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Virtual endocast of the Late Miocene <i>Hoplitomeryx matthei</i> (Artiodactyla, Hoplitomerycidae) and brain evolution in insular ruminants. [PDF]
Orgebin P +5 more
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Enhancing reservoir characterization in the Temsah gas field through high-resolution seismic analysis and three-dimensional modeling. [PDF]
Reda M +4 more
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Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1998
Vertebrate Paleontology in the Neotropics: The Miocene Fauna of La Venta, Colombia edited by R.F. Kay et al. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997. £62.50 hbk (xvi +592 pages) ISBN 1 56098 4 18 X.
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Vertebrate Paleontology in the Neotropics: The Miocene Fauna of La Venta, Colombia edited by R.F. Kay et al. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997. £62.50 hbk (xvi +592 pages) ISBN 1 56098 4 18 X.
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Miocene Hominoid Palatofacial Morphology
Folia Primatologica, 1980The palatofacial morphology of Proconsul africanus, P. nyanzae, P. major and Sivapithecus meteai is compared to extant catarrhines. The early Miocene hominoids (Proconsul) are unlike modern great apes, but retain a primitive catarrhine pattern more similar to some extant cercopithecoids.
H M, McHenry +2 more
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Il Miocene: le terre emerse del Miocene
2005In this chapter the fossil record of terrestrial mammals during the Early and Middle Miocene is reported. The fossil record for this time span is definitely poor. Only three localities, Burgio in Sicily, and Sardara and Oschiri in Sardinia, giveg us information on the distributions of emerged lands and only in Oschiri we deal with an assemblage of ...
ROOK L., KOTSAKIS, Anastassios
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Middle Miocene Hominoid Origins
Science, 2000Ward et al . ([1][1]) ably show that samples of thickly enameled Middle Miocene hominoids that they attribute to a new genus, Equatorius , are distinct from Kenyapithecus . They fail to show, however, how Equatorius differs from Griphopithecus .
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Miocene and Post‐Miocene Proboscidea from East Africa.
The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London, 1942SUMMARY. Deinotherium (Kaup). The occurrence of Deinoiherium in Pleistocene deposits in Africa is now well known. The material from Kanam appears to belong to the species Deinotherium bozasi (Arambourg), originally described from the Omo River deposits.
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