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         Vertebrate Paleontology:     more books (100)
  1. Geology and Vertebrate Paleontology of Western and Southern North America: Contributions in Honor of David P. Whistler (Science series / Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County) by David Paul Whistler, 2008-05-28
  2. Mesozoic/Cenozoic Vertebrate Paleontology: Classic Localities, Contemporary Approaches : Salt Lake City, Utah to Billings, Montana July 19-27, 1989 (Field ... (American Geophysical Union), T322.) by Malcolm C. McKenna, John J. Flynn, et all 1989-06
  3. Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Chinese Society of Vertebrate Paleontology by Dong Wei, 2008-01-01
  4. Recent Papers Relating To Vertebrate Paleontology (1897) by Edward Drinker Cope, 2009-11-21
  5. Outlines Of Vertebrate Paleontology: For Students Of Zoology (1898) by Arthur Smith Woodward, 2010-09-10
  6. The Development of the Vertebrate Skull by Gavin, Sir De Beer, 1985-07
  7. Vertebrate Paleontological Techniques (Vol 1)
  8. An Agenda for Antiquity: Henry Fairfield Osborn and Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, 1890-1935 (History Amer Science & Technol) by Ronald Rainger, 2004-03-22
  9. Recent Vertebrate Carcasses and Their Paleobiological Implications by Johannes Weigelt, 1989-08-09
  10. The Fossil Vertebrates of Florida by Richard C. Hulbert, 2001-02-23
  11. Mesozoic Vertebrate Life:
  12. In Quest of Great Lakes Ice Age Vertebrates by J. Alan Holman, 2001-11
  13. Evolution of the Vertebrates: A History of the Backboned Animals Through Time by Edwin Harris Colbert, Michael Morales, 1991-03
  14. Basic Structures and Evolution of Vertebrates, Volume 2 (Basic Structure & Evolution of Vertebrates) by Author Unknown, 1981-02-11

21. View Archives
Journal of vertebrate paleontology. View Archives. Journal of vertebrate paleontologyVolume 24 (2004) Author Index; Volume 23 (2003) Author Index;
http://www.bioone.org/bioone/?request=get-archive&issn=0272-4634

22. Dino Russ's Lair - HOME
dinosaur digs and how to join them, categorized and rated links to information, exhibitand other reference web sites on dinosaurs and vertebrate paleontology.
http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/dinos_home.html
DINOSAUR AND VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY INFORMATION
Dinosaur
Art
Dinosaur
Digs
Dinosaur
Eggs
Dinosaur
Exhibits
Dinosaur
Information
Dinosaur Sites to Visit Publications Dino Russ's Utah Field Projects Dino Russ's Montana Project Societies Software Tracks Other Exhibits Other Vertebrates VP Info Who is Dino Russ? Contacting Dino Russ Illinois Dinosaurs? Dinosaur Geology of the Colorado Plateau and Uinta Basin Dinosaur Geology of the Colorado Plateau and Uinta Basin Instructors:
Russ Jacobson and Joe Devera (ISGS) and Scott Ishman (SIU) This is a one week field course to be offered in the Summer of 2004 (August 2-6, 2004) through Southern Illinois University Division of Continuing Education. The goal of this course is an introduction to the geology and paleontology of the "Dinosaur Diamond" from Fruita, Colorado, to Moab, Price, and Vernal, Utah. Students will visit various field sites and museums on the Colorado Plateau, learn about Mesozoic Geology and Paleontology. The course will have a graduate credit option. Special Note: THE CLASS IS A GO!!!!! The SIU Division of Continuing Education considers this an important class offering and thus wants this class to go even though we have less than the minumum of 11 we prefer to have.

23. Florida Museum Of Natural History
Zoology and vertebrate paleontology.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu
text only The Hall of Florida Fossils: Evolution of Life and Land
Now Open!
The museum's third permanent exhibition hall, which takes visitors on a walk through time, focuses on Florida paleontology and history. Learn More...
Images of the Maya
June 12 - Sept. 6, 2004

This exhibit features traditional woven textiles from the highlands of Chiapas, Mexcio. With brocade and embroidery, Maya women create intricate symbols that express their ancient history and culture. Learn More...
Visit Us
Exhibits Current Events ... Travel Programs General Information About the Museum Calendar Classes/Tours Collectors Shop Current Events Education Exhibits In The News Links Membership Staff Directory Travel Programs Volunteer Info Birds Fishes Mammals Molecular Systematics Mollusks Plants Fossil Plants Invertebrate Paleontology Vertebrate Paleontology Caribbean Anthropology Ceramic Technology Lab Environmental Archaeology Florida Archaeology Historical Archaeology South Florida Archaeology Collection Databases Collection Policy Expedition Florida Photo Galleries Virtual Exhibits webmaster

24. Homepage Gudo
Invertebrate and vertebrate paleontology, Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg.
http://servermac.geologie.uni-frankfurt.de/Staff/Homepages/Gudo/GudoE.html

Home
About us Staff Study ... Homepages Gudo in Deutsch
Dr. Michael Gudo Scientific employee (Postdoc)
Naturmuseum und Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg Phone ++49 (0)69 - 7542 291 Senckenberganlage 25 e-mail: Michael.Gudo@senckenberg.de m.gudo@em.uni-frankfurt.de Research topics: Engineering- and Constructional Morphology of Invertebrates (Coelenterata: Scleractinia, Rugosa, Heterocorallia)
Engineering- and Constructional Morphology of Chordates (Acrania, Hemichordates (Enteropnusts, Echinoderms), Tunicates)
Evolution of rugose corals
Evolution of Echinoderms
Evolution of Chordates
Early Evolution of multicellular animals (Metazoa)
Frankfurt Theory of Organisms and Evolution

Scientific theory (methodological culturalism, neomachanizism) Working group: "

25. James Hopson's Home Page
vertebrate paleontology, particularly the evolutionary history of the Synapsida, morphology and systematic of nonmammalian synapsids (University of Chicago).
http://pondside.uchicago.edu/oba/faculty/hopson_j.html
James Hopson
Professor
Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy
Committee on Evolutionary Biology
Research Associate Field Museum of Natural History
OFFICE PHONE FAX EMAIL Anatomy 34 jhopson@midway.uchicago.edu Research Interests Vertebrate paleontology, particularly the evolutionary history of the Synapsida - the "mammal-like reptiles" and mammals; morphology and systematic of non-mammalian synapsids (especially therapids) and Mesozoic mammals; functional morphology of the feeding apparatus, especially of the dentition, in the transition from primitive amniotes to mammals; macroevolutionary patterns in the synapsid fossil record; amniote phylogeny; tetrapod faunas of the Permian and Mesozoic. I am interested in supervising research on fossil vertebrates, particularly, though not exclusively, on "mammal-like reptiles" and (primary Mesozoic) mammals. This research may include descriptive and functional morphology and phylogenetic analysis. Recent Publications
Hopson, J.A. and H.R. Barghusen (1986).
An analysis of therapsid relationships.

26. Yale Peabody Museum: Vertebrate Paleontology, History
History of the vertebrate paleontology Collection. This collection becamethe basis of the vertebrate paleontology collection at Yale.
http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/vp/History.html
History of the Vertebrate Paleontology Collection
Search the Collection Catalog Vertebrate Paleontology collections, other than a few specimens that date from the old Yale College Cabinet (e.g. fossil fish collected by Benjamin Silliman ), derive from the industry of Othniel Charles Marsh and the wealth of his uncle, the philanthropist George Peabody. Yale College Scientific Expeditions of 1870-1873, Pteranodon in particular), the toothed birds Ichthyornis and Hesperornis from the Cretaceous of Kansas, and a sizable collection of fossil fishes from the Eocene lake deposits of the Green River near Kemmerer, Wyoming. Charles Emerson Beecher, Hugh Gibb, George Bird Grinnell, Oscar Harger, John Bell Hatcher, Arthur Lakes, Otto Meyer, Benjamin Mudge, O. A. Peterson, William Reed, George R. Wieland, and Samuel Wendell Williston. In addition to numerous shorter papers, Marsh is remembered for his beautifully illustrated monographs, Dinocerata Odontornithes The Dinosaurs of North America , and posthumously, The Ceratopsia , which was successively worked on by Marsh, then Hatcher, and finally completed by Lull. According to his biographers, Schuchert and LeVene (1940), Marsh named 344 new species and 161 new genera of fossil vertebrates. His genera include

27. PALEO MONT
vertebrate paleontology in Montana.
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Lab/3381/
Your visitor to visit.

28. 403 Error - File Not Found
Features original articles and illustrations from the field of vertebrate paleontology.
http://illustrissimus.virtualave.net/dimfront.html
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Please note: You might not have permission to view this directory or page using the credentials you supplied. Attention: Virtual Ave Free Hosting Customers On January 13th, 2004, Virtual Ave discontinued free Web hosting plans. If you had a free hosting account and did not upgrade, your account has been taken offline. To upgrade to a paid account and retrieve your account and associated Web files, please visit: http://www.virtualave.net/virtualave/upgrade_plans2.bml HTTP 403 - File not found

29. Kevin Padian
Mesozoic vertebrate paleontology, incl. dinosaurs (Univ. CaliforniaBerkeley).
http://ib.berkeley.edu/faculty/padiank.html
@import url(/ibstyle.css)
UC Berkeley

