

Dicerorhinus sumatrensis (Sumatran rhinoceros)

Dihoplus schleiermacheri

"Dihoplus" pikermiensis

Coelodonta
Pliorhinus

Pliorhinus megarhinus

Pliorhinus miguelcrusafonti

Stephanorhinus

Stephanorhinus jeanvireti

Stephanorhinus etruscus

Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis

Stephanorhinus hemitoechus (Narrow-nosed or steppe rhinoceros)

Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis (Merck's or forest rhinoceros)

Species and evolution Edit

The oldest known species of the genus are from the Pliocene of Europe, the species S. pikermiensis and S. megarhinus that were formerly considered to belong to Stephanorhinus are currently considered to belong to Dihoplus,[7] while the positions of “Stephanorhinusmiguelcrusafonti from the Early Pliocene of Western Europe and Stephanorhinus? africanus from the Middle Pliocene of Tunisia and Chad are uncertain.[8]

Stephanorhinus jeanvireti, also known as S. elatus[9] is known from the Late Pliocene and Early Pleistocene of Europe. Its remains are relatively rare in comparison to other Stephanorhinus species. Specimens are known from the Late Pliocene of Germany,[10] France, Italy,[11] Slovakia[12] and Greece,[13] and the Early Pleistocene of Romania.[14]

Stephanorhinus etruscus first appears in the latest Pliocene in the Iberian Peninsula, around 3.3 million years ago (Ma) at Las Higueruelas in Spain and before 3 Ma at Piedrabuena, and during the latest Pliocene at Villafranca d’Asti and Castelnuovo di Berardenga in Italy and is abundant during most of the Villafranchian period in Europe, and is the sole rhinoceros species in Europe between 2.5 and around 1.3 Ma. A specimen is known from the Early Pleistocene (1.6-1.2 Ma) Ubeidiya locality in Israel. During the late Early Pleistocene, it is largely replaced by S. hundsheimensis. The last known records of the species are from the latest Early Pleistocene of the Iberian peninsula, around 0.9-0.8 Ma.[15]

Stephanorhinus migrated from its origin in western Eurasia into eastern Eurasia during the Early Pleistocene.[6] Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis is known from a single specimen in probably late Early Pleistocene aged deposits in Yushe, Shaanxi, China, while Stephanorhinus lantianensis is also known from a single specimen from late Early Pleistocene (1.15 Ma) deposits in Lantian, also in Shaanxi.[16] These may be synonymous with other named Stephanorhinus species, with a 2022 study suggesting that they were likely synonyms of S. kirchbergensis and S. etruscus respectively.[17]

The first definitive record of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis (Merck's rhinoceros) is in China at Zhoukoudian (Choukoutien; near Beijing), around the Early–Mid-Pleistocene transition at 0.8 Ma.[16]

Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis first definitively appears in the fossil record in Europe and Anatolia at around 1.2 Ma, with possible records in Iberia around 1.6 Ma and 1.4-1.3 Ma. The earliest confirmed appearance in Italy around 1 Ma.[18] The diet of S. hundsheimensis was flexible and ungeneralised, with two different early Middle Pleistocene populations under different climatic regimes (having tooth wear analyses suggesting contrasting browsing and grazing habits).[19] The more specialised S. kirchbergensis and S. hemitoechus, appear in Europe between 0.7-6 Ma and 0.6-0.5 Ma respectively, and replace S. hundsheimensis. S. kirchbergensis and S. hemitoechus are typically interpreted as a browsing form and grazing form, respectively. The evolution of more specialized diets is possibly due to the change to the 100 Kyr cycle after the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, which resulted in environmental stability allowing the development of more specialized forms.[20]

From the late Middle Pleistocene onwards, the large Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis and Stephanorhinus hemitoechus (each estimated at 2 t (4,400 lb) and 1.6 t (3,500 lb) in weight, respectively[21]) were the only species of Stephanorhinus. S. kirchbergensis was broadly distributed over northern Eurasia from Western Europe to East Asia and the Russian Far East, while S. hemitoechus was generally confined to the western Palearctic, including Europe and North Africa.[22][23][8]

In Europe, S. kirchbergensis disappeared during the earliest Late Pleistocene.[22] The last records of S. hemitoechus in Italy date to around 41,000 years ago.[24] A late record of S. hemitoechus is known from 40,000 years ago in Bacho Kiro cave in Bulgaria.[25] Remains of S. kirchbergensis in the Russian Far East and South China are suggested to date to marine isotope stage 3 (~60-27,000 years ago) and 2 (~29-14,000 years ago), respectively.[26][27]

