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         Prehistoric Animals Mammals:     more books (100)
  1. Prehistoric Mammals (A Pop-up book) by Melvin Berger, 1986-04-18
  2. Prehistoric Mammals
  3. When dinosaurs disappeared;: Mammals of long ago by Rosalie Davidson, 1973
  4. Creatures of the Past: Mighty Mammals of the Past No. 3 by John Stidworthy, 1991-05
  5. Land Mammals (Extinct) by Philip Steele, 1991-10-31
  6. After the Dinosaurs: Mammoths and Fossil Mammals (I Can Read Book 2) by Charlotte Lewis Brown, 2007-10-01
  7. GIANT GROUND SLOTH -LIB (Prehistoric Animals) by Michael P. Goecke, 2003-01-01
  8. Ice Age Beasts (Prehistoric animals) by Michael Jay, 2003-11-20
  9. Drawing Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals (How-to-Draw Book) by Don Bolognese, 1982-05
  10. Instant Guide to Prehistoric Animals (Dial-An-Animal) by Gina Phillips, F. S. Persico, 1989-04
  11. Prehistoric Animals by Michael P. Goecke, 2003-01
  12. Prehistoric Animals Set II by Michael P. Goecke, 2003-09
  13. Older Than the Dinosaurs: The Origin and Rise of the Mammals by Edward R. Ricciuti, 1980-04
  14. American Mastodon (Prehistoric Animals Set II) by Michael P. Goecke, 2003-09

41. Prehistoric Animals :: Allosaurus, Apatosaurus, Baluchitherium, Brachiosaurus, C
of a hairlike covering suggests that they may have been warmblooded, or endothermic,like mammals and birds. Go Back to 'prehistoric animals Index' Page Total
http://www.4to40.com/earth/geography/htm/prehistoricanimalsindex.asp?counter=10

42. HallAnimals.com Prehistoric Mammals Of Australia And New
You are here animals mammals prehistoric mammals of Australia andNew Guinea One Hundred Million Years of Evolution. Search (books).
http://hallanimals.com/index.php/Mode/product/AsinSearch/0801872235/name/Prehist

43. Timeless Arts
And, of course, it is especially suited for the depiction of prehistoric animals.More prehistoric mammals are displayed in Erhard's Gallery of Sold Carvings .
http://www.timelessarts.com/ewg-prehistoric-mammals.html
About Timeless Arts Timeless Arts Home investment art prints Native American flutes ... Email
Prehistoric Mammal Carving by Erhard W. Gross
Erhard W. Gross Carvings Home Christmas Ornaments Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemorative Knives Marine Mammals ... Sold Gallery Several dozen tons of ivory are recovered from the vast reaches of northern permafrost every year. Most of those tusks come from trunk-bearing animals which became extinct in the late Pleistocene era. Several species of mammoth and mastodon represent the sources of this ivory. Its value lies not only in its venerable age but also in the fact that thousands of years of being buried has often led to changes in color. From brown to turquoise to nearly black, these different colors can be used by the skilled craftsman to achieve wonderful effects. And, of course, it is especially suited for the depiction of prehistoric animals. More Prehistoric Mammals are displayed in Erhard's Gallery of Sold Carvings Please call or send email to Timeless Arts for availability status. ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED!!

