During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual owing to lack of funds. Nevertheless some interesting and valuable material was obtained by the Nebraska Geological Survey, notably the great mandible of a new longirostral mastodon from Cherry County, together with associated tusk and bones
Nebraska has long been a collecting ground famous for its fossil mammals, but as yet no dinosaurian ...
The ponderous mandible of the great shovel-tusked mastodon, Amebelodon fricki, was figured and descr...
On February 18,1922, the mandible of an unusually primitive mammoth was secured for the palaeontolog...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
In February, 1932, while opening a gravel pit to get material for highway construction, the skull, t...
The skull and tusks of the Thurston onnty mastodon, found near Pender, have recently been remounted ...
In developing the hydro-electric plant of the Iowa and Nebraska Light and Power Company, a number of...
The mandible of the Milford mastodon, Mastodon moodiei, was figured and described in Bulletin 24, De...
Pursuant to advice from Mr. A. S. Keith of Freedom, Frontier County, Nebraska, the first Morrill Geo...
During the past four years the Nebraska State Museum, under the directorship of Dr. Erwin Hinckley B...
Amebelodonts are so new and so rare that even fragmentary facts relative to the group seem worth pub...
A skeleton of Megabelodon lulli, partly composite, was mounted in the laboratory May 31, 1933, and w...
Nebraska has long been a collecting ground famous for its fossil mammals, but as yet no dinosaurian ...
The ponderous mandible of the great shovel-tusked mastodon, Amebelodon fricki, was figured and descr...
On February 18,1922, the mandible of an unusually primitive mammoth was secured for the palaeontolog...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
In February, 1932, while opening a gravel pit to get material for highway construction, the skull, t...
The skull and tusks of the Thurston onnty mastodon, found near Pender, have recently been remounted ...
In developing the hydro-electric plant of the Iowa and Nebraska Light and Power Company, a number of...
The mandible of the Milford mastodon, Mastodon moodiei, was figured and described in Bulletin 24, De...
Pursuant to advice from Mr. A. S. Keith of Freedom, Frontier County, Nebraska, the first Morrill Geo...
During the past four years the Nebraska State Museum, under the directorship of Dr. Erwin Hinckley B...
Amebelodonts are so new and so rare that even fragmentary facts relative to the group seem worth pub...
A skeleton of Megabelodon lulli, partly composite, was mounted in the laboratory May 31, 1933, and w...
Nebraska has long been a collecting ground famous for its fossil mammals, but as yet no dinosaurian ...
The ponderous mandible of the great shovel-tusked mastodon, Amebelodon fricki, was figured and descr...
On February 18,1922, the mandible of an unusually primitive mammoth was secured for the palaeontolog...