About the

Department
Academic Program ...
Directory
Kevin Padian
Professor
E-mail:
Phone:
Lab Homepage:
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/people/padian/webintro.html Full Directory Information
Research Interests
Selected Publications
Padian, K., and J.R. Horner. 2002. Typology versus transformation in the origin of birds. Trends in Ecology and Evolution
Padian, K., A.J. de Ricqlès, and J.R. Horner. 2001. Dinosaurian growth rates and bird origins. Nature
Horner, J.R., A.J. de Ricqlès, and K. Padian. 2001. Comparative osteohistology of some embryonic and perinatal archosaurs: phylogenetic and behavioral implications for dinosaurs. Paleobiology
Ricqlès, A.J. de, K. Padian, J.R. Horner, and H. Francillon-Viellot. 2000. Paleohistology of the bones of pterosaurs (Reptilia: Archosauria): anatomy, ontogeny, and biomechanical implications. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Padian, K. 1999. Charles Darwin's views of classification in theory and in practice. Systematic Biology Padian, K., and L.M. Chiappe. 1998. The origin and early evolution of birds.

30. So You Want To Be A Paleontologist?
Advice on how to become a paleontologist and which colleges offer programs in vertebrate paleontology.
http://www.psych.ucsb.edu/~rowe/dinosaur/FAQs.html

31. Laboratory For Vertebrate Paleontology
The University of Alberta Laboratory for vertebrate paleontology is an exceptionalresource for exploring dinosaurs and other early vertebrate animals.
http://www.museums.ualberta.ca/dig/naturalhist/fossils/vertpaleo/
@import "http://www.museums.ualberta.ca/dig/dig_ie.css"; HOME FEEDBACK HELP LINKS ... SITE MAP
Millions of years after the last dinosaur perished, our imaginations wonder at what were some of the largest and most intriguing animals ever to roam the Earth. What we know about these ancient creatures comes largely from paleontologists, who unearth and study the fossilized remains of the vast array of prehistoric vertebrate animals, including mammals, amphibians, fishes and reptiles. Their discoveries and research guide us back in time and illuminate an amazing and diverse ancient world. The University of Alberta Laboratory for Vertebrate Paleontology is an exceptional resource for exploring dinosaurs and other early vertebrate animals. It holds one of the finest collections of its kind in Canada, containing over 41,000 specimens, and is actively used by researchers, students and collectors. Specimens range from 450 million to 10,000 years old, with significant fossils highlighting unique discoveries that address major evolutionary questions. Highlights from this extraordinary collection are available for public discovery, exhibited in the Paleontology Museum. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

32. Augustana Geology Department In Antarctica
vertebrate paleontology of Antarctic dinosaurs (Augustana College, Illinois).
http://www.augustana.edu/academ/geology/antrctca.htm
Augustana In Antarctica Augustana Professor Makes Fossil Finds On Frozen Continent Augustana professor Dr. William R. Hammer is a veteran of Antarctic science. Having traveled to the frozen continent 5 times for research, Hammer has become well known for his fossil discoveries. During his fourth expedition, (1990-91 field season), Hammer and his field team, which also included Augustana graduate William J. Hickerson, made a major find. At an elevation of approximately 14,000 feet on Mt. Kirkpatrick not far from the South Pole, the team excavated Antarctica's first dinosaur along with bones from several other animals.
The vertebrate assemblage collected during the 1990-1991 field season from Mt. Kirkpatrick in the Beardmore Glacier region of the Central Transantarctic Mountains includes 120-140 bones, and 16 teeth representing at least six different taxa. The specimens are from the Hanson Formation and include the partial skull and numerous postcranial elements from a crested theropod dinosaur, Cryolophosaurus ellioti
The name means "frozen crested reptile" and

33. Vertebrate Paleontology
University of Alberta vertebrate paleontology Collection
http://www.museums.ualberta.ca/dig/search/vpaleo/
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

34. Collections & Research
back-. Department of vertebrate paleontology at Cincinnati Museum Center HistoryCollection Holdings Current Research Activities Research Facilities Student
http://www.cincymuseum.org/cmc/collection/vertpaleo.htm

-back-
Department of Vertebrate Paleontology
at Cincinnati Museum Center

History

Collection Holdings

Current Research Activities

Research Facilities
...
Amateur Associations

Overview:
for research, teaching and exhibit purposes. The Museum collects actively in this subject area, and accepts unrestricted private donations and deposits of orphaned institutional collections. Particularly sought are specimens of high quality that either fill a significant gap in the collections, complement existing research foci, or specimens whose removal from the public domain would represent a serious loss to the scientific community and the general public. History:
Return to top
Collection Holdings: Return to top Research Facilities: Return to top Current Research Activities: Field projects include excavations for Mississippian-age vertebrates from a non-marine Chesterian section in central Kentucky, salvage operations for regional Pleistocene vertebrates, recovery of fish remains from a variety of marine Devonian settings in Ohio and Kentucky, and excavation of dinosaurs in the Morrison and Formation of Wyoming and Montana. Department staff is actively investigating phylogenetic, taphonomic and paleoenvironmental problems associated with these field activities. Return to top Student and Volunteer Opportunities: A program of study in paleontology is offered through the University of Cincinnati where CMC scientists hold adjunct appointments. Undergraduate degrees as well as graduate programs leading to the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees are offered. For more information, contact the