44. Prehistoric Life - Ice Age Mammals.
18000 years ago. The large, extinct animals of this time are thereforetermed Pleistocene or Ice age mammals. The term 'Megafauna
http://www.museum.vic.gov.au/prehistoric/mammals/
If the size of the text in this page is too small, please either turn javascript on or adjust the default text size of your browser. Museum Victoria Education What's On Search ... South America.
Ice age mammals and their extinction
Smilodon , last of the sabre-toothed cats. Artist: Caroll.L. Fenton. A range of giant mammals, birds and reptiles lived on Earth during the Pleistocene Epoch . These creatures included the woolly mammoth, sabre-toothed cat and giant deer in the Northern Hemisphere, and giant marsupials like Diprotodon in Australia. The Pleistocene Epoch was characterised by a series of ice ages-the last peaking about 18000 years ago. The large, extinct animals of this time are therefore termed Pleistocene or Ice age mammals. The term ' Megafauna ' is also sometimes used, particularly for the giant marsupials that lived in Australia at this time. Palaeontologists are very interested in the ice age mammals. Many of these creatures coexisted with humans towards the end of the Pleistocene, with the last of them becoming extinct less than one thousand years ago. The causes of their extinction is of considerable interest, with most palaeontologists suggesting that climatic fluctuations, human hunting, human habitat alteration or a combination of the three were responsible. The part played by humans in the extinction of the megafauna is very unclear. Many researchers believe that the migration of humans into various parts of the world (such as North America) subjected the local megafauna to sudden hunting pressure, and so contributed to the extinction of many large animals. However, clear evidence of humans actually causing megafaunal extinctions is only present in Madagascar in the case of the giant lemurs, and in New Zealand in the case of the extinction of some of the moas (giant birds) about 500 years ago.

45. Prehistoric Life - What Is A Fossil?
Marsupial and placental mammals, nectarbearing plants and modern insects dinosaurs,pterosaurs, plesiosaurs, ammonites, and many other animals became extinct
http://www.museum.vic.gov.au/prehistoric/what/eras.html
If the size of the text in this page is too small, please either turn javascript on or adjust the default text size of your browser. Museum Victoria Education What's On Search ... Further information.
Geological Eras and Periods
Cainozoic Era
About 65 million years ago to present. Artist's impression of Diprotodon optatum. Artist: Frey Mickelthwaite. Source: Museum Victoria.
The Quaternary
About 1.78 million years ago to present. This period is further divided into Pleistocene Epoch (duration about 1.77 million years) and Holocene Epoch (about 10 thousand years). This was a period of successive ice ages, the last at its peak about 18000 years ago. Modern humans were present from about 100000 years ago. Some of the large mammals of the Northern Hemisphere and the giant megafauna of Australia became extinct about 50000 years ago. Pictures of Quaternary life. Top
Diplocynodon. Source: Museum Victoria.
The Tertiary (Sub-era)
About 65 to 1.78 million years ago. This sub-era is further divided into Epochs named Paleocene (duration about 10.2 million years), Eocene (about 21.1 million years), Oligocene (about 9.8 million years), Miocene (about 18.5 million years) and Pliocene (about 3.5 million years). This interval is sometimes called the 'Age of Mammals' because of the marked increase in the diversity and abundance of mammals of all kinds. Flowering plants, grasslands and deciduous trees were widespread, and insects, crocodiles, turtles, and tortoises continued to evolve. Fish increased in variety (including giant sharks more than 20 metres long about 15 million years ago). Most invertebrates were similar to those living today. Towards the end of the Tertiary, a number of very large mammals appeared. In the Northern hemisphere, these included ancestors of the mammoth and sabre-toothed cat; in Australia they were giant marsupials and lizards, and large, flightless birds.

46. Science Kit And Boreal Laboratories: Online Catalog: Prehistoric Animals
evolution of vertebrate animals from amphibians to mammals. It includes informationon all the main families and suborders of prehistoric animals and traces
http://www.sciencekit.com/Products/Display.cfm?categoryid=299610

47. Science Short Courses
The mammals covered in detail range from the familiar such as on fossil specimensand think critically about reconstructions of prehistoric animals and plants
http://www.open.ac.uk/science/short/
SCIENCE SHORT COURSES "If you'd like to learn more about an interesting topic in science you may find one of the following short courses suitable for you. Most of these courses are presented 4 times a year and you can spread your study over 2 months or longer, the choice is yours."
How long will I need to spend studying?
How much will it cost? When can I start? How are the courses assessed? ... What courses and qualifications are available? NEW FOR 2003
STUDYING MAMMALS
Studying Mammals is linked with BBC's Life of Mammals television series. It gives you an opportunity to learn about these diverse and fascinating animals at a level beyond that possible from watching the series alone. You will study the social habits of different mammals, their modes of feeding and reproduction, how they differ biologically from other animals and to what extent their survival is threatened by human interference and exploitation. The mammals covered in detail range from the familiar - such as cats, dogs and foxes - to the rare, exotic and spectacular - tigers, whales and polar bears.

