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Kennalestes
Mammalian Faunal Succession in the Cretaceous of the Kyzylkum Desert
Eutherians Experienced Elevated Evolutionary Rates in the Immediate
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Craniodental Anatomy of a New Late Cretaceous Multituberculate Mammal from Udan Sayr, Mongolia
Mammals from the Mesozoic of Mongolia
New Data on the Skull and Dentition in the Mongolian Late Cretaceous Eutherian Mammal Zalambdalestes
Digitalcommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
AMERICAN MUSEUM Novitates PUBLISHED by the AMERICAN MUSEUM of NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST at 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y
An Extended Range of Multituberculate Kryptobaatar and Distribution of Mammals in the Upper Cretaceous of the Gobi Desert
New Protoceratopsid Specimens Improve the Age Correlation of the Upper Cretaceous Gobi Desert Strata
Evolution of Dental Replacement in Mammals
CRANIODENTAL ANATOMY of a NEW LATE CRETACEOUS MULTITUBERCULATE MAMMAL from UDAN SAYR, MONGOLIA -.: Palaeontologia Polonica
The University of Michigan
Limbs in Mammalian Evolution
Preliminary Data on the Upper Cretaceous
Phylogeny and Relationships of Taeniodonta, an Enigmatic Order of Eutherian Mammals (Paleogene, North America)
On the Classification of the Early Tertiary Erinaceomorpha (Insectivora, Mammalia)
Comptes Rendus
Top View
Journal of Systematic Palaeontology New Material of the Late
Earliest Eutherian Mammal Skull, from the Late Cretaceous (Coniacian)Of Uzbekistan
Tribosphenic Mammal from the North American Early Cretaceous
The Late Cretaceous Placental Mammal Kulbeckia
Th E Lat Retaceous I Kennalestes and Mamm Als I
Lithobiotopes of the Nemegt Gobi Basin
EVOLUTION of the THERIAN MAMMALS in the LATE CRETACEOUS of ASIA. PART VII. SYNOPSIS -.: Palaeontologia Polonica
Supporting Information
Petrosal Anatomy of the Paleocene Eutherian Mammal Deltatherium Fundaminis (Cope, 1881)
Evolution of the Therian Mammals in the Late Cretaceous of Asia
Evolution of the Therian Mammals.In the Late
The Enigmatic Evolutionary Relationships of Paleocene Mammals and Their Relevance for the Tertiary Radiation of Placental Mammals