Skip to main content
Login
Library Home
My Profile
Links
Ask the Librarian
About
New Titles
Full Record
Back to Search Results
Evidence from earliest known erinaceomorph basicranium that insectivorans and primates are not closely related
Record no:
53017
Call no:
RP21199
Author:
Novacek, Michael J.
;
McKenna, Malcolm C.
;
Neff, Nancy A.
;
Cifelli, Richard L.
Citation:
NATURE. 15 Dec. 1983, v.306 no.5944 : 683-684;
Year:
1983
Subject:
Insectivora, Fossil
;
Primates, Fossil
;
Type:
Reprint
Item availability
Search
Reserve
{ 1 } items found
Result
Links
Location
Library
Shelf no
Status
Year
Volume
Copy
1
Archives room
Western Australian Museum
Reprint boxes
On Shelf
Print
Mail
Similar Items
Cranial anatomy and evolution of Early Tertiary Plesiadapidae (Mammalia, Primates) by Philip D. Gingerich / Malcolm C. McKenna ... [et al.] [book review]
New fossil primates: a review of the past decade
The hunt for Darwin's third ape
Fossil primates and the evolution of some primate locomotor systems. The significance of primate paleontology for anthropological studies.
A Middle Palaeocene primate
The insectivores of the Hagerman local fauna, Upper Pliocene of Idaho
The shrews of the WaKeeney local fauna, Lower Pliocene of Trego County, Kansas
Notes on Late Cenozoic shrews
Nyctitheriidae (Mammalia, Insectivora) from the Bridger formation of Wyoming
Amphipethecus revisited