A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has played a major role in the history of paleontology in Madagascar. Andrahomana Cave has yielded a rich fossil record of the extinct megafauna. Expeditions in 2000 and 2003 produced a wealth of new material and provided the first systematic information concerning the genesis, stratigraphy, and taphonomy of the site. Recovered bones of one of the most poorly understood extinct large lemurs, Hadropithecus stenognathus, include many skeletal elements previously unknown. Radiocarbon dates show that the site has sampled this disappeared fauna in the midto- late Holocene, but that bone-bearing layers are stratigraphically mixed, probably owing to the effects of re...
The origin of Madagascar’s highly endemic vertebrate fauna remains one of the great unsolved mysteri...
Madagascar experienced a major faunal turnover near the end of the first millenium CE that particula...
Recently expanded estimates for when humans arrived on Madagascar (up to ~10,000 years ago) highligh...
Abstract: A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has play...
Paleontological expeditions to Madagascar over the past two decades have yielded large quantities of...
A new fossil site in a previously unexplored part of western Madagascar (the Beanka Protected Area)...
In the last 2000 years, changes on the island of Madagascar have resulted in the modification of key...
Madagascar is a country known for its incredible biodiversity, but it has lost the majority of its d...
We report here definitive evidence of butchery, most probably associated with hunting, of giant exti...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
Biodiversity provides us with a host of cultural, scientific, and economic benefits, and highly biod...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
Remains of what appears to be a single, subadult Hadropithecus stenognathus were recovered from a pr...
The origin of Madagascar’s highly endemic vertebrate fauna remains one of the great unsolved mysteri...
The identifications of non-permineralized fossil bird bones recovered from Ankilitelo Cave in southw...
The origin of Madagascar’s highly endemic vertebrate fauna remains one of the great unsolved mysteri...
Madagascar experienced a major faunal turnover near the end of the first millenium CE that particula...
Recently expanded estimates for when humans arrived on Madagascar (up to ~10,000 years ago) highligh...
Abstract: A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has play...
Paleontological expeditions to Madagascar over the past two decades have yielded large quantities of...
A new fossil site in a previously unexplored part of western Madagascar (the Beanka Protected Area)...
In the last 2000 years, changes on the island of Madagascar have resulted in the modification of key...
Madagascar is a country known for its incredible biodiversity, but it has lost the majority of its d...
We report here definitive evidence of butchery, most probably associated with hunting, of giant exti...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
Biodiversity provides us with a host of cultural, scientific, and economic benefits, and highly biod...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
Remains of what appears to be a single, subadult Hadropithecus stenognathus were recovered from a pr...
The origin of Madagascar’s highly endemic vertebrate fauna remains one of the great unsolved mysteri...
The identifications of non-permineralized fossil bird bones recovered from Ankilitelo Cave in southw...
The origin of Madagascar’s highly endemic vertebrate fauna remains one of the great unsolved mysteri...
Madagascar experienced a major faunal turnover near the end of the first millenium CE that particula...
Recently expanded estimates for when humans arrived on Madagascar (up to ~10,000 years ago) highligh...