Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
[25]
Fordyce, R. E. (1994).
Waipatia maerewhenua,
new genus and species (Waipatiidae,
new family), an archaic Late Oligocene dolphin (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Platanistoidea)
from New Zealand.
Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History
, 29, 147-
176.
[26]
Fordyce, R. E. (2006). Chapter 33. A southern perspective on Cetacean evolution and
zoogeography. In J. Merrick, M. Archer, G. M. Hickey, & M. S. Y. Lee (Eds.),
Evolution and Biogeography of Australasian Vertebrates
(pls. 116-124, pp 755-778).
New South Wales, Australia: Australian Scientific Publishing.
[27]
Fordyce, R. E, & Barnes, L. G. (1994). The evolutionary history of whales and
dolphins, In G. W. Wetherill (Ed.),
1994 Annual Review of Earth and Planetary
Sciences
(Volume 22, pp. 419-455). Palo Alto, California: Annual Reviews, Inc.
[28]
Fordyce, R. E, Barnes, L. G., & Miyazaki, N. (1995). General aspects of the
evolutionary history of whales and dolphins. In L.G. Barnes, Y. Hasegawa, & N.
Inuzuka, (Eds.),
The Island Arc, Thematic Issue: Evolution and Biogeography of Fossil
Marine Vertebrates in the Pacific Realm, Proceedings of the 29th International
Geological Congress
, (3(4), pp 373-391). Kyoto, Japan: International Geological
Congress.
[29]
Fraser, F. C., & Purves, P. E. (1960). Hearing in cetaceans: evolution of the accessory
air sacs and the structure of the outer and middle ear in Recent cetaceans.
Bulletin of the
British Museum (Natural History), Zoology
, 7(1), 1-140, 53 pls.
[30]
Geisler, J. H., & Sanders, A. E. (2003). Morphological evidence for the phylogeny of
Cetacea.
Journal of Mammalian Evolution
, 10(1 & 2), 23-129
[31]
Godfrey, S. J, Barnes, L. G., & Bohaska, D. J. (2006).
Araeodelphis natator
Kellogg,
1957, the most primitive known member of the Platanistidae (Odontoceti, Cetacea), and
relationships to other clades within the Platanistoidea.
Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology
, 26(supplement to 3), 68A.
[32]
Gottfried, M. D., Bohaska, D. J., & Whitmore, F. C. Jr. (1994). Miocene cetaceans of
the Chesapeake Group.
Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History
, 29,
229-238.
[33]
Hamilton, H., Caballero, S., Collins, A. G., & Browell, R. L. Jr. 2001. Evolution of
river dolphins.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Biological Series
, 268,
549-556.
[34]
Hershkovitz, P. (1966). Catalog of living whales.
Smithsonian Institution Bulletin
, 246,
1-259.
[35]
Heyning, J. E. (1989). Comparative facial anatomy of beaked whales (Ziphiidae) and a
systematic revision among the families of extant Odontoceti.
Contributions in Science,
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
, 405, 1-64.
[36]
Hulbert, R. C., Jr., & Whitmore, F. C. Jr. (2006). Late Miocene mammals from the
Mauvilla Local Fauna, Alabama.
Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History,
University of Florida
46(1), 1-28.
[37]
Kellogg, A. R. (1923). Description of two squalodonts recently discovered in the
Calvert Cliffs, Maryland; and notes on the shark-toothed cetaceans.
Proceedings of the
United States National Museum
, 62(16), 1-69, pls. 1-20.
[38]
Kellogg, A. R. (1924). A fossil porpoise from the Calvert Formation of Maryland.
Proceedings of the United States National Museum
, 63(14), 1-39, pls. 1-18.
Search WWH ::
Custom Search