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	Kalasin (กาฬสินธุ์)  
				
			Thai-Pali-Sanskrit. ‘Black water’ or ‘black river’. Name of a 
			province (map), 
			as well as its capital city, in Northeast Thailand, 519 kms 
			Northeast of  
			
			Bangkok.  
			The name comes from the fact that the area 
			around the town of Kalasin has many still and natural waters (sin), 
			such as marshes, swamps, ponds, creeks and brooks. The water in 
			these is very often dark or black (kala), 
			hence the name given to the city.  
			Although the 
			first town in the province was founded only in 1793, archeological 
			excavations have shown that people of the
	
	
			
    Lawa 
			tribe have lived in the area since ancient times, probably already 
			since the 5th century AD. Besides this, also 120 million year-old 
			dinosaur fossils (fig.) have been excavated at Phu Kum Khao, in the 
			district of Sahatsakhan. At this dinosaur site, the largest of its 
			kind in Thailand, more than 700 fossilized bones were found and in 
			the nearby Phu Faek Forest Park, in the district of Huai Peung, 
			several large dinosaur footprints were discovered. In the beginning 
			of the twentieth century the town of Kalasin was made into a 
			province, but in 1932 this province was done away with and the area 
			was incorporated in the province of
							
							
	Maha Sarakham, only to be re-established 
			again in 1947. Kalasin is a 
			mainly agricultural province covered by a 
			hilly landscape which allowed the creation of a large dam and water 
			reservoir for flood prevention and irrigation. The province 
			has at present fourteen 
			 
				 
			
			amphur and four  
				 
			
			king amphur, 134  
			
				tambon and 1,509 villages, called 
				
	
			
	mu ban 
			in Thai. See also
				
			
			Kalasin data file.
				
			
				
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