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Catopsalis
Masticatory Musculature of Asian Taeniolabidoid Multituberculate Mammals
New Specimens of the Multituberculate Mammal Sphenopsalis from China: Implications for Phylogeny and Biology of Taeniolabidoids
Late Cretaceous (65-100 Ma Time-Slice) Time
The Middle Ear in Multituberculate Mammals
Arna PANE@NUOD@O@A DODMUGA Nornenclatorial Note Vol
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Doi:10.1038/Nature10880
NEW UPPER CRETACEOUS MULTITUBERCULATE GENERA from BAYN DZAK, GOBI DESERT (Plates >C-->Cv1l)
Catopsalis (Multituberculata) from Asia and North America and the Problem of Taeniolabidid Dispersal in the Late Cretaceous
By DAVID A. LEVERING Bachelors of Science
Largest Known Mesozoic Multituberculate from Eurasia And
A New Taeniolabidoid Multituberculate (Mammalia)
Vertebrate Paleontology of Montana
Stratigraphy and Geologic History of the Uppermost Cretaceous, Paleocene, and Lower Eocene Rocks in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming
Mammals Across the K/Pg Boundary in Northeastern Montana
Genozoic Mammal Horizons of Western North America
The Late Paleocene Gashato Fauna, Mongolia
Ct Scanning and Computerized Reconstructions of the Inner Ear of Multituberculate Mammals
Adaptive Radiation of Multituberculate Mammals Before the Extinction of Dinosaurs
Top View
The Extinction of the Multituberculates Outside North America: a Global Approach to Testing the Competition Model
The Multituberculate Catopsalis from the Early Paleocene of the Crazy Mountains Basin in Montana
Cretaceous Nanno Taxa Micula Prinsii Palynodinium Grallator Tr
Mammals from the End of the Age of Dinosaurs in North Dakota and Southeastern Montana, with a Reappraisal of Geographic Differentiation Among Lancian Mammals
A New Taeniolabidoid Multituberculate (Mammalia)
Comprehensive Bibliography of the Crazy Mountain Basin Project
A New Suborder of Multituberculate Mammals
The Enamel Ultrastructure of Multituberculate Mammals: a Review
Hypsodonty and Enamel Microstructure in the Paleocene Gondwanatherian Mammal Sudamerica Ameghinoi
Higgins, P, 2003, a Wyoming Succession of Paleocene Mammal
Multituberculate Mammals from Near the Early-Late Cretaceous Boundary, Cedar Mountain Formation, Utah
Snout and Orbit of Cretaceous Asian Multitiuberculates Studied by Serial Sections
Were Immigrants a Significant Part of the Earliest Paleocene Mammalian Fauna of the North American Western Interior?
Genus/Species Skull Ht Lt Wt Stage Range Aaptoryctes U.Paleocene W USA A