The remains of teeth of different generations and jaws of the mammoth Mammuthus intermedius from the type localities of the Khazar faunal complex Cherniy Yar / Nizhnee Zaimische (late Middle Pleistocene – early Late Pleistocene, Lower Volga Region, Astrakhan Province, Russia) are described. The specimens are stored in the collection of the Astrakhan Museum-Reserve. Teeth M3 / m3 of this elephant consist, on average, of 22–24 enamel plates, with a lamellar frequency of 7.5–7.7 per 10 cm, and an enamel thickness of 1.8–1.9 mm. This species, described from the similar age deposits of Western Europe, appeared to be widely distributed in Eurasia during the period of the Saalian and the Eemian periods. The comparative analysis showed a marked difference between the teeth of this taxon from the same of M. trogontherii from Sussenborn (Germany), Tiraspol (Transnistria) and Kagalnik sand pit (Northeast Sea of Azov Region, Russia), the M. trogontherii chosaricus holotype by lamellar frequency, the length of single plate, enamel thickness and the total number of plates. The same differences were also revealed from Late Pleistocene woolly mammoths from Taimyr and Yakutia, including the neotype of M. primigenius primigenius. The similarity of the examined teeth from the collection of the Astrakhan Museum-Reserve to the teeth of M. intermedius from Western and Eastern Europe and Western Siberia was detected. M. intermedius, probably, was the most mass species of elephants of this period and occupied steppe biotopes. Less numerous M. trogontherii chosaricus and Palaeoloxodon antiquus with which it co-existed may have been the inhabitants of more forested landscapes.
2017 in press). Characteristic large mammals of this community are Canis lupus, Mammuthus trogontherii chosaricus, Stephanorhinus cf. kirchbergensis, Elasmotherium sibiricum, Equus latipes, Camelus knoblochi, Megaloceros giganteus, Cervus elaphus, Bison priscus, Bos primigenius, and Saiga tatarica. Chernyi Yar is one of the reference localities of the Khazar mammalian complex (Chernyi Yar village, Astrakhan Region, Russia; Fig. 1). The taxon Mammuthus trogontherii chosaricus Dubrovo, 1966 was defined based on the complete skull and mandible with M3/3 excavated in 1935 from the "Khazarian" deposits. A holotype of this elephant (collection of GIN; exposition no. PIN PMKP-4874/P-1520) is exhibited in the Paleontological Museum of Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow) (Dubrovo, 1966). The exact stratigraphical position of this specimen is not known. But taking into
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