Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
County and its Foundation through the Fossil Marine Mammal Research Account, and by
generous donations from Ronald and Judith Perlstein, Ms. Donna Matson, and by Mr. James
E. Klein and Mrs. Sally Klein. Dr. Bruno Frolich (USNM Department of Anthropology)
made the CT scan of the fossil skull of Zarhachis flagellator that appears in Figure 9C. John
De Leon (former LACM staff photographer) made the photographs in Figures 2A-C and 3.
Daniel N. Gabai (volunteer at LACM) made the photographs in Figures 1D, 3D, and 11, and
helped format Figure 9. All other images were prepared by the authors.
R EFERENCES
[1] Abel, O. (1905). Les Odontoc│tes du Bold←rien (Mioc│ne Sup←rieur) d'Anvers.
Mémoires du Musée Royal d'Histoire Naturelle de Belgique , 3, 1-155.
[2] Addicott, W. O. (1972). Provincial middle and late Tertiary molluscan stages, Temblor
Range, California. In E. H. Stinemeyer (Ed.), Proceedings of the Pacific Coast Miocene
Biostratigraphic Symposium (pp 1-26) . Bakersfield, California: Society of Economic
Paleontologists and Mineralogists.
[3] Allen, G. M. (1921). Fossil cetaceans from the Florida phosphate beds. Journal of
Mammalogy , 2(3), 144-159, pls. 9-12.
[4] Au, W. L. (2002). Echolocation. In W. F. Perrin, H. Thewissen, & B. Wursig, (Eds.),
Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals (pp. 358-367). San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
[5] Barnes, L. G. (1977). Outline of eastern North Pacific fossil cetacean assemblages.
Charles A. Repenning, editor, Symposium: Advances in systematics of marine
mammals. Systematic Zoology , 25(4), 321-343 [for December 1976].
[6] Barnes, L. G. (1978). A review of Lophocetus and Liolithax and their relationships to
the delphinoid family Kentriodontidae (Cetacea: Odontoceti). Natural History Museum
of Los Angeles County Science Bulletin , 28, 1-35.
[7] Barnes, L. G. (1985). The Late Miocene dolphin Pithanodelphis Abel, 1905 (Cetacea:
Kentriodontidae) from California. Contributions in Science, Natural History Museum of
Los Angeles County , 367, 1-27.
[8] Barnes, L. G. (1990). The fossil record and evolutionary relationships of the genus
Tursiops. In S. Leatherwood & R. R. Reeves (Eds.), The Bottlenose Dolphin (pp. 3-26).
San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
[9] Barnes, L. G. (2002a). Cetacea, Overview. In W. F. Perrin, H. Thewissen, & B. Wursig
(Eds.), Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals (pp. 204-208) Sand Diego, CA: Academic
Press.
[10] Barnes, L. G. (2002b). An Early Miocene long-snouted marine platanistid dolphin
(Mammalia,Cetacea, Odontoceti) from the Korneuberg Basin (Austria). Das Karpat des
Korneuburger Beckens, Volume 2, W. Sovis and B. Schmid, editors, Beitrage zur
Paläontologie , 27, 407-418.
[11] Barnes, L. G. (2006). A phylogenetic analysis of the superfamily Platanistoidea
(Mammalia, Cetacea, Odontoceti). Beitrage zur Paläontologie , 30, 25-42.
[12] Barnes, L. G., McLeod, S. A. Kearin, M. L., & Deering, M. A. (2003). The most
primitive known platanistid (Cetacea; Odontoceti), a new Early Miocene species from
southern California. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology , 23(supplement to 3), 32A.
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