 
Drawing of Stephanorhinus hemitoechus

Ecology Edit

Stephanorhinus etruscus is thought to have been a browser, while Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis, Stephanorhinus hemitoechus and Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis are thought to have been mixed feeders (both browsing and grazing), with a greater tendency towards browsing in S. kirchbergensis and more towards grazing in S. hemitoechus.[28]

Relationship with humans Edit

Remains of several Stephanorhinus species, including S. kirchbergensis and S. hemitoechus, have been found in sites across Europe with break or cut marks indicating that they were butchered by archaic humans.[29][30][31][32][33]

References Edit

  1. ^ Tong, HaoWen; Wu, XianZhu (April 2010). "Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis (Rhinocerotidae, Mammalia) from the Rhino Cave in Shennongjia, Hubei". Chinese Science Bulletin. 55 (12): 1157–1168. Bibcode:2010ChSBu..55.1157T. doi:10.1007/s11434-010-0050-5. ISSN 1001-6538. S2CID 67828905.
  2. ^ Miklós Kretzoi: Bemerkungen zur System der Nachmiozänen Nashorn-Gattungen (Comments on the system of the post Miocene rhinoceros genera) Földtani Közlöni, Budapest 72 (4-12), 1942, S. 309–318
  3. ^ Kirillova, Irina V.; Chernova, Olga F.; van der Made, Jan; Kukarskih, Vladimir V.; Shapiro, Beth; van der Plicht, Johannes; Shidlovskiy, Fedor K.; Heintzman, Peter D.; van Kolfschoten, Thijs; Zanina, Oksana G. (November 2017). "Discovery of the skull of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis (Jäger, 1839) above the Arctic Circle". Quaternary Research. 88 (3): 537–550. Bibcode:2017QuRes..88..537K. doi:10.1017/qua.2017.53. ISSN 0033-5894. S2CID 45478220.
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stephanorhinus, extinct, genus, horned, rhinoceros, native, eurasia, north, africa, that, lived, during, pliocene, late, pleistocene, species, were, predominant, often, only, species, rhinoceros, much, temperate, eurasia, especially, europe, most, pleistocene,. Stephanorhinus is an extinct genus of two horned rhinoceros native to Eurasia and North Africa that lived during the Pliocene to Late Pleistocene Species of Stephanorhinus were the predominant and often only species of rhinoceros in much of temperate Eurasia especially Europe for most of the Pleistocene The last two species of Stephanorhinus Merck s rhinoceros S kirchbergensis and the narrow nosed rhinoceros S hemitoechus went extinct during the last glacial period StephanorhinusTemporal range Pliocene to Late Pleistocene 5 0 04 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Stephanorhinus etruscus skeletonStephanorhinus hundsheimensis skeletonScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PerissodactylaFamily RhinocerotidaeTribe DicerorhininiGenus StephanorhinusKretzoi 1942Type species Rhinoceros etruscusFalconer 1868Species S etruscus Falconer 1868 Etruscan rhinoceros S hemitoechus Falconer 1859 Narrow nosed rhinoceros S hundsheimensis Toula 1902 Hundsheim rhinoceros S jeanvireti Falconer 1859 S kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Merck s rhinoceros S lantianensis Hu and Qi 1978 S yunchuchenensis Chow 1963 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 3 Species and evolution 4 Ecology 5 Relationship with humans 6 ReferencesEtymology EditThe first part of the name Stephano honours Stephen I the first king of Hungary 1 The genus name was coined by Kretzoi a Hungarian The second part is from rhinos Greek for nose a typical suffix of rhinoceros genus names Taxonomy EditThe taxonomic history of Stephanorhinus is long and convoluted as many species are known by numerous synonyms and different genera typically Rhinoceros and Dicerorhinus for the 19th and most of the early 20th century The genus was named by Miklos Kretzoi in 1942 2 It is thought that Stephanorhinus is more closely related to the Sumatran rhinoceros and woolly rhinoceros than to all other living rhino species A complete mitochondrial genome of S kirchbergensis obtained from a 70 000 48 000 year old skull preserved in permafrost in arctic Yakutia showed that it was more closely related to the woolly rhinoceros than the Sumatran rhinoceros with the three species forming a clade to the exclusion of other living rhinoceros species 3 In 2019 a study of dental proteomes proposed that Stephanorhinius was paraphyletic as currently defined with the proteome sequence