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Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis

Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis, also known as Merck's rhinoceros or the forest rhinoceros, is an extinct species of rhinoceros belonging to the genus Stephanorhinus from the Middle to Late Pleistocene of Eurasia. Its range spanned from western Europe to eastern Asia. Among the last members of the genus, it co-existed alongside Stephanorhinus hemitoechus (the narrow-nosed or steppe rhinoceros) in the western part of its range.

Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene–Late Pleistocene
Mostly complete skull from Germany
Diagram of skull from Russia
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Rhinocerotidae
Genus: Stephanorhinus
Species:
S. kirchbergensis
Binomial name
Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis
(Jäger, 1839)
Synonyms
List
  • Coelodonta merckii
    (Kaup, 1841)
  • Dicerorhinus merckii
    (Kaup, 1841)
  • Dc. m. var. brachycephala
    Schroeder, 1903
  • Dc. kirchbergensis
    (Jäger, 1839)
  • Dc. k. var. brachycephala
    Schroeder, 1903
  • Dihoplus kirchbergensis
    (Jäger, 1839)
  • R. incisivus
    Merck, 1784
  • R. kirchbergense
    Jäger, 1839
  • R. leptorhinus
    Cuvier, 1836
  • R. megarhinus
    de Christol, 1834
  • R. merckii (or mercki, merki)
    Kaup, 1841
  • R. m. var. brachycephala
    Schroeder, 1903
  • R. (Tichorhinus) merckii
    (Kaup, 1841)
  • Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis (Chow, 1963)

Etymology and taxonomy edit

The first part of the genus name is derived from that of King Stephen I of Hungary, and the second part from 'rhinos' (ρινος, meaning "nose"), as with Dicerorhinus. The species name was given by Georg Friedrich von Jäger in 1839 for Kirchberg an der Jagst in Baden-Württemberg, Germany where the type specimens had been found.[1] It is often known in English (and equivalents in other languages) as Merck's rhinoceros after Carl Heinrich Merck, who gave the initial name to the species in 1784 as Rhinoceros incisivus, that is now considered a nomen oblitum, and who after a widely used junior synonym of the species, Rhinoceros merckii (historically several alternate spellings) was named by Johann Jakob Kaup in 1841.[2]

Description edit

 
Comparison of the head angle of Merck's rhinoceros (top) with that of Stephanorhinus hemitoechus and the woolly rhinoceros (middle and bottom, respectively)

Merck's rhinoceros was a large rhinoceros, with a particularly large specimen from Poland reaching an estimated height at the withers of 1.82 metres (6.0 ft).[3] The bones of the skeleton are robust and massive. The skull of Merck's rhinoceros is elongated, with the septum nasalis ossified only towards its anterior (front) end. The mandibular symphysis is relatively long and the mandible has a horizontal high, thick branch.[4]

Dental anatomy edit

The enamel of the teeth is very thick, and often bright coloured and smooth, with very thin or absent coronal cement. The buccal (cheek-facing) sides of the teeth often have sub-vertical bluish lines. Tooth dimensions are highly variable in comparison to other Stephanorhinus species. The upper teeth, especially the molars, are much higher towards the buccal side than to the lingual (towards the tongue) side. The ectolophs of the first and second upper molars have shallower folds, especially the fold between the paracone and mesostyle, than those of S. hemitoechus, resulting in a less pronounced undulation. In comparison to other species of Stephanorhinus, the premolars of S. kirchbergensis are mesially (towards the front of the tooth) broad and relatively lingually short. The upper premolar ectoloph folds are shallow, and have narrow anterior valleys. The ectoloph curves strongly mesially and often distally (towards the hind portion of the tooth) towards the inside of the tooth. In both upper molars and premolars, the metalophs and the protolophs are distinctly bulbous. The lower premolars and molars are similar and hard to distinguish.[4]

