Results 171 to 180 of about 2,629 (202)
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The systematic position of Hoplitomerycidae (Ruminantia) revisited

Geobios, 2013
Abstract Hoplitomeryx Leinders was originally described only on cranial characters. The type specimens were found during the 1970's in karstic fissure fillings, most likely of Messinian age, in Gargano (Apulia, southeastern Italy), between Poggio Imperiale (41°49′30′ N, 15°21′58′ E) and Apricena (41°47′06′ N, 15°26′41′ E).
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Palaeobiology of tragulids (Mammalia: Artiodactyla: Ruminantia)

2018
Tragulidae is a family of the order Artiodactyla and suborder Ruminantia. Its representatives are closely related to deer, antelopes and their relatives. Fossil evidence from Asia suggests an origin of the Tragulidae in the Eocene at least 34 million years ago, with a climax during the Miocene and subsequent decline until present.
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The first known AsianHispanomeryx(Mammalia, Ruminantia, Moschidae)

Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 2011
Hispanomeryx Morales, Moya-Sola and Soria, 1981, is a moschid pecoran from the middle-early late Miocene of Europe (MN 6 to MN 11; Morales et al., 1981; Azanza, 1986; Prothero, 2007; Vislobokova, 2...
Israel M. Sánchez   +3 more
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Ruminantia from the middle Miocene of the Gračanica coalmine (Bugojno Basin, Bosnia-Herzegovina)

Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, 2018
Five different ruminant taxa were found in the Gracanica coal mine: the tragulid Dorcatherium vindebonense, a palaeomerycid (Palaeomerycidae gen. et sp. indet.), the giraffe Giraffokeryx sp., and the bovids ?Tethytragus sp. and Eotragus ?clavatus. The ruminant fauna fits well to an early middle to middle middle Miocene age and is typical for a locality
Manuela Aiglstorfer, Serdar Mayda
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Elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchungen über die Granula iridis der Ruminantia

Albrecht von Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 1968
Die Feinstruktur der Granula iridis (Traubenkorner) wird bei einigen Ruminantia (Ziege, Schaf, Rind) erstmalig untersucht. Die Granula stellen Wucherungen des Pigmentepithels dar, die zahlreiche grose Cysten mit Stroma, Blutgefasen und Nerven enthalten. Daneben existieren Mikrocysten, die sich zwischen den Pigmentzellen bilden.
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Boselaphines (Artiodactyla, Ruminantia, Bovidae) from the Middle Siwaliks of Hasnot, Pakistan

Geobios, 2009
Abstract In this paper, boselaphine material from several localities in the area of the Hasnot Pakistan, is described, identified, and discussed. Four species that belong to three different genera of the tribe Boselaphini have been found: Selenoportax vexillarius, S. lydekkeri, Pachyportax latidens and Eotragus sp. Eotragus sp.
Muhammad Akbar Khan   +2 more
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Revision of the Extinct Pseudoceratinae (Artiodactyla: Ruminantia: Gelocidae)

Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History, 2008
The Pseudoceratinae is a North American clade of small, hornless ruminant artiodactyls known from the late middle Miocene to the earliest Pliocene. Two genera and three species are recognized: Pseudoceras skinneri Frick 1937 (including P. potteri Frick 1937 and P.
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Mitochondrial and nuclear phylogenies of Cervidae (Mammalia, Ruminantia): Systematics, morphology, and biogeography

Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2006
The family Cervidae includes 40 species of deer distributed throughout the northern hemisphere, as well as in South America and Southeast Asia. Here, we examine the phylogeny of this family by analyzing two mitochondrial protein-coding genes and two nuclear introns for 25 species of deer representing most of the taxonomic diversity of the family.
Gilbert C., Ropiquet A., Hassanin A.
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An early record of the moschid genus Micromeryx (Mammalia, Ruminantia) [PDF]

open access: possible, 2022
The paper presents the description of six isolated fossil teeth discovered in 2011 at Sibnica 4 locality (Central Serbia). Based on the morphological characteristics, the material is identified as belonging to a small fossil moschid Micromeryx sp., which makes the first occurrence of this genus in Serbia.
Alaburić, Sanja, Radović, Predrag
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[Sarcocystis alceslatrans (Apicomplexa) from a palaearctic elk (Ruminantia)].

Angewandte Parasitologie, 1986
Sarcocysts from a palaearctic moose have been studied for the first time by light and electron microscopy. Because of coincidences in morphology of the cysts, especially of the cyst wall structure and the cystozoides, with the North American species Sarcocystis alceslatrans DUBEY, 1980, they are assigned to this species.
J, Sedlaczek, J, Zipper
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