35. The Archaeopteryx Pages
Information about the history of the fossil bird Archaeopteryx lithographica and vertebrate paleontology in general. Maintained by Ilja Nieuwland.
http://homepage.mac.com/ilja/
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36. Vertebrate Paleontology
vertebrate paleontology. Vertebrate anatomy. Romer became the firstpresident of the Society of vertebrate paleontology in 1940.
http://www.fact-index.com/v/ve/vertebrate_paleontology.html
Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
Vertebrate paleontology
Vertebrate paleontology seeks to discover the behavior, reproduction and appearance of extinct spined animals, through the study of their fossilized remains. It also tries to connect, on the evolutionary timeline, the animals of the past and their modern day relatives. The fossil record clearly shows the evolutionary progression from early aquatic vertebrates to mammals. The earliest known fossil vertebrates were heavily armored fish discovered in rocks from the Ordovician Period about 500 to 430 million years ago. (The phrase 'million years ago' is shortened to 'mya' in most paleontological references). The Devonian Period (395 to 345 mya) brought in the changes that allowed primitive lungfish to remain on land as long as they wished, thus becomng the first terrestrial vertebrates, the amphibians Amphibians developed forms of reproduction and locomotion and a metabolism better suited for life exclusively on land, becoming more reptilian. Full fledged reptiles appeared in the Carboniferous Period (345 to 280 mya).

37. Tomothy Rowe - Geology - UT Austin
vertebrate paleontology and avian evolution (Univ. Texas, Austin).
http://www.geo.utexas.edu/faculty/rowe.htm
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES DIRECTORY Home Directory FACULTY
Short Vita Teaching Research Publications ... Current Students Professor Timothy Rowe
Professor and J. Nalle Gregory Regents Professor in Geological Sciences
Director - Vertebrate Paleontology Laboratory
Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley, 1986.
Field of Study:
Vertebrate Paleontology Short Biography:
Dr. Rowe's primary research focuses on the evolution and development of the vertebrate skeleton. In this work, Dr. Rowe uses phylogenetic systematics to study the evolution of skeletal form as well as the evolution of skeletal development in the ontogeny of living species. This work is directed mostly at the early history of mammals and their extinct relatives among Synapsida, and on the history of birds and their extinct relatives among Dinosauria, and on other amniotes. An important tool for this research is high-resolution X-ray computed tomography, which has become a secondary research focus. This breakthrough technology permits the non-destructive inspection of internal structure in even the smallest and most delicate of vertebrate specimens. In collaborative research with scientist from many countries, Dr. Rowe is scanning and studying the anatomy of
Contact Information:
Office: 6.106

38. Natural History Museum: Research & Collections: Vertebrate Paleontology
R C vertebrate paleontology. STAFF. Lawrence G. Barnes, Ph.D., CuratorInterests in marine mammals (213) 7633329. LMC, Luis M. Chiappe
http://www.nhm.org/research/vertebrate_paleontology/
VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY
STAFF COLLECTION Take a "Journey through Time" to view the history and evolution of animals. Click here or on the logo above to begin your adventure. T he Vertebrate Paleontology collection at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County contains one of the largest collections of fossil vertebrates in North America. Specimens in the LACM VP collections range in age from the Devonian, approximately 400 million years ago, to extinct species only a few thousand years old. P articular emphases of the collection include one of the world's largest fossil fish and shark collections, a collection of fossil marine mammals second only to the National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution, important Jurassic and Cretaceous dinosaurs and other verterbrates, especially one of the best preserved skulls of Tyrannosaurus rex yet recovered, one of the most extensive paleo-ornithology collections in the world, and significant collections of Tertiary terrestrial fossils from western North America.

39. Redirect To New Anatomy Department URL
Ph.D. program, specializing in evolutionary morphology, functional morphology, musculoskeletal biology, and vertebrate paleontology.
http://www.informatics.sunysb.edu/anatomy/
The web page for the Department of Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine, Stony Brook University has been moved. Click here to be sent to the new URL.

40. Additional Information About Journal Of Vertebrate Paleontology
Additional Information Journal of vertebrate paleontology. Journal InformationName Journal of vertebrate paleontology. Frequency Quarterly.
http://apt.allenpress.com/aptonline/?request=get-moreinfo&issn=0272-4634

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