The University of Iowa Geoscience Department and Museum of Natural History are involved in a project recovering the remains of three 12,000 year old giant ground sloths (Megalonyx jeffersonii) from Tarkio Valley in southwest Iowa. This is the first time that adult and juvenile sloths have been found in association with one another. We have one adult and two juveniles of different sizes to study. This project has led to a better understanding of the Pleistocene extinction event, in which 40 large mammal species became extinct simultaneously, and of how ground sloths lived and interacted with one another
Sloths, like other xenarthrans, are an extremely interesting group of mammals that, after a long his...
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xe...
International audienceThe peopling of the Americas and human interaction with the Pleistocene megafa...
A well-preserved cranium of a large Pleistocene ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii) is described in...
Animals with large differences in body size between adults and juveniles will often exhibit differen...
Evidence of the extinct ground sloth in Iowa is very meager, but additional remains are being brough...
Harlan\u27s ground sloth, Paramylodon harlani, is documented for the first time from Iowa. The recor...
Excavations of ACb-3 Cave have uncovered the remains of at least seven individual Megalonyx jefferso...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityVariation in specimens of extinct taxa complicates attempts to...
Author Institution: The Dayton Museum of Natural HistoryMILLS, RICHARD s. A Ground Sloth, Megalonyx,...
Extant sloths present an evolutionary conundrum in that the two living genera are superficially simi...
A well-preserved ungual of a pes documents the presence of Jefferson’s ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffe...
International audienceLiving sloths represent two distinct lineages of small-sized mammals that inde...
Fossil vertebrates from the Doeden gravel pit, Yellowstone River Valley near Miles City, Montana, do...
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xe...
Sloths, like other xenarthrans, are an extremely interesting group of mammals that, after a long his...
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xe...
International audienceThe peopling of the Americas and human interaction with the Pleistocene megafa...
A well-preserved cranium of a large Pleistocene ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii) is described in...
Animals with large differences in body size between adults and juveniles will often exhibit differen...
Evidence of the extinct ground sloth in Iowa is very meager, but additional remains are being brough...
Harlan\u27s ground sloth, Paramylodon harlani, is documented for the first time from Iowa. The recor...
Excavations of ACb-3 Cave have uncovered the remains of at least seven individual Megalonyx jefferso...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityVariation in specimens of extinct taxa complicates attempts to...
Author Institution: The Dayton Museum of Natural HistoryMILLS, RICHARD s. A Ground Sloth, Megalonyx,...
Extant sloths present an evolutionary conundrum in that the two living genera are superficially simi...
A well-preserved ungual of a pes documents the presence of Jefferson’s ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffe...
International audienceLiving sloths represent two distinct lineages of small-sized mammals that inde...
Fossil vertebrates from the Doeden gravel pit, Yellowstone River Valley near Miles City, Montana, do...
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xe...
Sloths, like other xenarthrans, are an extremely interesting group of mammals that, after a long his...
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xe...
International audienceThe peopling of the Americas and human interaction with the Pleistocene megafa...