Origin edit

The earliest definitive records are from Choukoutien Locality 13, in Fangshan District near Beijing at around the Early-Middle Pleistocene transition.[5] Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis from Shanxi, China, likely represents a junior synonym of S. kirchbergensis, its precise age is uncertain, but it has been suggested to date to the late Early Pleistocene.[6] S. kirchbergensis appears in Europe during the early Middle Pleistocene between 0.7 and 0.6 million years ago, existing alongside the already present S. hundsheimensis.[7] Mitochondrial and nuclear genomes obtained from a permafrost specimen[8][9] and a dental proteome[10] suggest that it is more closely related to the woolly rhinoceros than the Sumatran rhinoceros. A 2023 morphological study suggested its closest relative was the narrow-nosed rhinoceros (S. hemitoechus).[11]

Relationships among Late Pleistocene and modern rhinoceros genera, based on nuclear DNA, after Liu et al, 2021:[9]

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, after (Pandolfi, 2023) Note: This excludes living African rhinoceros species.[11]

Distribution edit

 
Range of Merck's rhinoceros, excluding arctic localities

Its range spans from Europe to East Asia, but appears to be absent from the Iberian Peninsula.[12][13] It was predominantly present in Europe during interglacial periods where it formed part of the Palaeoloxodon antiquus assemblage, where it occurred alongside the straight-tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon antquus) the narrow-nosed rhinoceros (Stephanorhinus hemitoechus), and the hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius).[14] It is presumed to have had a preference for closed forest and woodland habitats, as opposed the to open grassland habitats favoured by S. hemitoechus.[14] Its range extended into the Arctic Circle, with a 70–48,000 year old skull known from arctic Yakutia in the Chondon River valley[8] and a late Middle Pleistocene aged lower jaw from the Yana River valley.[15] Teeth are known from caves in Primorsky Krai , suggested to date between 50,000 and 25,000 years ago based on dates of other bones found in the deposit, which are the easternmost known records,[16] along with a record from the Middle Pleistocene of western Japan.[17] A tooth of S. cf. kirchbergensis of an unknown age is known from the Lut Desert in eastern Iran.[18] It is fairly common throughout the Pleistocene in North China,[19] but is a rarer component of South Chinese assemblages,[20] being known from around 30 localities in the region.[5] Antoine (2012) states that D. choukoutienensis, D. lantianensis, and D. yunchuchenensis are local names for the taxon, without elaboration.[19] Its range was strongly controlled by glacial cycles, with the species experiencing repeated cycles of expansion and contraction as the ice sheets advanced, this accounts for the relative rarity of its remains in comparison to the woolly rhinoceros.[12] During the Last Glacial Period, the species range contracted. The timing of its extinction in Europe is uncertain, thought it postdates the end of the Last Interglacial around 115,000 years ago.[21] Radiocarbon dated remains from the Altai date to around 40,000 years ago.[22] The youngest reliable records in China are from the Rhino Cave in Hubei, which is early Late Pleistocene in age.[20] Though less definitive remains are known from near Harbin in Heilongjiang, which are thought to be 20 kya in age.[5] Records from Migong Cave just south of the Yangtze River in the Three Gorges area are suggested to date to MIS 2 (29,000-14,000 years ago).[23]

Diet edit

 
Restoration of two Merck's rhinoceros in open wooded landscape with oak trees during the Eemian interglacial in Europe

Merck's rhinoceros has been interpreted as a browser or a mixed feeder, consuming both browse such as branches and leaves of trees and shrubs, as well as low-lying vegetation. Its diet appears to have varied according to local conditions.[24][25][7] Analysis of plant material embedded within teeth from the Neumark-Nord locality in Germany found remains of Populus (poplar or aspen) Quercus (oak), Crataegus (hawthorn), Pyracantha, Urtica (nettles) and Nymphaea (water lilies) as well as indeterminate remains of Betulaceae, Rosaceae, and Poaceae (grass).[26] Preserved plant remains found with the teeth on the arctic Chondon skull included twigs of Salix (willow), Betula (birch) and abundant Larix (larch) alongside fragments of Ericaceae (heather); sedges were notably absent.[8] A specimen from Eemian aged deposits in Gorzów Wielkopolski in Poland had twigs of Corylus (hazel), Carpinus (hornbeam), and Viscum (mistletoe), alongside fruit scales of birch, with hazel and birch dominating amongst the pollen.[24] The pollen from a specimen found at Spinadesco in Italy was dominated (~50%) by trees, particularly Alnus (alder) and Fagus (beech), with Hippophae rhamnoides (sea buckthorn), dominating amongst the shrubs, with around 30% of the total contribution being from a variety of herbaceous plants.[27]

