Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 36
pro vyhledávání: '"SWIFT, SANDRA L."'
Autor:
MEAD, JIM I.1,2 jmead@mammothsite.org, SWIFT, SANDRA L.1, MCDONALD, H. GREGORY3, EMSLIE, STEVEN D.4
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist. Aug2023, Vol. 83 Issue 2, p269-276. 8p.
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist, 2020 Dec 01. 80(4), 521-530.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27109670
Publikováno v:
In Quaternary Science Reviews 1 November 2019 223
Autor:
Mead, Jim I., Baez, Arturo, Swift, Sandra L., Carpenter, Mary C., Hollenshead, Marci, Czaplewski, Nicholas J., Steadman, David W., Bright, Jordon, Arroyo-Cabrales, Joaquin
Publikováno v:
The Southwestern Naturalist, 2006 Jun 01. 51(2), 226-239.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/3672572
Autor:
Mead, Jim I1 (AUTHOR) jmead@mammothsite.org, Swift, Sandra L1 (AUTHOR), Jass, Christopher N2 (AUTHOR), Meyers, Jeffrey I3 (AUTHOR), Weaver, Sharon E1 (AUTHOR)
Publikováno v:
Northwestern Naturalist. Autumn2021, Vol. 102 Issue 2, p109-119. 11p.
Autor:
Mead, Jim I., Jin, Changzhu, Wei, Guangbiao, Sun, Chengkai, Wang, Yuan, Swift, Sandra L., Zheng, Longting
Publikováno v:
In Quaternary International 15 December 2014 354:139-146
Publikováno v:
Quaternary; Jun2023, Vol. 6 Issue 2, p31, 16p
Publikováno v:
ETSU Faculty Works.
Research on squamate evolution of Australia has predominantly focused on the eastern portion of the continent, whereas little is known about the record from Western Australia. Deposits in Devils Lair provide a glimpse of late Pleistocene Egernia grou
Externí odkaz:
https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/16437
Autor:
Erbajeva, Margarita A., Mead, Jim I., Alexeeva, Nadezhda V., Angelone, Chiara, Swift, Sandra L.
Publikováno v:
ETSU Faculty Works.
Ochotonids (pikas) are an ancient group of mammals originating in the Oligocene of Asia and flourishing in the Miocene of the Old World. During the Pliocene they reduced both their diversity and abundance, Only the Pleistocene genus Ochotona survived
Publikováno v:
ETSU Faculty Works.
Few Pleistocene paleontological faunas are published in detail for most of Central America. Probably the richest locality of vertebrates in Central America is at Tomayate, El Salvador, and dates to the early-middle Pleistocene. Literature about late