48. Palaeontology - Dinosaur FAQs
exhibition (Level 2) has many prehistoric animals ranging from ate lizards, turtles,eggs, or early mammals. hunted other dinosaurs or scavenged dead animals.
http://www.austmus.gov.au/palaeontology/faqs/dinosaur.htm
FAQs
Dinosaurs
What dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals do you have on display in the Australian Museum?
Museum Diner (entrance level)
  • Tyrannosaurus rex
    Carnivorous dinosaur (replica skeleton)
The More Than Dinosaurs exhibition (Level 2) has many prehistoric animals ranging from small marine invertebrates up to large dinosaurs. These animals include:
  • Afrovenator abakensis
    A carnivorous dinosaur (replica skeleton) Stegosaurus stenops
    An armoured herbivorous dinosaur (replica skeleton) Tyrannosaurus rex
    Replica head Diprotodon optatum
    Large herbivorous marsupial (replica skeleton + model)
    http://www.lostkingdoms.com/facts/factsheet48.htm
    Meiolania platyceps
    Horned Turtle (replica skeleton) Pteranodon ingens
    Flying reptile-pterosaur (model) Chasmosaurus belli
    Bird-hipped, armoured dinosaur (replica skeleton) Dilophosaurus wetherlli
    Carnivorous dinosaur (replica skeleton) Genyornis newtoni Extinct megapod bird (replica) http://www.lostkingdoms.com/facts/factsheet50.htm

49. Paleocene Mammals Of The World
B. (editor) 1988 Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and prehistoric animals.Macmillan London Limited. Paula Couto, C. de 1952 Fossil mammals from the
http://www.paleocene-mammals.de/marsupials.htm
Marsupials: A southern success story
Marsupials are often associated with the Australian continent where such popular animals as kangaroos and koalas live. Less widely known is that a number of marsupials occur in South America today. These include the opossums, the only marsupials that also occur in the northern hemisphere today. Surprisingly, Mesozoic marsupials are mainly known from North America, and they may have originated there during the Cretaceous. Primitive opossum-like marsupials are among the most common and most diverse mammals in the late Cretaceous of North America. They include cat-sized forms like Didelphodon , one of the largest Mesozoic mammals - and one of the most widely known thanks to its appearance in "Walking with Dinosaurs". Didelphodon had teeth specialized for crushing, and it has been suggested that it fed on hard shelled food like clams, snails, turtles or even young ankylosaurs. The diversity of North American marsupials was dramatically reduced at the end of the Cretaceous. Only one single lineage, represented by late Cretaceous Alphadon and Paleocene Peradectes , survived the faunal turnover. Thus marsupials fared hardly better than dinosaurs in North America, and worse than reptiles on the whole.

50. Paleocene Mammals Of The World
and prehistoric animals. Macmillan London Limited. Although about fossil vertebratesin general, this book contains an extensive section on fossil mammals,
http://www.paleocene-mammals.de/pal_ref.htm
References
Non-technical literature on fossil mammals
Since I know of no (semi-)popular publications that deal especially with Paleocene mammals, I can only provide some recommendations for fossil mammals in general. The books below all aim at adult readers. Benton, M. J. 1991: The rise of the mammals. Eagle Editions. This should be the most recent semipopular overview of the history of mammals. Contains many nice drawings of extinct mammals and photographs of their fossils. Probably the most comprehensive non-technical book on fossil mammals that was published in the last two decades. Besides many excellent restorations, there are numerous line drawings of fossils, so it looks a little like a popular edition of the chapters on mammals in Carrol (1988). Kurtén, B. 1971: The age of mammals. Columbia University Press, New York. Although a little outdated, this books still gives a very good overview of mammal evolution in the Cenozoic, including a long chapter on the Paleocene. Drawings and plates are present, but the focus is clearly on the text. A great summary of Cenozoic mammal evolution in Europe, richly illustrated in the style of "The Big Cats and Their Fossil Relatives". Although the text does not go into too much technical detail, it still aims at more serious students of the subject. The chapter on the Paleocene is up-to-date and quite detailed, and some of its unique restorations might soon appear on this site.

51. Prehistoric Life
How did mammals survive the Ice Age? Which reptiles ruled the seas? What didprehistoric fish eat? What were the first animals like? What is a fossil?
http://www.gridclub.com/fact_gadget/best_ever_qa/nature/prehistoric_life/

52. Fossils And Prehistoric Life
Evolution. Fossils and prehistoric Life. Dinosaurs. Simple animals. Insects andSpiders. Fish. Amphibians. Reptiles. Birds. Sea mammals. Land mammals. Plant Kingdom.
http://www.gridclub.com/fact_gadget/1001/nature/fossils_and_prehistoric_life/
Space Earth Nature Evolution Fossils and Prehistoric Life Dinosaurs Simple Animals Insects and Spiders Fish ... Science and Technology Fossils and Prehistoric Life Previous:
Back to Fossils and Prehistoric Life
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Nature Chapter:
Fossils and Prehistoric Life

53. Template
prehistoric Life. DK Vision, 1996. Video. chn,urv Giants from the Past; the Ageof mammals. National Geographic Society, 1983. urc,chn,ol Ice Age animals by
http://urbanafreelibrary.org/cdnathi.htm
The Urbana Free Library
Children's Department
Natural History and Science Books
Fossils Back to Books! Books! Books! Fossils: Clues to Prehistoric Life
www.spurlock.uiuc.edu/

Fossils
The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Fossils
by Ida
Thompson. Random House, 1982. urn,chn,ol Collecting Fossils; Hold Prehistory in the Palm of Your Hand by Steve and
Jane Parker. Sterling Publishing, 1997. urc,chn, ol Collecting Small Fossils by Lois J. Hussey. Crowell, 1970. urc,ol Fossil Detective; Nature Club by Joyce Pope. Troll, 1994. urc,chn,ol Fossil; Eyewitness Books by Paul D. Taylor. Knopf, 1990. urc,chn,ol Fossils by Mark Lambert. Arco Publishing, Inc., 1978. urn,ol Fossils Tell of Long Ago by Aliki. HarperCollins, 1972. urc,chn,ol Fossils: Eyewitness Handbook by Cyril Walker and David Ward. Dorling
Kindersley, Inc., 1992. urn,chn,ol

54. ScienceDaily Related Stories
of eight other prehistoric animals, in a rich bed of fossils in Madagascar, providinga 'time capsule' from the earliest days of dinosaurs and mammals and
http://www.sciencedaily.com/related.php?filename=030124073924

55. ScienceDaily News Release: Excavations In Prehistoric Chinese Cave Uncover Unusu
Packs of animals could have killed the large mammals and dragged them Everythingyou could do as a prehistoric person to damage a bone has been done. .
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1998/03/980331075253.htm
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Excavations In Prehistoric Chinese Cave Uncover Unusual Collections Of Large Mammals
Cincinnati Lumbering rhinos and elephant-like Stegodons are not the type of animal you would expect to find deep inside a mountainous cave, but those are exactly the type of animals showing up in large numbers in prehistoric deposits in the Panxian Dadong Cave in southern China. Schepartz said it is unlikely that the animals wandered into the cave on their own. Rhinos are grazers and Stegodons are browsers, normally found in more open areas. In addition, rhinos tend to be solitary animals while in the Dadong cave, large numbers of rhino remains were discovered in the ancient deposits. Schepartz is working with a team of researchers, including Sari Miller-Antonio of California State University, Deborah Bakken of the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago and archaeologists at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of Beijing.

56. DINO RUSS's LAIR - Dinosaur Books And Publications
of the creatures covered include the typical prehistoric creatures, such as and aselection of mammals from the Tertiary and earlier animals that preceded
http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/kingfisher.html
Illinois State Geological Survey - Geoscience Education and Outreach Unit
The Kingfisher Illustrated Dinosaur Encyclopedia
The Kingfisher Illustrated Dinosaur Encyclopedia By David Burnie. Information on the book:
  • Title: The Kingfisher Illustrated Dinosaur Encyclopedia
  • Authors:David Burnie
  • Publisher: Kingfisher
    • 80 Maiden Lane
    • New York, New York 10038
  • Date: September 2001
  • Cost: $24.95 US
Comments by R. J. Jacobson The book is another in a series of books that not only discusses dinosaurs but other prehistoric creatures. When I first looked at it, I thought from the title, that it was book along the lines of the old Dinosaur Encyclopedia by Dave Norman but I soon found I was wrong. Dinosaurs certainly get the major treatment in this book, with 98 pages out of a total of 219 pages being devoted to my favorite creatures. Hence the term dinosaur in the title I suppose, however, the rest of the creatures covered include the typical prehistoric creatures, such as some contemporaries of dinosaurs (namely the flying reptiles and sea creatures), and a selection of mammals from the Tertiary and earlier animals that preceded the dinosaurs. I wonder if the publisher was trying to overuse the popularity of dinosaurs to promote and sell a book that covers alot more than dinosaurs? While the content on each is fairly current, this book has one serious flaw, namely reinforcing the public misconception that anything prehistoric is a "dinosaur". The discussion about dinosaurs starting on page 64 (

57. SchoolAtlas Academic Search Engine ... Science:Biology:Animals
animal, biology, mammals, fish, reptiles, marsupials freshwater, marine animals,biosurf, bird fish, insect, oceanography, prehistoric, evolution, primates
http://www.schoolatlas.com/search2/Science/Biology/Animals/index1.html
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College Search Here: Academic Websites Yahoo! Google Ask Jeeves About.com Alta Vista Lycos Excite HotBot Infoseek Northern Light DejaNews Lawcrawler Metacrawler Look Smart Science Biology Animals
  • Animal Catagories -This site, maintained by the Birmingham Zoo, offers a list of web resources indexed by the name of the animal.Find information on mammals, marsupials, rodents, and all taxonomies and classifications. Amphibians Arthropods Birds Dinosaurs Fishes Mammals Mollusks Reptiles
  • Bird On! Bird Book -The Bird On! Bird Book contains fascinating backgrounds to the lives of birds in the news - with illustrations by leading wildlife artists and photographers.
  • Prehistoric Animals -This site exhibits fossils and rocks dating back 3 billion years and examines the evolution of animals.
  • Insect World -Learn all about the most successful lifeform on the planet -insects- with diagrams, pictures, and interesting anecdotes.
  • Rain Forests -Learn about rain forests, the plants and animals that live in them, and how to conserve these fragile environments.
  • 58. IPL Youth Collection Science NetAnimalsMammals
    You can learn a lot about these animals, including the about manatees and dungongs,two mammals that live You can explore how the prehistoric horse originated
    http://www.ipl.org.ar/cgi-bin/youth/youth.out.pl?sub=sci4510

    59. Prehistoric Animals Information And Links
    KeyWorlds.com Education animals prehistoric animals Links Murchison's SiluriaTrilobites.com Ice Age animals of Utah Ice Age mammals Mastodons and
    http://www.keyworlds.com/p/prehistoric_animals.htm
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    60. Summary Of Prehistoric Animals - The Dinosaur Fan
    Summary Of prehistoric Animal Listings. Group, Reptiles, mammals,Amphibians, Fishes, Arthropods, Other animals, Plants/ Fungi, OtherLife.
    http://www.dinofan.com/dinopages/dinolist_summary.html
    S ummary O f P rehistoric A nimal L istings Group Reptiles Mammals Amphibians Fishes Arthropods Other Animals Plants/ Fungi Other Life Dinosaurs Pterosauria Other Ornithodira Other A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z TOTALS Return to top of this page Last Updated: August 21, 2000 mmriley@dinofan.com www.dinofan.com

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