Human exploitation edit

Cut marks are known on bones of S. kirchbergensis from the Guado San Nicola site in central Italy, which dates to the late Middle Pleistocene, around 400-345,000 years ago.[28] Remains of S. kirchbergensis with cut marks have also been reported from the Medzhibozh locality in western Ukraine, dating to MIS 11, around 425-375,000 years ago.[29] At the Taubach travertine site in Thuringia, Germany, which dates to the Eemian (approximately 130,000-115,000 years ago) abundant remains of Merck's rhinoceros with cut marks are known. The vast majority of remains were of young subadults, alongside a much smaller number of adults. It has been suggested that the rhinoceroses were killed and butchered on site by Neanderthals.[30]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Georg Friedrich Jäger: Über die fossilen Säugetiere welche in Württemberg in verschiedenen Formationen aufgefunden worden sind, nebst geognostischen Bemerkungen über diese Formationen. C. Erhard Verlag, Stuttgart, 1835–39
  2. ^ Johann Jakob Kaup: Akten der Urwelt oder Osteologie der urweltlichen Säugethiere und Amphibien. Darmstadt, Verlag des Herausgebers, 1841
  3. ^ Sobczyk, Artur; Borówka, Ryszard K.; Badura, Janusz; Stachowicz-Rybka, Renata; Tomkowiak, Julita; Hrynowiecka, Anna; Sławińska, Joanna; Tomczak, Michał; Pitura, Mateusz; Lamentowicz, Mariusz; Kołaczek, Piotr (May 2020). "Geology, stratigraphy and palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis -bearing Quaternary palaeolake(s) of Gorzów Wielkopolski (NW Poland, Central Europe)". Journal of Quaternary Science. 35 (4): 539–558. Bibcode:2020JQS....35..539S. doi:10.1002/jqs.3198. hdl:10261/237944. ISSN 0267-8179. S2CID 216264117.
  4. ^ a b Selected records of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis (Jäger, 1839 (Mammalia, Rhinocerotidae) in Italy Emmanuel M.E. BILLIA & Carmelo PETRONIO Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana, 48 (1), 2009, xx-xx. Modena
  5. ^ a b c Tong, Hao-wen (November 2012). "Evolution of the non-Coelodonta dicerorhine lineage in China". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 11 (8): 555–562. Bibcode:2012CRPal..11..555T. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2012.06.002.
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stephanorhinus, kirchbergensis, also, known, merck, rhinoceros, forest, rhinoceros, extinct, species, rhinoceros, belonging, genus, stephanorhinus, from, middle, late, pleistocene, eurasia, range, spanned, from, western, europe, eastern, asia, among, last, mem. Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis also known as Merck s rhinoceros or the forest rhinoceros is an extinct species of rhinoceros belonging to the genus Stephanorhinus from the Middle to Late Pleistocene of Eurasia Its range spanned from western Europe to eastern Asia Among the last members of the genus it co existed alongside Stephanorhinus hemitoechus the narrow nosed or steppe rhinoceros in the western part of its range Stephanorhinus kirchbergensisTemporal range Middle Pleistocene Late Pleistocene PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Mostly complete skull from Germany Diagram of skull from Russia Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Perissodactyla Family Rhinocerotidae Genus Stephanorhinus Species S kirchbergensis Binomial name Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Synonyms List Coelodonta merckii Kaup 1841 Dicerorhinus merckii Kaup 1841 Dc m var brachycephala Schroeder 1903Dc kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Dc k var brachycephala Schroeder 1903Dihoplus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 R incisivus Merck 1784R kirchbergense Jager 1839R leptorhinus Cuvier 1836R megarhinus de Christol 1834R merckii or mercki merki Kaup 1841R m var brachycephala Schroeder 1903R Tichorhinus merckii Kaup 1841 Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis Chow 1963 Contents 1 Etymology and taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Dental anatomy 3 Origin 4 Distribution 5 