Evolutionary relationships of the endemic South American ungulates (SANUs), both to each other and to other major placental clades, have been robustly debated for more than a century. Morphological evidence has not provided unambiguous resolution of these controversies, although recent paleoproteomic and paleogenomic analyses have supplied unequivocal evidence that at least Litopterna and Notoungulata are most closely related to each other and then to crown Perissodactyla. A recent study based on morphological characters has gone much further, claiming that litopterns and South American condylarths are stem to, or even nested within, Perissodactyla, but are not otherwise related to any North American clades of archaic ungulates. This study ...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
No large group of recently extinct placental mammals remains as evolutionarily cryptic as the approx...
In 1933 George G. Simpson described a remarkably complete skull of Trigonostylops, an Eocene South A...
Since the late eighteenth century, fossils of bizarre extinct creatures have been described from the...
Since the late eighteenth century, fossils of bizarre extinct creatures have been described from the...
A remarkable diversity of plant-eating mammals known as South American native ungulates (SANUs) flou...
A remarkable diversity of plant-eating mammals known as South American native ungulates (SANUs) flou...
Les notongulés constituent un groupe fossile de mammifères ongulés endémiques d Amérique du Sud au C...
Contrary to morphological claims, molecular data indicate that the order Perissodactyla (e.g., horse...
No large group of recently extinct placental mammals remains as evolutionarily cryptic as the approx...
49 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 42-49)."A previously unknown genus and ...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
No large group of recently extinct placental mammals remains as evolutionarily cryptic as the approx...
In 1933 George G. Simpson described a remarkably complete skull of Trigonostylops, an Eocene South A...
Since the late eighteenth century, fossils of bizarre extinct creatures have been described from the...
Since the late eighteenth century, fossils of bizarre extinct creatures have been described from the...
A remarkable diversity of plant-eating mammals known as South American native ungulates (SANUs) flou...
A remarkable diversity of plant-eating mammals known as South American native ungulates (SANUs) flou...
Les notongulés constituent un groupe fossile de mammifères ongulés endémiques d Amérique du Sud au C...
Contrary to morphological claims, molecular data indicate that the order Perissodactyla (e.g., horse...
No large group of recently extinct placental mammals remains as evolutionarily cryptic as the approx...
49 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 42-49)."A previously unknown genus and ...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
South America was isolated during most of the Cenozoic, and it was home to an endemic fauna. The Sou...
No large group of recently extinct placental mammals remains as evolutionarily cryptic as the approx...
In 1933 George G. Simpson described a remarkably complete skull of Trigonostylops, an Eocene South A...