Home > Science > Earth Sciences > Paleontology > Vertebrates > Mammals
This category is for websites dealing specifically with the fossil record of mammals.
http://ashfall.unl.edu/
Describes a 10 million year old volcanic ash deposit in Nebraska which contains the remains of rhinos, camels, horses and other mammals which once lived in the area.
http://www.helsinki.fi/~mhaaramo/metazoa/deuterostoma/chordata/synapsida/mammalian_orders.html
This is Mikko Haaramo's private archive of various phylogenetic trees, starting at Mammaliaformes.
http://www.nhm.uio.no/besok-oss/utstillinger/faste/fossiler/galleri/montre/english/m_tidligpattedyr_e.htm
Oslo University - Paleontological Museum - Description of major mesozoic mammal groups: early mammals, triconodonts and multituberculates.
http://www.paleocene-mammals.de/
Provides comprehensive information on the mammals that came to occupy the vacant ecological niche left by the departure of the dinosaurs.
http://www.paleocene-mammals.de/condylarths.htm
Information on this group of relatively unspecialized placental mammals that were to evolve into the ungulates that dominated the Cenozoic animal communities on land.
http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/larson/
Online exhibit by the Illinois State Museum depicting the mammals and other animals which lived in the Midwestern U.S. during late Pleistocene times.
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-transitional/part2a.html
A lengthy but incomplete list of transitional vertebrate fossils that have been discovered.
http://geology.utah.gov/utahgeo/dinofossil/iceage/iceage.htm
Ice Age Animals from the Utah Geological Survey
Home > Science > Earth Sciences > Paleontology > Vertebrates > Mammals
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