Diet 6 Human exploitation 7 Gallery 8 ReferencesEtymology and taxonomy editThe first part of the genus name is derived from that of King Stephen I of Hungary and the second part from rhinos rinos meaning nose as with Dicerorhinus The species name was given by Georg Friedrich von Jager in 1839 for Kirchberg an der Jagst in Baden Wurttemberg Germany where the type specimens had been found 1 It is often known in English and equivalents in other languages as Merck s rhinoceros after Carl Heinrich Merck who gave the initial name to the species in 1784 as Rhinoceros incisivus that is now considered a nomen oblitum and who after a widely used junior synonym of the species Rhinoceros merckii historically several alternate spellings was named by Johann Jakob Kaup in 1841 2 Description edit nbsp Comparison of the head angle of Merck s rhinoceros top with that of Stephanorhinus hemitoechus and the woolly rhinoceros middle and bottom respectively Merck s rhinoceros was a large rhinoceros with a particularly large specimen from Poland reaching an estimated height at the withers of 1 82 metres 6 0 ft 3 The bones of the skeleton are robust and massive The skull of Merck s rhinoceros is elongated with the septum nasalis ossified only towards its anterior front end The mandibular symphysis is relatively long and the mandible has a horizontal high thick branch 4 Dental anatomy edit The enamel of the teeth is very thick and often bright coloured and smooth with very thin or absent coronal cement The buccal cheek facing sides of the teeth often have sub vertical bluish lines Tooth dimensions are highly variable in comparison to other Stephanorhinus species The upper teeth especially the molars are much higher towards the buccal side than to the lingual towards the tongue side The ectolophs of the first and second upper molars have shallower folds especially the fold between the paracone and mesostyle than those of S hemitoechus resulting in a less pronounced undulation In comparison to other species of Stephanorhinus the premolars of S kirchbergensis are mesially towards the front of the tooth broad and relatively lingually short The upper premolar ectoloph folds are shallow and have narrow anterior valleys The ectoloph curves strongly mesially and often distally towards the hind portion of the tooth towards the inside of the tooth In both upper molars and premolars the metalophs and the protolophs are distinctly bulbous The lower premolars and molars are similar and hard to distinguish 4 Origin editThe earliest definitive records are from Choukoutien Locality 13 in Fangshan District near Beijing at around the Early Middle Pleistocene transition 5 Stephanorhinus yunchuchenensis from Shanxi China likely represents a junior synonym of S kirchbergensis its precise age is uncertain but it has been suggested to date to the late Early Pleistocene 6 S kirchbergensis appears in Europe during the early Middle Pleistocene between 0 7 and 0 6 million years ago existing alongside the already present S hundsheimensis 7 Mitochondrial and nuclear genomes obtained from a permafrost specimen 8 9 and a dental proteome 10 suggest that it is more closely related to the woolly rhinoceros than the Sumatran rhinoceros A 2023 morphological study suggested its closest relative was the narrow nosed rhinoceros S hemitoechus 11 Relationships among Late Pleistocene and modern rhinoceros genera based on nuclear DNA after Liu et al 2021 9 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 after Pandolfi 2023 Note This excludes living African rhinoceros species 11 Hyrachyus eximius Tapirus terrestris South American tapir Rhinocerotidae Trigonias osborni Ronzotherium filholi Aceratheriini Plesiaceratherium mirallesi Aceratherium incisivum Hoploaceratherium tetradactylum Teleoceratina Brachypotherium perimense Teleoceras fossiger Rhinocerotina Gaindatherium browni Lartetotherium sansaniense Nesorhinus Nesorhinus hayasakai Nesorhinus philippinensis Rhinoceros Rhinoceros sondaicus Javan rhinoceros Rhinoceros unicornis Indian rhinoceros Dicerorhinus