Annals
Bulletins Home
Memoirs
Special Publications
Author Guide
Sci Pubs Home
 

Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History

Photo of Bulletin

B0036 Mary R. Dawson and Jason A. Lillegraven, editors. 2004. Fanfare for an Uncommon Paleontologist: Papers in Honor of Malcolm C. McKenna. One foldout map, 140 figures, 33 tables, and 10 appendices. 362 pp. $63.00

Table of Contents

1. Fanfare for an uncommon paleontologist, M.R. Dawson and J.A. Lillegraven

2. Purgatorius (Plesiadapiformes, Primates?, Mammalia), a Paleocene immigrant into northeastern Montana: statigraphic occurrances and incisor proportions, W.A. Clemens

3. Spatiotemporal hyperdimensions in paleontology, D.P. Domning

4. New screen-washing approaches to biostratigraphy and paleoecology of nonmarine rocks, Cretaceous of Utah, J.G. Eaton

5. The collections of J.C. Fremont and the type locality and record of Viviparus paludinaeformis (Hall) (Gastropoda) from the Eocene of Wyoming, J.H. Hartman

6. Taxonomic utility of sequential wear patterns in some fossil camelids: comparison of three Miocene taxa, J.G. Honey

7. Eutherian mammal systematics and the origins of South American ungulates as based on postcranial osteology, I. Horovitz

8. Hanomys malcolmi, a new simplicidentate mammal from the Paleocene of central China: its relationships and stratigraphic implications, X. Huang, C. Li, M.R. Dawson, and L. Liu

9. A new eubaenine, Goleremys mckennai,, gen. et. sp. n., (Baenidae: Testudines) from the Paleocene of California, J.H. Hutchison

10. A reevaluation of the biochronology of the Brisbane and Judson local faunas (late Paleocene) of North Dakota, A.J. Kihm and J.H. Hartman

11. Rodents and marsupial (Mammalia) from the Duchesnean (Eocene) Turtle Basin local fauna, Sevier Plateau, Utah, W.W. Korth and J.G. Eaton

12. Barstovian ochotonids from Hepburn's Mesa, Park County, Montana, with comments on the biogeography and phylogeny of Oreolagus, B.P. Kraatz and A.D. Barnosky

13. Revisions to Upper Cretaceous stratigraphy near Hell's Half Acre, eastern Wind River Basin, central Wyoming, J.A. Lillegraven

14. Evolution of dental replacement in mammals, Z.-X. Luo, Z. Kielan-Zaworoska, and R.L. Cifelli

15. A new small dichobunid artiodactyl from Shanghuang (middle Eocene, eastern China); implications for the early evolution of proto-selenondonts in Asia, G. Metais, J. Guo, and K.C. Beard

16. Evidence from the enamel microstructure for reversals in dietary behavior in the transition from primitive Ceratomorpha to Rhinocerotoidea, J.M. Rensberger

17. The postcranial skeleton of early Eocene rodents, K.D. Rose and B.J. Chinnery

18. New specimen of Deltatheroides cretacicus (Metatheria, Deltatheroida) from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, G.W. Rougier, J.R. Wible, and M.J. Novacek

19. Paleozoogeography and neozoogeography of mammals in Eritrea, J. Shoshani

20. Miocene mammalian faunas, Ogallala Group, Pawnee Buttes area, Weld County, Colorado, R.H. Tedford

21. New early Eocene mammalian fossils from the Hengyang Basin, Hunan China, S. Ting, Y.-Q. Wang, J.A. Schiebout, P.L. Koch, W.C. Clyde, G.J. Bowen, and Y. Wang

22. Taeniodonta of the Washakie Formation, southwestern Wyoming, W.D. Turnbull

23. The skull and dentition of Eumys elegans from the Oligocene of North Dakota, J.H. Wahlert

24. On the origin of lamine Camelidae including a new genus from the late Miocene of the High Plains, S.D. Webb and J. Meachen

Return to Bulletin Listings


All publications are paper bound. Add $5.00 for shipping in the US; email us about foreign shipping.

Copies of these publications may be obtained by sending a check or money order (US funds only) made payable to Carnegie Museum of Natural History to the following address:

Office of Scientific Publications
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
4400 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh PA 15213-4080 USA
For information or shipping estimates, contact:
SciPub@CarnegieMNH.org, tel: (412) 622-3287, fax: (412) 665-2751

     
 
Annals | Bulletin | Memoirs | Special Publications | Author Guide | Sci Pubs Home

CMNH Research Home | Contact Us

© Carnegie Museum of Natural History