Paleontological expeditions to Madagascar over the past two decades have yielded large quantities of bones of extinct lemurs. These include abundant postcranial and cranial remains of new species belonging to a group of giant extinct lemurs that we have called sloth lemurs due to their remarkable postcranial convergence with arboreal sloths. New fossils have come from a variety of locations in Madagascar, including caves in the Northwest (Anjohibe) and the Ankarana Massif, located in the extreme north, as well as pits in the karstic plains near Toliara in southwestern Madagascar. The most spectacular of these is the extremely deep pit (\u3e100 m) called Ankilitelo, the “place of the three kily trees.” These new materials provide insights in...
Humans first arrived on Madagascar only a few thousand years ago. Subsequent habitat destruction and...
Subfossil fecal pellets associated with Archaeolemur cf. edwardsi skeletal material from Anjohikely ...
© 2018, The Author(s). In 1967 G.G. Simpson described three partial mandibles from early Miocene dep...
A new fossil site in a previously unexplored part of western Madagascar (the Beanka Protected Area)...
A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has played a major...
Abstract: A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has play...
We report here definitive evidence of butchery, most probably associated with hunting, of giant exti...
Background Although today 15% of living primates are endemic to Madagascar, their diversity was even...
Background - Although today 15% of living primates are endemic to Madagascar, their diversity was e...
Modern tools of paleoecological and ecomorphological research have enabled researchers to reconstruc...
ew tools are available for teasing out aspects of life-history variation among extinct species. Here...
The Spiny Thicket Ecoregion (STE) of Southern and southwestern Madagascar was recently home to numer...
Among the best known of recently extinct Malagasy lemurs is Archaeolemur, which is represented by ma...
Remains of what appears to be a single, subadult Hadropithecus stenognathus were recovered from a pr...
Humans first arrived on Madagascar only a few thousand years ago. Subsequent habitat destruction and...
Humans first arrived on Madagascar only a few thousand years ago. Subsequent habitat destruction and...
Subfossil fecal pellets associated with Archaeolemur cf. edwardsi skeletal material from Anjohikely ...
© 2018, The Author(s). In 1967 G.G. Simpson described three partial mandibles from early Miocene dep...
A new fossil site in a previously unexplored part of western Madagascar (the Beanka Protected Area)...
A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has played a major...
Abstract: A remote eolianite cave and sinkhole complex on the southeast coast of Madagascar has play...
We report here definitive evidence of butchery, most probably associated with hunting, of giant exti...
Background Although today 15% of living primates are endemic to Madagascar, their diversity was even...
Background - Although today 15% of living primates are endemic to Madagascar, their diversity was e...
Modern tools of paleoecological and ecomorphological research have enabled researchers to reconstruc...
ew tools are available for teasing out aspects of life-history variation among extinct species. Here...
The Spiny Thicket Ecoregion (STE) of Southern and southwestern Madagascar was recently home to numer...
Among the best known of recently extinct Malagasy lemurs is Archaeolemur, which is represented by ma...
Remains of what appears to be a single, subadult Hadropithecus stenognathus were recovered from a pr...
Humans first arrived on Madagascar only a few thousand years ago. Subsequent habitat destruction and...
Humans first arrived on Madagascar only a few thousand years ago. Subsequent habitat destruction and...
Subfossil fecal pellets associated with Archaeolemur cf. edwardsi skeletal material from Anjohikely ...
© 2018, The Author(s). In 1967 G.G. Simpson described three partial mandibles from early Miocene dep...