Dicerorhinus gwebinensis Dicerorhinus fusuiensis Dicerorhinus sumatrensis Sumatran rhinoceros Dihoplus schleiermacheri Dihoplus pikermiensis Coelodonta Coelodonta thibetana Coelodonta nihowanensis Coelodonta tologoijensis Coelodonta antiquitatis antiquitatis woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis praecursor woolly rhinoceros 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 Distribution edit nbsp Range of Merck s rhinoceros excluding arctic localities Its range spans from Europe to East Asia but appears to be absent from the Iberian Peninsula 12 13 It was predominantly present in Europe during interglacial periods where it formed part of the Palaeoloxodon antiquus assemblage where it occurred alongside the straight tusked elephant Palaeoloxodon antquus the narrow nosed rhinoceros Stephanorhinus hemitoechus and the hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius 14 It is presumed to have had a preference for closed forest and woodland habitats as opposed the to open grassland habitats favoured by S hemitoechus 14 Its range extended into the Arctic Circle with a 70 48 000 year old skull known from arctic Yakutia in the Chondon River valley 8 and a late Middle Pleistocene aged lower jaw from the Yana River valley 15 Teeth are known from caves in Primorsky Krai suggested to date between 50 000 and 25 000 years ago based on dates of other bones found in the deposit which are the easternmost known records 16 along with a record from the Middle Pleistocene of western Japan 17 A tooth of S cf kirchbergensis of an unknown age is known from the Lut Desert in eastern Iran 18 It is fairly common throughout the Pleistocene in North China 19 but is a rarer component of South Chinese assemblages 20 being known from around 30 localities in the region 5 Antoine 2012 states that D choukoutienensis D lantianensis and D yunchuchenensis are local names for the taxon without elaboration 19 Its range was strongly controlled by glacial cycles with the species experiencing repeated cycles of expansion and contraction as the ice sheets advanced this accounts for the relative rarity of its remains in comparison to the woolly rhinoceros 12 During the Last Glacial Period the species range contracted The timing of its extinction in Europe is uncertain thought it postdates the end of the Last Interglacial around 115 000 years ago 21 Radiocarbon dated remains from the Altai date to around 40 000 years ago 22 The youngest reliable records in China are from the Rhino Cave in Hubei which is early Late Pleistocene in age 20 Though less definitive remains are known from near Harbin in Heilongjiang which are thought to be 20 kya in age 5 Records from Migong Cave just south of the Yangtze River in the Three Gorges area are suggested to date to MIS 2 29 000 14 000 years ago 23 Diet edit nbsp Restoration of two Merck s rhinoceros in open wooded landscape with oak trees during the Eemian interglacial in Europe Merck s rhinoceros has been interpreted as a browser or a mixed feeder consuming both browse such as branches and leaves of trees and shrubs as well as low lying vegetation Its diet appears to have varied according to local conditions 24 25 7 Analysis of plant material embedded within teeth from the Neumark Nord locality in Germany found remains of Populus poplar or aspen Quercus oak Crataegus hawthorn Pyracantha Urtica nettles and Nymphaea water lilies as well as indeterminate remains of Betulaceae Rosaceae and Poaceae grass 26 Preserved plant remains found with the teeth on the arctic Chondon skull included twigs of Salix willow Betula birch and abundant Larix larch alongside fragments of Ericaceae heather sedges were notably absent 8 A specimen from Eemian aged deposits in Gorzow Wielkopolski in Poland had twigs of Corylus hazel Carpinus hornbeam and Viscum mistletoe alongside fruit scales of birch with hazel and birch dominating amongst the pollen 24 The pollen from a specimen found at Spinadesco in Italy was dominated 50 by trees particularly Alnus alder and Fagus beech with Hippophae rhamnoides sea