DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Didelphodon
Didelphodon
Mammalia: Metatheria) from the Early Paleocene (Torrejonian) Nacimiento Formation, San Juan Basin, New Mexico, USA
Here Come the (Bigger) Mammals
Caudal Cranium of Thylacosmilus Atrox (Mammalia, Metatheria, Sparassodonta), a South American Predaceous Sabertooth
Dual Origin of Tribosphenic Mammals
Mammal Disparity Decreases During the Cretaceous Angiosperm Radiation
Baby Hadrosaurid Material Associated with an Unusually High Abundance of Troodon Teeth from the Horseshoe Canyon Formation, Upper Cretaceous, Alberta, Canada
New Specimens of Sparassodonta (Mammalia, Metatheria) From
Jaw Shape and Mechanical Advantage Are Indicative of Diet in Mesozoic Mammals ✉ Nuria Melisa Morales-García 1 , Pamela G
The Taphonomy, Paleoecology, and Depositional Environment Of
Mammalian Faunal Dynamics During the Last 1.8 Million Years of the Cretaceous in Garfield County, Montana
Late Cretaceous Mammalian Fauna from the Hell Creek Formation, Southeastern Montana
Geology, Taphonomy, and Paleoecology of a Unique Upper Cretaceous Bonebed Near the Cretaceous-Tertiary Boundary in South Dakota
American Museum Novitates
A Large Carnivorous Mammal from the Late Cretaceous and the North American Origin of Marsupials
A Stagodontid Mammal from the Mid-Cretaceous Of
Biogeography and Phylogeny of the Metatheria
Survivor of the Cretaceous Mass Extinction
Article New Specimen Reveals Deltatheroidan Affinities of the North American Late Cretaceous Mammal Nanocuris
Top View
Stagodontid Marsupials from the Late Cretaceous of Canada and Their Systematic and Functional Implications
Mammals from the End of the Age of Dinosaurs in North Dakota and Southeastern Montana, with a Reappraisal of Geographic Differentiation Among Lancian Mammals
The Patagonian Fossil Mammal Necrolestes: a Neogene Survivor of Dryolestoidea
68Th Annual Meeting
May 20, 2016 Mary Gates Hall
A Symposium Focusing on Cretaceous and Paleogene Vertebrate Paleontology of the Western Interior
Were Immigrants a Significant Part of the Earliest Paleocene Mammalian Fauna of the North American Western Interior?
Norntates PUBLISHED by the AMERICAN MUSEUM of NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST at 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10024 Number 3235, 13 Pp., 3 Figures August 27, 1998
Stagodontid Marsupials from the Late Cretaceous of Canada and Their Systematic and Functional Implications