obtained from the enamel of a 1 77 million year old Stephanorhinus tooth from Dmanisi belonging to an indeterminate species found outside the clade containing the woolly rhinoceros and S kirchbergensis with the authors positing that the genus Coelodonta was derived from an early diverging lineage within Stephanorhinus 4 A 2021 study based on nuclear genomes including those of S kirchbergensis found the same result as the mitochondrial genome study with strong support with the estimated split between the woolly rhinoceros and S kirchbergensis occurring around 5 5 million years ago with their closest living relatives being Dicerorhinus 5 A 2023 morphological study recovered Stephanorhinus as monophyletic 6 Placement of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis among recent and subfossil rhinoceros species based on nuclear genomes Liu 2021 5 Elasmotheriinae Elasmotherium sibiricumRhinocerotinae Black rhinoceros Diceros bicornis White Rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum Indian rhinoceros Rhinoceros unicornis Javan rhinoceros Rhinoceros sondaicus Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis Woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis Merck s rhinoceros Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Bayesian morphological phylogeny Pandolfi 2023 Note This excludes living African rhinoceros species 6 Hyrachyus eximiusTapirus terrestris South American tapir Rhinocerotidae Trigonias osborniRonzotherium filholiAceratheriini Plesiaceratherium mirallesiAceratherium incisivumHoploaceratherium tetradactylumTeleoceratina Brachypotherium perimenseTeleoceras fossigerRhinocerotina Gaindatherium browniLartetotherium sansanienseNesorhinus Nesorhinus hayasakaiNesorhinus philippinensisRhinoceros Rhinoceros sondaicus Javan rhinoceros Rhinoceros unicornis Indian rhinoceros Dicerorhinus Dicerorhinus gwebinensisDicerorhinus fusuiensisDicerorhinus sumatrensis Sumatran rhinoceros Dihoplus schleiermacheri Dihoplus pikermiensisCoelodonta Coelodonta thibetanaCoelodonta nihowanensisCoelodonta tologoijensisCoelodonta antiquitatis antiquitatis woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis praecursor woolly rhinoceros Pliorhinus Pliorhinus megarhinusPliorhinus miguelcrusafontiStephanorhinus Stephanorhinus jeanviretiStephanorhinus etruscusStephanorhinus hundsheimensisStephanorhinus hemitoechus Narrow nosed or steppe rhinoceros Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Merck s or forest rhinoceros Species and evolution EditThe oldest known species of the genus are from the Pliocene of Europe the species S pikermiensis and S megarhinus that were formerly considered to belong to Stephanorhinus are currently considered to belong to Dihoplus 7 while the positions of Stephanorhinus miguelcrusafonti from the Early Pliocene of Western Europe and Stephanorhinus africanus from the Middle Pliocene of Tunisia and Chad are uncertain 8 Stephanorhinus jeanvireti also known as S elatus 9 is known from the Late Pliocene and Early Pleistocene of Europe Its remains are relatively rare in comparison to other Stephanorhinus species Specimens are known from the Late Pliocene of Germany 10 France Italy 11 Slovakia 12 and Greece 13 and the Early Pleistocene of Romania 14 Stephanorhinus etruscus first appears in the latest Pliocene in the Iberian Peninsula around 3 3 million years ago Ma at Las Higueruelas in Spain and before 3 Ma at Piedrabuena and during the latest Pliocene at Villafranca d Asti and Castelnuovo di Berardenga in Italy and is abundant during most of the Villafranchian period in Europe and is the sole rhinoceros species in Europe between 2 5 and around 1 3 Ma A specimen is known from the Early Pleistocene 1 6 1 2 Ma Ubeidiya locality in Israel During the late Early Pleistocene it is largely replaced by S hundsheimensis The last known records of the species are from the latest Early Pleistocene of the Iberian peninsula around 0 9 0 8 Ma 15 Stephanorhinus migrated from its origin in western Eurasia into eastern Eurasia during the Early Pleistocene 6 Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis is known from a single specimen in probably late Early Pleistocene aged deposits in Yushe Shaanxi China while Stephanorhinus lantianensis is also known from a single specimen from late Early Pleistocene 1 15 Ma deposits in Lantian also in Shaanxi 16 These may be synonymous with other named Stephanorhinus species with a 2022 study suggesting that they were likely synonyms of S kirchbergensis and S etruscus respectively 17 The first definitive record of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Merck s rhinoceros is in China at Zhoukoudian Choukoutien near Beijing around the Early Mid Pleistocene transition at 0 8 Ma 16 Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis first definitively appears in the fossil record in Europe and Anatolia at around 1 2 Ma with possible records in Iberia around 1 6 Ma and 1 4 1 3 Ma The earliest confirmed appearance in Italy around 1 Ma 18 The diet of S hundsheimensis was flexible and ungeneralised with two different early Middle Pleistocene populations under different climatic regimes having tooth wear analyses suggesting contrasting browsing and grazing habits 19 The more specialised S kirchbergensis and S hemitoechus appear in Europe between 0 7 6 Ma and 0 6 0 5 Ma respectively and replace S hundsheimensis S kirchbergensis and S hemitoechus are typically interpreted as a browsing form and grazing form respectively The evolution of more specialized diets is possibly due to the change to the 100 Kyr cycle after the Mid Pleistocene Transition which resulted in environmental stability allowing the development of more specialized forms 20 From the late Middle Pleistocene onwards the large Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis and Stephanorhinus hemitoechus each estimated at 2 t 4 400 lb and 1 6 t 3 500 lb in weight respectively 21 were the only species of Stephanorhinus S kirchbergensis was broadly distributed over northern Eurasia from Western Europe to East Asia and the Russian Far East while S hemitoechus was generally confined to the western Palearctic including Europe and North Africa 22 23 8 In Europe S kirchbergensis disappeared during the earliest Late Pleistocene 22 The last records of S hemitoechus in Italy date to around 41 000 years ago 24 A late record of S hemitoechus is known from 40 000 years ago in Bacho Kiro cave in Bulgaria 25 Remains of S kirchbergensis in the Russian Far East and South China are suggested to date to marine isotope stage 3 60 27 000 years ago and 2 29 14 000 years ago respectively 26 27 nbsp Skull of Stephanorhinus jeanvireti nbsp Skull of Stephanorhinus etruscus nbsp Skull of Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis nbsp Skulls from top to bottom S kirchbergensis S hemitoechus and the woolly rhinoceros showing the difference in head angle nbsp Drawing of Stephanorhinus hemitoechusEcology EditStephanorhinus etruscus is thought to have been a browser while Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis Stephanorhinus hemitoechus and Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis are thought to have been mixed feeders both browsing and grazing with a greater tendency towards browsing in S kirchbergensis and more towards grazing in S hemitoechus 28 Relationship with humans EditRemains of several Stephanorhinus species including S kirchbergensis and S hemitoechus have been found in sites across Europe with break or cut marks indicating that they were butchered by archaic humans 29 30 31 32 33 References Edit Tong HaoWen Wu XianZhu April 2010 Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Rhinocerotidae Mammalia from the Rhino Cave in Shennongjia Hubei Chinese Science Bulletin 55 12 1157 1168 Bibcode 2010ChSBu 55 1157T doi 10 1007 s11434 010 0050 5 ISSN 1001 6538 S2CID 67828905 Miklos Kretzoi Bemerkungen zur System der Nachmiozanen Nashorn Gattungen Comments on the system of the post Miocene rhinoceros genera Foldtani Kozloni Budapest 72 4 12 1942 S 309 318 Kirillova Irina V Chernova Olga F van der Made Jan Kukarskih Vladimir V Shapiro Beth van der Plicht Johannes Shidlovskiy Fedor K Heintzman Peter D van Kolfschoten Thijs Zanina Oksana G November 2017 Discovery of the skull of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 above the Arctic Circle Quaternary Research 88 3 537 550 Bibcode 2017QuRes 88 537K doi 10 1017 qua 2017 53 ISSN 0033 5894 S2CID 45478220 Cappellini Enrico Welker Frido Pandolfi Luca Ramos Madrigal Jazmin Samodova Diana Ruther Patrick L Fotakis Anna K Lyon David Moreno Mayar J Victor Bukhsianidze Maia et al October 2019 Early Pleistocene enamel proteome from Dmanisi resolves Stephanorhinus phylogeny Nature 574 7776 103 107 Bibcode 2019Natur 574 103C doi 10 1038 s41586 019 1555 y ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 6894936 PMID 31511700 a b Liu Shanlin Westbury Michael V Dussex Nicolas Mitchell Kieren J Sinding Mikkel Holger S Heintzman Peter D Duchene David A Kapp Joshua D von Seth Johanna Heiniger Holly Sanchez Barreiro Fatima August 2021 Ancient and modern genomes unravel the evolutionary history of the rhinoceros family Cell 184 19 4874 4885 e16 doi 10 1016 j cell 2021 07 032 ISSN 0092 8674 PMID 34433011 S2CID 237273079 a b c Pandolfi Luca 2023 01 19 Reassessing the phylogeny of Quaternary Eurasian Rhinocerotidae Journal of Quaternary Science jqs 3496 doi 10 1002 jqs 3496 ISSN 0267 8179 Pandolfi Luca Rivals Florent Rabinovich Rivka January 2020 A new species of rhinoceros from the site of Bethlehem Dihoplus bethlehemsis sp nov Mammalia Rhinocerotidae Quaternary International 537 48 60 Bibcode 2020QuInt 537 48P doi 10 1016 j quaint 2020 01 011 S2CID 213080180 a b Pandolfi Luca 2018 Evolutionary history of Rhinocerotina Mammalia Perissodactyla Fossilia Reports in Palaeontology Saverio Bartolini Lucenti pp 27 32 doi 10 32774 fosreppal 20 1810 102732 ISBN 979 12 200 3408 1 Ballatore Manuel Breda Marzia December 2016 Stephanorhinus elatus Rhinocerotidae Mammalia proposal for the conservation of the earlier specific name and designation of a lectotype Geodiversitas 38 4 579 594 doi 10 5252 g2016n4a7 ISSN 1280 9659 S2CID 90370988 Lacombat Frederic Mors Thomas 2008 08 01 The northernmost occurrence of the rare Late Pliocene rhinoceros Stephanorhinus jeanvireti Mammalia Perissodactyla Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Abhandlungen 249 2 157 165 doi 10 1127 0077 7749 2008 0249 0157 Pandolfi Luca October 2013 New and revised occurrences of Dihoplus megarhinus Mammalia Rhinocerotidae in the Pliocene of Italy Swiss Journal of Palaeontology 132 2 239 255 doi 10 1007 s13358 013 0056 0 ISSN 1664 2376 S2CID 140547755 Sujan M Rybar S Sarinova K Kovac M Vlaciky M Zervanova J 2013 Uppermost Miocene to Quaternary accumulation history at the Danube Basin eastern flanks in Fodor L Kover Sz eds 11th Meeting of the Central European Tectonic Studies Group CETeG Abstract book Geol Geophys Inst of Hungary Budapest pp 66 68 Guerin Claude Tsoukala Evangelia June 2013 The Tapiridae Rhinocerotidae and Suidae Mammalia of the Early Villafranchian site of Milia Grevena Macedonia Greece Geodiversitas 35 2 447 489 doi 10 5252 g2013n2a7 ISSN 1280 9659 S2CID 129164720 Pandolfi Luca Codrea Vlad A Popescu Aurelian December 2019 Stephanorhinus jeanvireti Mammalia Rhinocerotidae from the early Pleistocene of Colțești southwestern Romania Comptes Rendus Palevol 18 8 1041 1056 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2019 07 004 Pandolfi Luca Cerdeno Esperanza Codrea Vlad Kotsakis Tassos September 2017 Biogeography and chronology of the Eurasian extinct rhinoceros Stephanorhinus etruscus Mammalia Rhinocerotidae Comptes Rendus Palevol 16 7 762 773 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2017 06 004 a b Tong Hao wen November 2012 Evolution of the non Coelodonta dicerorhine lineage in China Comptes Rendus Palevol 11 8 555 562 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2012 06 002 Pandolfi Luca December 2022 A critical overview on Early Pleistocene Eurasian Stephanorhinus Mammalia Rhinocerotidae Implications for taxonomy and paleobiogeography Quaternary International S1040618222003780 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2022 11 008 Pandolfi Luca Erten Huseyin January 2017 Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis Mammalia Rhinocerotidae from the late early Pleistocene deposits of the Denizli Basin Anatolia Turkey Geobios 50 1 65 73 doi 10 1016 j geobios 2016 10 002 Kahlke Ralf Dietrich Kaiser Thomas M August 2011 Generalism as a subsistence strategy advantages and limitations of the highly flexible feeding traits of Pleistocene Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis Rhinocerotidae Mammalia Quaternary Science Reviews 30 17 18 2250 2261 Bibcode 2011QSRv 30 2250K doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2009 12 012 van Asperen Eline N Kahlke Ralf Dietrich January 2015 Dietary variation and overlap in Central and Northwest European Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis and S hemitoechus Rhinocerotidae Mammalia influenced by habitat diversity PDF Quaternary Science Reviews 107 47 61 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