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Stegodon sumbaensis Middle – Late Pleistocene, Sumba, Indonesia; Stegodon timorensis Middle Pleistocene, Timor, Indonesia; Stegodon mindanensis Pleistocene Mindanao, Philippines; An indeterminate Stegodon molar of an uncertain locality and age is known from Greece, representing the only record of the genus in Europe. [28]
Philippines and northeastern Australia The extirpated Philippine population was described as the subspecies G. a. luzonica on the basis of differences with the Indian (G. a. antigone) and Indochinese subspecies (G. a. sharpii), but genetic studies indicate that it was identical to the Australian subspecies. [97]
Dwarf species of elephants and Stegodon have been found on the islands of Indonesia and the Philippines, with dwarfed species of Stegodon also having been found in Japan. The Channel Islands of California once supported the pygmy mammoth , a dwarf species descended from Columbian mammoths , [ 1 ] while the woolly mammoths that existed on ...
Homo luzonensis, also known as Callao Man and locally called "Ubag" after a mythical caveman, [2] [3] is an extinct, possibly pygmy, species of archaic human from the Late Pleistocene of Luzon, the Philippines.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 21 November 2023. Family of extinct elephant-like mammals Not to be confused with the extinct metatherian family Stagodontidae. Stegodontidae Temporal range: Miocene–Late Pleistocene Pre๊ ๊ O S D C P T J K Pg N Stegolophodon cautleyi Stegodon hunghoensis Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota ...
The first four floors of the museum is managed by the National Museum of the Philippines while the fifth floor is managed by Museo Dabawenyo- the city's local museum. [4] The first floor houses the 40 ft (12 m) oil on canvas painting of "Davao Industries" by Victorio Edades, a national artist who spent his retirement years in Davao.
Rizal (formerly known as Liwan), officially the Municipality of Rizal is a municipality in the province of Kalinga, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 19,554 people. [3] The town is famous for its Pleistocene archaeological site which possesses rhino bones, tools, deer bones, turtle remains, and stegodon bones ...
Stegodon miensis Stegodon protoaurorae Stegodon aurorae: Japan (Also Taiwan for S. aurorae) [29] Extinct (Early Pleistocene) Chinese Stegodon: Greater Flores dwarf stegodont [3] Stegodon florensis: Flores: Extinct (Late Pleistocene) Sundaland Stegodon: Javan dwarf stegodonts: Stegodon hypsilophus [26] S. semedoensis [30] S. sp. [26] Java: Extinct