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- The Final, Correct Published Version of This Article Is Available Online [Published in Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association]
- Reconstructing Body Size in Extinct Crown Cetacea (Neoceti) Using Allometry, Phylogenetic Methods and Tests from the Fossil Record
- Muizon, Christian. the Polyphyletism of the Acrodelphidae, Long-Snouted
- Supplemental Table 1. List of Neogene
- Otekaikea Huata Expands Diversity of the Early Platanistoidea
- Systematic Revision of the Miocene Long-Snouted Dolphin Eurhinodelphis Longirostris Du Bus, 1872 (Cetacea, Odontoceti, Eurhinodelphinidae)
- A 17-My-Old Whale Constrains Onset of Uplift and Climate Change in East Africa
- Miocene Rhino Tooth Added to Collection Features Rhino Tooth Calvert Formation Dolphin Seal Jaw from the Cliffs
- Supplementary Data to a Total-Group Phylogenetic Metatree for Cetacea and the Importance of Fossil Data in Diversification Analyses
- A New Dolphin from the Early Miocene of Patagonia, Argentina: Insights Into the Evolution of Platanistoidea in the Southern Hemisphere
- Redalyc.Cetáceos Fósiles (Mammalia, Odontoceti, Eurhinodelphinoidea
- (Cetacea: Delphinoidea) from the Middle Miocene of Hungary
- Fossil Dolphin Otekaikea Marplesi (Latest Oligocene, New Zealand) Expands the Morphological and Taxonomic Diversity of Oligocene Cetaceans
- Systematic Revision of the Miocene Long-Snouted Dolphin Eurhinodelphis Longirostris DU Bus, 1872 (Cetacea, Odontoceti, Eurhinodelphinidae)
- Odontocete Periotics (Mammalia: Cetacea) from the Car Pathian Basin, Middle Miocene
- Mammalia, Cetacea, Odontoceti) from the Early Miocene of Peru
- Reconstructing Cetacean Brain Evolution Using Computed Tomography
- Cetacea, Mammalia) from the Miocene of the Lower Tagus Basin (Portugal)
- Cetáceos Fósiles
- Downloaded a Complete List of All Known Cetacean Species (56 Million Years Ago to Present) from the Paleobiology Database
- Pages 172 To
- Bulletin 247
- Downloaded from And
- Partie 5. Conclusions Générales Et Perspectives
- Guide to the Whales, Porpoises, and Dolphins (Order Cetacea), Exhibited in the Department of Zoology, British Museum (Natural Hi
- Eurhinodelphinids