Attached
Sabaragamuwa basin is the dominant type of natural museum in Sri Lanka. Cultural remains
of Homo sapiens discovered alongside the skeletal fragments, which include with the
geometric microliths. Other discoveries include various fauna and flora that are thought to
have formed part of their diet, also the animal bones which was fossilized surrounding the
basin called “Rathnapura fauna”. From these animal fossils, elephant fossils also were found.
The identified elephant fossils were represented by three species of elephant: Elephas
hysudricus, Elephas namadicus, Elephas maximus sinhaleyus, who were extinct at present.
Fossilized remains (teeth and bones) of elephants are found at present from gem pits and gem
gravels (llama) belong to the Pleistocene Epoch. The gathered Ehephas spp. fossils (five
samples, one sample from Highland Complex) found from alluvial sedimentary deposits of
gem pits. These were identified according to the special anatomical characters comparing
with the similar species recorded in the literature. In addition to sediment samples collected
from gem pits, where those fossils can be used for sedimentological analysis. The objective
of this study was to paleo biogeographycal patters of Elephas spp. & develop the evaluate
an accurate, fully automated 3D histology reconstruction method to visualize the arterioles
and venules within the Prehistoric Elephant’s teeth has founed. This approach will provide a
valuable tool for high-accuracy 3D histology reconstructions for analysis of sedimental
factors of Sabaragamuwa beds & develop the demo for biogeographycal patters base on
Interactive 3D map.