Buffetaut, Eric, Raksaskulwong, Lertsin, Suteethorn, Varavudh, Tong, Haiyan (1994) First post-Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from the Shan-Thai block: intercentra from the Jurassic of peninsular Thailand. Geological Magazine, 131 (6) 837-839 doi:10.1017/s0016756800012899
Reference Type | Journal (article/letter/editorial) | ||
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Title | First post-Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from the Shan-Thai block: intercentra from the Jurassic of peninsular Thailand | ||
Journal | Geological Magazine | ||
Authors | Buffetaut, Eric | Author | |
Raksaskulwong, Lertsin | Author | ||
Suteethorn, Varavudh | Author | ||
Tong, Haiyan | Author | ||
Year | 1994 (November) | Volume | 131 |
Issue | 6 | ||
Publisher | Cambridge University Press (CUP) | ||
DOI | doi:10.1017/s0016756800012899Search in ResearchGate | ||
Generate Citation Formats | |||
Mindat Ref. ID | 256415 | Long-form Identifier | mindat:1:5:256415:3 |
GUID | 0 | ||
Full Reference | Buffetaut, Eric, Raksaskulwong, Lertsin, Suteethorn, Varavudh, Tong, Haiyan (1994) First post-Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from the Shan-Thai block: intercentra from the Jurassic of peninsular Thailand. Geological Magazine, 131 (6) 837-839 doi:10.1017/s0016756800012899 | ||
Plain Text | Buffetaut, Eric, Raksaskulwong, Lertsin, Suteethorn, Varavudh, Tong, Haiyan (1994) First post-Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from the Shan-Thai block: intercentra from the Jurassic of peninsular Thailand. Geological Magazine, 131 (6) 837-839 doi:10.1017/s0016756800012899 | ||
In | (1994, November) Geological Magazine Vol. 131 (6) Cambridge University Press (CUP) | ||
Abstract/Notes | AbstractTwo temnospondyl intercentra from non-marine middle Jurassic rocks at Mab Ching, in the southern peninsula of Thailand, are the first remains of post-Triassic labyrinthodont amphibians to be reported from the Shan-Thai block. They closely resemble an intercentrum recently reported from the middle Jurassic of the Khorat Plateau of northeastern Thailand, which is part of the Indochina block. Although the Mab Ching specimens are too fragmentary to warrant a precise identification, they confirm that temnospondyl amphibians were widespread on the various Asian continental blocks in the Jurassic. |
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