buckthorn dominating amongst the shrubs with around 30 of the total contribution being from a variety of herbaceous plants 27 Human exploitation editCut marks are known on bones of S kirchbergensis from the Guado San Nicola site in central Italy which dates to the late Middle Pleistocene around 400 345 000 years ago 28 Remains of S kirchbergensis with cut marks have also been reported from the Medzhibozh locality in western Ukraine dating to MIS 11 around 425 375 000 years ago 29 At the Taubach travertine site in Thuringia Germany which dates to the Eemian approximately 130 000 115 000 years ago abundant remains of Merck s rhinoceros with cut marks are known The vast majority of remains were of young subadults alongside a much smaller number of adults It has been suggested that the rhinoceroses were killed and butchered on site by Neanderthals 30 Gallery edit nbsp Partial skull in Stuttgart nbsp 300 000 year old dentary fragment from the United Kingdom in the NHM London nbsp Remains of Merck s rhinoceros from Germany nbsp View of the top of the snout of a S kirchbergensis skull showing the rugose texture of the horn attachment areaReferences edit Georg Friedrich Jager Uber die fossilen Saugetiere welche in Wurttemberg in verschiedenen Formationen aufgefunden worden sind nebst geognostischen Bemerkungen uber diese Formationen C Erhard Verlag Stuttgart 1835 39 Johann Jakob Kaup Akten der Urwelt oder Osteologie der urweltlichen Saugethiere und Amphibien Darmstadt Verlag des Herausgebers 1841 Sobczyk Artur Borowka Ryszard K Badura Janusz Stachowicz Rybka Renata Tomkowiak Julita Hrynowiecka Anna Slawinska Joanna Tomczak Michal Pitura Mateusz Lamentowicz Mariusz Kolaczek Piotr May 2020 Geology stratigraphy and palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis bearing Quaternary palaeolake s of Gorzow Wielkopolski NW Poland Central Europe Journal of Quaternary Science 35 4 539 558 Bibcode 2020JQS 35 539S doi 10 1002 jqs 3198 hdl 10261 237944 ISSN 0267 8179 S2CID 216264117 a b Selected records of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Mammalia Rhinocerotidae in Italy Emmanuel M E BILLIA amp Carmelo PETRONIO Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 48 1 2009 xx xx Modena a b c Tong Hao wen November 2012 Evolution of the non Coelodonta dicerorhine lineage in China Comptes Rendus Palevol 11 8 555 562 Bibcode 2012CRPal 11 555T 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 674 675 109 120 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2022 11 008 a b 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 doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2014 10 001 S2CID 83801422 a b c 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 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 16 September 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 hdl 10230 48693 PMID 34433011 S2CID 237273079 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 Pandolfi Luca 2023 01 19 Reassessing the phylogeny of Quaternary Eurasian Rhinocerotidae Journal of Quaternary Science 38 3 291 294 Bibcode 2023JQS 38 291P doi 10 1002 jqs 3496 hdl 11563 163194 ISSN 0267 8179 a b Billa E M E 2011a Occurrences of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Mammalia Rhinocerotidae in Eurasia An account Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae 7 17 40 Billia E M E Zervanova J 2015 New Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Mammalia Rhinocerotidae records in Eurasia Addenda to a previous work Gortania Geologia Paleontologia Paletnologia36 55 68 a b Pushkina Diana July 2007 The Pleistocene easternmost distribution in Eurasia of the species associated with the Eemian Palaeoloxodon antiquus assemblage Mammal Review 37 3 224 245 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2907 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A Louys J 2016 First report of Quaternary mammals from the Qalehjough area Lut Desert Eastern Iran Palaeontologia Electronica doi 10 26879 539 ISSN 1094 8074 a b Antoine Pierre Olivier March 2012 Pleistocene and