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Teratornis
Evolution and Presence of Diurnal Predatory Birds in the Carpathian Basin
Additions to the Late Pleistocene Vertebrate Paleontology of the Las
Onetouch 4.0 Scanned Documents
A Condor from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas
Abstract
Ice Age Fossils of Woodburn, Oregon
Southern Exposures
The Aerodynamics of Argentavis, the World's Largest Flying Bird from The
New Information on the Late Pleistocene Birds from San Josecito Cave, Nuevo Leon, Mexico ’
Eastward Migration Through the Gulf States
Brasso, Rebecka and S. Emslie. 2006. Two New Late Pleistocene Avifaunas from New Mexico. Condor
Original Drawing by Linda Newberry, a Naturalist and Artist Living in Cannon Beach, Oregon
Chapter 16, the Mistaken Extinction, by Lowell Dingus and Timothy Rowe, New York, W
GRIFFON VULTURE Gyps Fulvus Hablizl 1883
Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington
The Great American Biotic Interchange in Florida
Size and Locomotion in Teratorns (Aves: Teratornithidae)
A New Genus for the Cuban Teratorn (Aves: Teratornithidae)
Top View
Morgan, Gary and S. D. Emslie. 2010. Tropical and Western Influences In
Avian Community, Climate, and Sea-Level Changes in the Plio-Pleistocene of the Florida Peninsula Ornithological Monographs
Winter 2020: Volume 78, No
The Great Predatory Birds of the Pleistocene of Cuba
PROCEEDINGS of the 6TH FOSSIL RESOURCE CONFERENCE Edited by Vincent L
CALIFORNIA CONDORS at Home in Arizona
Stasis in Teratorns from the La Brea Tar Pits During the Last Glacial- Interglacial Cycle
(Aves, Cathartidae) from the Late Pleistocene of Uruguay
The Late Pleistocene Continental Avian Extinction – an Evaluation of the Fossil Evidence
Collected Papers in Avian Paleontology Honoring the 90Th Birthday of Alexander Wetmore
The Role of Olfaction in Food Location by the Turkey Vulture (Cathartes Aura)
Florida State Museum
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Geology and Paleontology Explorations and Resources at Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument
The Aerodynamics of Argentavis, the World's Largest Flying Bird from The
California Condors in the Pacific Northwest: Integrating History, Molecular Ecology, and Spatial Modeling for Reintroduction Planning