News Letter
Weather
Community
English home Forum Photo Gallery Features Newsletter Archive   About US Help Site Map
China
World
Opinion
Business
Sci-Edu
Culture/Life
Sports
Photos
 Services
- Newsletter
- News Archive
- Feedback
- Weather Forecast
 Search
Advanced
 About China
- China at a glance
- Constitution
- CPC & state organs
- Chinese leadership
- Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping

Home >> Life
UPDATED: 20:22, June 23, 2004
Saber-toothed elephant, tiger fossils excavated in SW China
font size    

Chinese archeologists said they have discovered fossils of ancient saber-toothed elephants and tigers at two separate sites in southwest China's Guizhou Province.

Workers dug out a pile of fossilized bone fragments including shanks, ribs, jawbones and tusks at a construction site in Zunyi City of Guizhou early this month. Archeologists believed the unearthed bones to be the remains of a stegodon, or a saber-toothed elephant.

Stegodon was a kind of large herbivorous amniote living in the same age as the dinosaur in the late Jurassic period about 130 million years ago.

Archaeologists have also found fossils of a skull of saber-toothed tiger in a cave at the Maolan national natural reserve. The skull measures 28 centimeters long, 21.3 centimeters wide and 13.7 centimeters tall, and weighs 2,500 grams, containing a dozen of well-preserved teeth.

Source: Xinhua

Print friendly Version Comments on the story Recommend to friends Save to disk


   Recommendation
- China Forum
- PD Newsletter
- People's Comment
- Most Popular
 Related News

Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved