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         Vertebrate Paleontology:     more books (100)
  1. Geology and Vertebrate Paleontology of Western and Southern North America: Contributions in Honor of David P. Whistler (Science series / Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County) by David Paul Whistler, 2008-05-28
  2. Mesozoic/Cenozoic Vertebrate Paleontology: Classic Localities, Contemporary Approaches : Salt Lake City, Utah to Billings, Montana July 19-27, 1989 (Field ... (American Geophysical Union), T322.) by Malcolm C. McKenna, John J. Flynn, et all 1989-06
  3. Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Chinese Society of Vertebrate Paleontology by Dong Wei, 2008-01-01
  4. Recent Papers Relating To Vertebrate Paleontology (1897) by Edward Drinker Cope, 2009-11-21
  5. Outlines Of Vertebrate Paleontology: For Students Of Zoology (1898) by Arthur Smith Woodward, 2010-09-10
  6. The Development of the Vertebrate Skull by Gavin, Sir De Beer, 1985-07
  7. Vertebrate Paleontological Techniques (Vol 1)
  8. An Agenda for Antiquity: Henry Fairfield Osborn and Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, 1890-1935 (History Amer Science & Technol) by Ronald Rainger, 2004-03-22
  9. Recent Vertebrate Carcasses and Their Paleobiological Implications by Johannes Weigelt, 1989-08-09
  10. The Fossil Vertebrates of Florida by Richard C. Hulbert, 2001-02-23
  11. Mesozoic Vertebrate Life:
  12. In Quest of Great Lakes Ice Age Vertebrates by J. Alan Holman, 2001-11
  13. Evolution of the Vertebrates: A History of the Backboned Animals Through Time by Edwin Harris Colbert, Michael Morales, 1991-03
  14. Basic Structures and Evolution of Vertebrates, Volume 2 (Basic Structure & Evolution of Vertebrates) by Author Unknown, 1981-02-11

21. Non-vertebrate Paleontology Lab

http://www.tmm.utexas.edu/npl/
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Texas Memorial Museum
at UT Austin
Acknowledgements

22. Michael Gudo’s Homepage
Invertebrate and vertebrate paleontology, Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg.
http://servermac.geologie.uni-frankfurt.de/Staff/Homepages/Gudo/Gudo/gudo.html
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23. James Hopson's Home Page
vertebrate paleontology, particularly the evolutionary history of the Synapsida, morphology and systematic of nonmammalian synapsids (University of Chicago).
http://pondside.uchicago.edu/oba/faculty/hopson_j.html
James Hopson
Professor
Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy
Committee on Evolutionary Biology
Research Associate Field Museum of Natural History
OFFICE PHONE FAX EMAIL Anatomy 34 jhopson@midway.uchicago.edu Research Interests Vertebrate paleontology, particularly the evolutionary history of the Synapsida - the "mammal-like reptiles" and mammals; morphology and systematic of non-mammalian synapsids (especially therapids) and Mesozoic mammals; functional morphology of the feeding apparatus, especially of the dentition, in the transition from primitive amniotes to mammals; macroevolutionary patterns in the synapsid fossil record; amniote phylogeny; tetrapod faunas of the Permian and Mesozoic. I am interested in supervising research on fossil vertebrates, particularly, though not exclusively, on "mammal-like reptiles" and (primary Mesozoic) mammals. This research may include descriptive and functional morphology and phylogenetic analysis. Recent Publications
Hopson, J.A. and H.R. Barghusen (1986).
An analysis of therapsid relationships.

24. Yale Peabody Museum: Vertebrate Paleontology, History
History of the vertebrate paleontology Collection. This collection becamethe basis of the vertebrate paleontology collection at Yale.
http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/vp/History.html
History of the Vertebrate Paleontology Collection
Search the Collection Catalog Vertebrate Paleontology collections, other than a few specimens that date from the old Yale College Cabinet (e.g. fossil fish collected by Benjamin Silliman ), derive from the industry of Othniel Charles Marsh and the wealth of his uncle, the philanthropist George Peabody. Yale College Scientific Expeditions of 1870-1873, Pteranodon in particular), the toothed birds Ichthyornis and Hesperornis from the Cretaceous of Kansas, and a sizable collection of fossil fishes from the Eocene lake deposits of the Green River near Kemmerer, Wyoming. Charles Emerson Beecher, Hugh Gibb, George Bird Grinnell, Oscar Harger, John Bell Hatcher, Arthur Lakes, Otto Meyer, Benjamin Mudge, O. A. Peterson, William Reed, George R. Wieland, and Samuel Wendell Williston. In addition to numerous shorter papers, Marsh is remembered for his beautifully illustrated monographs, Dinocerata Odontornithes The Dinosaurs of North America , and posthumously, The Ceratopsia , which was successively worked on by Marsh, then Hatcher, and finally completed by Lull. According to his biographers, Schuchert and LeVene (1940), Marsh named 344 new species and 161 new genera of fossil vertebrates. His genera include

25. Welcome To Virginia Museum Of Natural History
Online exhibits from the state museum based in Martinsville, including both invertebrate and vertebrate paleontology, and information on museumsponsored fossil collecting field trips.
http://www.vmnh.org/
Home Information Membership Support Every Thursday in March is Marvelous at VMNH! Children ages 4 and 5 will enjoy a story and participate in a fun natural history activity. From 4 - 4:45 every Thursday in March. Call 666-8636 to register ... The next Special Saturday program is March 29. "Beautiful Birds" is for families with children ages 6 - 12. 8:30 a.m. - noon. Register by calling 666-8636. Now on exhibit: Announcing the 2003 VMNH vertebrate paleontology summer digs in Shell, Wyoming and Ruther Glen, Virginia ASK A NATURAL HISTORY QUESTION! Your question may be answered in the Richmond-Times Dispatch column, "Virginia Naturally!" Watch for it each Thursday. Museum staff will answer selected questions. Watch for more details. E-mail natural history questions to the science and learning office. The Virginia Museum of Natural History is a state museum which is an agency of the Secretary of Natural Resources Unless otherwise specified, all content on this site is the sole property of The Virginia Museum of Natural History. Unauthorized use, reproduction or distribution is prohibited. E-mail our web team.

26. VP Fossil Collection
This outstanding fossil vertebrate collection has been accumulated by more than 100years of field work by the vertebrate paleontology staff and acquisition by
http://www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/vp/collect.html
F OSSIL C OLLECTIONS
Interim Manager: Amy Henrici The collection of fossil vertebrates at the Carnegie Museum is the fourth largest in North America. It currently has more than 103,000 specimens from the Silurian to the Pleistocene with a world-wide geographical distribution, and is still growing at a healthy pace. This diverse collection boasts specimens representing all vertebrate classes, including 376 type specimens, such as that of Tyrannosaurus rex . This extensive record of the extinct vertebrates offers fascinating insight into the history of the earth and its biota, and has inestimable scientific value. Collection facilities have been completely renovated since 1992 through grants from the National Science Foundation. Most specimens are housed in fire-proof and secure metal cabinets. User-friendly compactors have been installed to conserve space and allow easy access to all specimens. The collection database has been computerized and the catalogue can be searched electronically. The catalogue will soon be put online on this World Wide Web page.
Other Highlights of the Vertebrate Fossil Collections
  • Permian and Pennsylvanian fishes, amphibians and reptiles of the southwestern United States and the Dunkard Basin in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia.

27. PALEO MONT
vertebrate paleontology in Montana.
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Lab/3381/
Your visitor to visit.

28. DINOSAUR ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE FRONT PAGE
Features original articles and illustrations from the field of vertebrate paleontology.
http://illustrissimus.virtualave.net/dimfront.html
WELCOME TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DINOSAURS! ENTER
Let American Consumer Counseling Help you Get Out of Debt!

29. Non-vertebrate Paleontology Lab

http://octopus.npl.utexas.edu/npl/current/index-vol.htm
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Texas Memorial Museum
at UT Austin
Acknowledgements

30. The Academy Of Natural Sciences - Biodiversity Research Group - Vertebrate Paleo
vertebrate paleontology CONTACTS Ted Daeschler Many call Leidy the fatherof vertebrate paleontology in this country. Edward Drinker Cope
http://www.acnatsci.org/research/biodiv/paleo.html
You are in Research Biodiversity Research Group / Vertebrate Paleontology
S E A R C H Biodiversity Research Group Departments Collections
Database
Botany
Entomology
...
Paleontology

Vertebrate Paleontology
CONTACTS:
Ted Daeschler

Assistant Curator
Department of Vertebrate Zoology
Academy of Natural Sciences 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway Philadelphia, PA 19103-1195 daeschler@acnatsci.org Frederick Mullison Preparator Department of Vertebrate Paleontology Academy of Natural Sciences 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway Philadelphia, PA 19103-1195 mullison@acnatsci.org Ned Gilmore Collections Manager Department of Vertebrate Zoology Academy of Natural Sciences 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway Philadelphia, PA 19103-1195

31. Kevin Padian
Mesozoic vertebrate paleontology, incl. dinosaurs (Univ. CaliforniaBerkeley).
http://ib.berkeley.edu/faculty/padiank.html
@import url(/ibstyle.css)
UC Berkeley

About the

Department
Academic Program ...
Directory
Kevin Padian
Professor
E-mail: kpadian@socrates.berkeley.edu
Phone:
Lab Homepage:
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/people/padian/webintro.html Full Directory Information
Research Interests
Selected Publications
Padian, K. 1999. Charles Darwin's views of classification in theory and in practice. Systematic Biology
Ricqlès, A.J. de, K. Padian, J.R. Horner, and H. Francillon-Viellot. 2000. Paleohistology of the bones of pterosaurs (Reptilia: Archosauria): anatomy, ontogeny, and biomechanical implications. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Fiorillo, A.R., K. Padian, and C. Musikasinthorn. 2000. Taphonomy and depositional setting of the Placerias Quarry (Chinle Formation: Late Triassic, Arizona). Palaios
Horner, J.R., A.J. de Ricqlès, and K. Padian. 2001. Comparative osteohistology of some embryonic and perinatal archosaurs: phylogenetic and behavioral implications for dinosaurs. Paleobiology
Padian, K., Ji Q., and Ji S.-A. 2001. Feathered dinosaurs and the origin of flight. Pp. 117-135, pls. 1-3, (K. Carpenter and D. Tanke, eds.). Bloomington In Mesozoic Vertebrate Life: Indiana University Press.

32. The Academy Of Natural Sciences - Biodiversity Research Group - Vertebrate Paleo
vertebrate paleontology. Catskill Project The ongoing Catskill projecthas focused on the Late Devonianage Catskill Formation in
http://www.acnatsci.org/research/biodiv/paleocatskills.html
You are in Research Biodiversity Research Group Vertebrate Paleontology / Catskills Project
S E A R C H Biodiversity Research Group Departments Collections
Database
Botany
Entomology
...
Paleontology

Vertebrate Paleontology Catskill Project
Devonian Times web site. , The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103
Tel: 215-299-1000 Email: webmaster@acnatsci.org

33. Yale Vertebrate Paleontology - Online Catalog
Yale vertebrate paleontology Online Catalog. Additional Notes on the Data. All ofthe catalogued material from the vertebrate paleontology is presently online.
http://george.peabody.yale.edu/vp/
Yale Vertebrate Paleontology - Online Catalog
69,988 specimen lots available; last updated 21 Mar 2003 Enter terms for fields (e.g., Deinonychus , Wyoming):
TaxonName
AuthorName
HigherRanks
TypeStatus
TypeCitation
Locality
CollectorDate
Stratigraphy
OtherAttributes
Or a catalog number:
CatalogNumber Use expanded data format when displaying results Search terms match whole words rather than substrings No limitations on material Type material only Princeton Univ material only Undetermined material only Sort by Taxon Sort by Locality You may search the online catalog by specific fields, or for a catalog number. Searches are case-insensitive; by default, any string in a field that contains a term renders that record a match. For example, asking for "margin" will match "Margin," "marginal," " albomarginata ," and so forth. You can also ask that terms be matched in their entirety. Prior to searching, characters that are neither numbers or letters are stripped away, and single-character terms discarded (except for catalog number). Terms are and-ed together in the search. Matches are presented in alphabetical order by scientific name, unless you request sorting by locality. By default, the taxon name and abbreviated locality are presented, along with a hyperlink to the fully expanded data. This offers flexibility for rapid screening, but for final output you may wish to use "expanded data format." Further details about the data appear below. OTHER SEARCHES Anthropology Botany Entomology Herpetology ... Vertebrate Paleontology Additional Notes on the Data

34. Vertebrate Paleontology - Harvard University
The vertebrate paleontology collection in the Museum of Comparative Zoology ismanaged and employed as a resource for research and teaching in the areas of
http://www.mcz.harvard.edu/Departments/VertPaleo/index.cfm
collection overview database Preparation lab inquiries general information ... personnel The Vertebrate Paleontology collection in the Museum of Comparative Zoology is managed and employed as a resource for research and teaching in the areas of vertebrate evolution , functional anatomy, and systematics. Since its founding in 1860, the MCZ has amassed approximately 90,000 specimens of fossil fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. Various specimens of fish, amphibians, reptiles and mammals that are on display in the MCZ's public exhibition areas are available for research access by pre-arrangement. All content ©President and Fellows of Harvard College

35. Vertebrate Paleontology - Harvard University
Professor Farish A. Jenkins Jr., Curator of vertebrate paleontology(Tel 617495-2499). Charles R. Schaff, Curatorial Associate
http://www.mcz.harvard.edu/Departments/VertPaleo/loan_pol.cfm
collection overview database Preparation lab inquiries general information ... personnel Collection Use and Loan Policy COLLECTION ACCESS Access to specimens is open to qualified visitors, researchers, and students. Interested parties are requested to obtain authorization by contacting the Curator or Curatorial Associate. Professor Farish A. Jenkins Jr.,
Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology
(Tel: 617-495-2499) Charles R. Schaff,
Curatorial Associate in Vertebrate Paleontology
(Tel: 617-496-1053)
e-mail: cschaff@oeb.harvard.edu
Department of Vertebrate Paleontology
Museum of Comparative Zoology
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
(FAX: 617-495-5667) EARNST MAYR GRANTS support short visits to museums for collection based research. For guidelines and an application, contact Ms. Tina Calamese, OEB Administration: 617-495-5891 or tcalamese@oeb.harvard.edu

36. Augustana Geology Department In Antarctica
vertebrate paleontology of Antarctic dinosaurs (Augustana College, Illinois).
http://www.augustana.edu/academ/geology/antrctca.htm
Augustana In Antarctica Augustana Professor Makes Fossil Finds On Frozen Continent Augustana professor Dr. William R. Hammer is a veteran of Antarctic science. Having traveled to the frozen continent 5 times for research, Hammer has become well known for his fossil discoveries. During his fourth expedition, (1990-91 field season), Hammer and his field team, which also included Augustana graduate William J. Hickerson, made a major find. At an elevation of approximately 14,000 feet on Mt. Kirkpatrick not far from the South Pole, the team excavated Antarctica's first dinosaur along with bones from several other animals.
The vertebrate assemblage collected during the 1990-1991 field season from Mt. Kirkpatrick in the Beardmore Glacier region of the Central Transantarctic Mountains includes 120-140 bones, and 16 teeth representing at least six different taxa. The specimens are from the Hanson Formation and include the partial skull and numerous postcranial elements from a crested theropod dinosaur, Cryolophosaurus ellioti
The name means "frozen crested reptile" and

37. Www.biology.ualberta.ca/wilson.hp/UALVP.html
Similar pages UMMP vertebrate paleontologyvertebrate paleontology. a. Graduate Degree Programs in Geologyand Biology. vertebrate paleontology Graduate Students.
http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/wilson.hp/UALVP.html

38. USB Anatomy Department
Ph.D. program, specializing in evolutionary morphology, functional morphology, musculoskeletal biology, and vertebrate paleontology.
http://www.informatics.sunysb.edu/anatomy/
Anatomical Sciences Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY 11794-8081
Tel: 1-631-444-2350
Fax: 1-631-444-3947
Faculty

Graduate Students

Graduate Program in Anatomical Sciences

Interdepartmental Doctoral Program in
...
The Polyglot Paleontologist
Last Updated February 10, 2003
Health Sciences Center at Stony Brook University

39. Vertebrate Paleontology
vertebrate paleontology. The University's fossil vertebrate collectionof dinosaurs and other early vertebrate animals is one of
http://easweb.eas.ualberta.ca/department/facilities/collections/vertebrate.cfm
Home Department Facilities Collections Vertebrate Paleontology
Vertebrate Paleontology
The University's fossil vertebrate collection of dinosaurs and other early vertebrate animals is one of the finest of its kind in Canada, containing over 41,000 catalogued specimens including some 70 holotypes.The original collection was established in 1920 and this exceptional resource now supports paleontological research and teaching in the departments of Earth and Atmospheric Science and Biological Sciences. University of Alberta Virtual Museum
Back to Collections

40. The Archaeopteryx Pages
Information about the history of the fossil bird Archaeopteryx lithographica and vertebrate paleontology in general. Maintained by Ilja Nieuwland.
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~nieuwlnd/
We have moved! The brand new Archaeopteryx page can now be found at http://homepage.mac.com/ilja please adjust your bookmarks for future reference.
This page will probably disappear within the next month or so. You can still visit the old site there, as well. ilja@mac.com
Date last modified: 20-01-2003

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