Holocene rhinocerotids Mammalia Perissodactyla from the Indochinese Peninsula Comptes Rendus Palevol 11 2 3 159 168 Bibcode 2012CRPal 11 159A doi 10 1016 j crpv 2011 03 002 a b 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 Stefaniak Krzysztof Kotowski Adam Badura Janusz Sobczyk Artur Borowka Ryszard K Stachowicz Rybka Renata Moskal del Hoyo Magdalena Hrynowiecka Anna Tomkowiak Julita Slawinska Joanna Przybylski Boguslaw Ciszek Dariusz Alexandrowicz Witold Pawel Skoczylas Sniaz Sylwia Ratajczak Skrzatek Urszula 2023 05 09 A skeleton of peat trapped forest rhinoceros Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 from Gorzow Wielkopolski Northwestern Poland a record of life and death of the Eemian large mammals Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Abhandlungen 308 1 45 77 doi 10 1127 njgpa 2023 1129 ISSN 0077 7749 Kirillova I V Vershinina A O Zazovskaya E P Zanina O G Katler S Kosincev P A Lapteva E G Chernova O F Shapiro B 2021 K voprosu o vremeni i srede obitaniya Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Mammalia Rhinoceratidae na Altae i severo vostoke Rossii To the question of time and environment of Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Mammalia Rhinocerotidae in Altai and North East of Russia Zoologicheskij Zhurnal in Russian 100 5 558 572 doi 10 31857 S0044513421050068 ISSN 0044 5134 S2CID 234970639 Pang Libo Chen Shaokun Huang Wanbo Wu Yan Wei Guangbiao April 2017 Paleoenvironmental and chronological analysis of the mammalian fauna from Migong Cave in the Three Gorges Area China Quaternary International 434 25 31 Bibcode 2017QuInt 434 25P doi 10 1016 j quaint 2014 11 039 a b Stefaniak Krzysztof Stachowicz Rybka Renata Borowka Ryszard K Hrynowiecka Anna Sobczyk Artur Moskal del Hoyo Magdalena Kotowski Adam Nowakowski Dariusz Krajcarz Maciej T Billia Emmanuel M E Persico Davide September 2020 Browsers grazers or mix feeders Study of the diet of extinct Pleistocene Eurasian forest rhinoceros Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 and woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis Blumenbach 1799 Quaternary International 605 606 192 212 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2020 08 039 hdl 10261 255910 S2CID 224984977 Pandolfi Luca Bartolini Lucenti Saverio Cirilli Omar Bukhsianidze Maia Lordkipanidze David Rook Lorenzo July 2021 Paleoecology biochronology and paleobiogeography of Eurasian Rhinocerotidae during the Early Pleistocene The contribution of the fossil material from Dmanisi Georgia Southern Caucasus Journal of Human Evolution 156 103013 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2021 103013 PMID 34030060 Jan van der Made und Rene Grube The rhinoceroses from Neumark Nord and their nutrition In Harald Meller Hrsg Elefantenreich Eine Fossilwelt in Europa Halle Saale 2010 S 382 394 Burkanova Elena M Billia Emmanuel M E Persico Davide July 2020 Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis Jager 1839 Mammalia Rhinocerotidae from the Po valley Lombardia Northern Italy possible diet nutrition and living conditions Quaternary International 554 164 169 Bibcode 2020QuInt 554 164B doi 10 1016 j quaint 2020 07 031 ISSN 1040 6182 S2CID 225542965 Berruti Gabriele Luigi Francesco Arzarello Marta Ceresa Allison Muttillo Brunella Peretto Carlo December 2020 Use Wear Analysis of the Lithic Industry of the Lower Palaeolithic Site of Guado San Nicola Isernia Central Italy Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology 3 4 794 815 Bibcode 2020JPalA 3 794B doi 10 1007 s41982 020 00056 3 ISSN 2520 8217 Stepanchuk V N Moigne A M July 2016 MIS 11 locality of Medzhibozh Ukraine Archaeological and paleozoological evidence Quaternary International 409 241 254 Bibcode 2016QuInt 409 241S doi 10 1016 j quaint 2015 09 050 Bratlund B 1999 Taubach revisited Jahrbuch des Romisch Germanischen Zentralmuseums Mainz 46 61 174 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis amp oldid 1218483841, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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