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Pleistocene wolf
Quaternary Records of the Dire Wolf, Canis Dirus, in North and South America
Extended Survival of Pleistocene Siberian Wolves Into the Early 20Th Century on the Island of Honshū
Dire Wolves Were the Last of an Ancient New World Canid Lineage Angela
Specialized Sledge Dogs Accompanied Inuit Dispersal Across the North American Arctic
The Case Study of Gnirshöhle, a Magdalenian Cave Site Chris Baumann1,2,17*, Saskia Pfrengle2,3,17*, Susanne C
Social Inequality Before Farming?
Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion from Beringia
A Comprehensive Approach to Wolf Domestication
Revising the Archaeological Record of the Upper Pleistocene Arctic Siberia: Human Dispersal and Adaptations in MIS 3 and 2
Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion from Beringia
Dogs and Mankind: Coevolution on the Move - an Update
Gray Wolf Paul C
1 Dire Wolves Were the Last of an Ancient New World Canid Lineage 1
(Canidae, Carnivora, Mammalia) from the Fonelas P-1 Plio-Pleistocene Site (Guadix Basin, Granada, Spain)§ Canis Accitanus Nov
1 Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion from Beringia
Ancient DNA Suggests Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion from Beringia
Specialized Sledge Dogs Accompanied Inuit Dispersal Across
The First Evidence for Late Pleistocene Dogs in Italy
Top View
Dire Wolves Were the Last of an Ancient New World Canid Lineage
Ancient DNA Suggests Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion from Beringia
Dental Microwear As a Behavioral Proxy for Distinguishing Between Canids at the Upper Paleolithic (Gravettian) Site of Predmostí, Czech Republic
Dogdomesticationandthedualdis
Extinct Beringian Wolf Morphotype Found in the Continental U.S. Has Implications for Wolf Migration and Evolution Julie A
Deciphering the Origin of Dogs: from Fossils to Genomes Adam H
Hypercarnivorous Teeth and Healed Injuries to Canis Chihliensis from Early Pleistocene Nihewan Beds, China, Support Social Hunting for Ancestral Wolves
Phylogenetic Systematics of the North American Fossil Caninae (Carnivora: Canidae)
A New Species of Dog from the Early Pleistocene Site of Venta Micena (Orce, Baza Basin, Spain)
Ancient Northern Wolves - Origins, Extinction and Replacement
1 Ancient DNA Suggests Modern Wolves Trace Their Origin to a Late Pleistocene Expansion 2 from Beringia
Population Dynamics in Italian Canids Between the Late Pleistocene and Bronze Age
Bone Modification by Modern Wolf (Canis Lupus)