We present an analysis of the asymmetries in the population of Galactic
M-giant stars present in the 2MASS All Sky catalogue. Several large-scale
asymmetries are detected, the most significant of which is a strong
elliptical-shaped stellar over-density, close to the Galactic plane at (l=240,
b=-8), in the constellation of Canis Major. A small grouping of globular
clusters (NGC 1851, NGC 1904, NGC 2298, and NGC 2808), coincident in position
and radial velocity, surround this structure, as do a number of open clusters.
The population of M-giant stars in this over-density is similar in number to
that in the core of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. We argue that this object is
the likely dwarf galaxy progenitor of the ring-like structure that has recently
been found at the edge of the Galactic disk. A numerical study of the tidal
disruption of an accreted dwarf galaxy is presented. The simulated debris fits
well the extant position, distance and velocity information on the ``Galactic
Ring'', as well as that of the M-giant over-densities, suggesting that all
these structures are the consequence of a single accretion event. The disrupted
dwarf galaxy stream orbits close to the Galactic Plane, with a pericentre at
approximately the Solar circle, an orbital eccentricity similar to that of
stars in the Galactic thick disk, as well as a vertical scale height similar to
that of the thick disk. This finding strongly suggests that the Canis Major
dwarf galaxy is a building block of the Galactic thick disk, that the thick
disk is continually growing, even up to the present time, and that thick disk
globular clusters were accreted onto the Milky Way from dwarf galaxies in
co-planar orbits.Comment: 13 pages, 18 figures (2 in colour), accepted for publication in MNRA