Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T12:34:45.469Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

20 - Cylindrodontidae

from Part V - Glires

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

Christine M. Janis
Affiliation:
Brown University, Rhode Island
Gregg F. Gunnell
Affiliation:
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Mark D. Uhen
Affiliation:
University of Alabama, Birmingham
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agrawal, V. C. (1967). Skull adaptations in fossorial rodents. Mammalia, 31, 300–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Averianov, A. (1996). Early Eocene Rodentia of Kyrgzystan. Bulletin of the Museum of Natural History, Paris, 4th séries, 18C, 629–62.Google Scholar
Baskin,, J. A. and Tedford,, R. H. (1996). Small arctoid and feliform carnivorans. In The Terrestrial Eocene–Oligocene Transition in North America, ed. Prothero, D. R. and Emry, R. J., pp. 486–97. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beard,, K. C. and Dawson,, M. R. (2001). Early Wasatchian mammals from the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi: biostratigraphic and paleobiogeographic implications. In Eocene Biodiversity: Unusual Occurrences and Rarely Sampled Habitats, ed. Gunnell, G. F., pp. 75–94. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.Google Scholar
Black, C. C. (1970a). A new Pareumys (Rodentia: Cylindrodontidae) from the Duchesne River Formation, Utah. Fieldiana, Geology, 16, 453–9.Google Scholar
Black, C. C. (1970b). Paleontology and geology of the Badwater Creek area, central Wyoming. Part 5. The cylindrodont rodents. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 41, 201–14.Google Scholar
Black, C. C. (1971). Paleontology and geology of the Badwater Creek area, central Wyoming. Part 7. Rodents of the Family Ischyromyidae. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 43, 179–217.Google Scholar
Black, C. C. (1974). Paleontology and geology of the Badwater Creek area, central Wyoming. Part 9. Additions to the cylindrodont rodents from the late Eocene. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 45, 151–60.Google Scholar
Black, C. C. and Sutton, J. F. (1984). Paleocene and Eocene rodents of North America. [In Papers in Vertebrate Paleontology Honoring Robert Warren Wilson, ed. Mengel, R. M..] Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication, 9, 67–84.Google Scholar
Bryant, J. D. and McKenna, M. C. (1995). Cranial anatomy and phylogenetic position of Tsaganomys altaicus (Mammalia: Rodentia) from the Hsanda Gol Formation (Oligocene), Mongolia. American Museum Novitates, 3156, 1–42.Google Scholar
Burke, J. J. (1935a). Pseudocylindrodon, a new rodent genus from the Pipestone Springs Oligocene of Montana. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 25, 1–4.Google Scholar
Burke, J. J. (1935b). Fossil rodents from the Uinta Eocene Series. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 25, 5–12.Google Scholar
Burke, J. J. (1936). Ardynomys and Desmatolagus in the North Amercian Oligocene. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 25, 135–54.Google Scholar
Burke, J. J. (1938). A new cylindrodont rodent from the Oligocene of Montana. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 27, 255–75.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. (1881). Review of the Rodentia of the Miocene Period of North America. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories, 6, 361–86.Google Scholar
Dashzeveg, D. and Meng, J. (1998). A new Eocene cylindrodontid rodent (Mammalia, Rodentia) from the eastern Gobi of Mongolia. American Museum Novitates, 3253, 1–18.Google Scholar
Dawson, M. R. (1966). Additional late Eocene rodents (Mammalia) from the Uinta Basin, Utah. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 38, 97–114.Google Scholar
Dawson, M. R. (1968). Oligocene rodents (Mammalia) from East Mesa, Inner Mongolia. American Museum Novitates, 2324, 1–12.Google Scholar
Dawson, M. R. (2004). Early Wasatchian cylindrodontid rodents: evolution in the Gulf Coastal Plain. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 24(suppl. to no. 3), p. 51A.Google Scholar
Doi, K. (1990). Geology and paleontology of two primate families of the Raven Ridge, Northwestern Colorado and Northeastern Utah. M. Sc. Thesis, University of Colorado, Boulder.
Douglass, E. (1901). Fossil Mammalia of the White River beds of Montana. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 20, 237–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emry,, R. J. and Korth,, W. W. (1996). Cylindrodontidae. In The Terrestrial Eocene–Oligocene Transition in North America, ed. Prothero, D. R. and Emry, R. J., pp. 399–416. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Emry, R. J. and Thorington, R. W. Jr. (1982). Descriptive and comparative osteology of the oldest fossil squirrel, Protosciurus (Rodentia: Sciuridae). Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 47, 1–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagan, S. R. (1960). Osteology of Mylagaulus laevis, a fossorial rodent from the upper Miocene of Colorado. University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions, Vertebrata, 9, 1–32.Google Scholar
Ferrusquía-Villafranca, I. (1984). A review of the early and middle Tertiary mammal faunas of Mexico. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 4, 187–198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrusquía-Villafranca, I. and Wood, A. E. (1969). New fossil rodents from the early Oligocene Rancho Gaitan local fauna, northeastern Chihuahua, Mexico. The Pearce-Sellards Series, Texas Memorial Museum, 16, 1–13.Google Scholar
Flynn, L. J., Jacobs, L. L., and Cheema, I. U. (1986). Baluchimyinae, a new ctenodactyloid rodent subfamily from the Miocene of Baluchistan. American Museum Novitates, 2841, 1–58.Google Scholar
Galbreath, E. C. (1969). Cylindrodont rodents from the Lower Oligocene of northwestern Colorado. Transactions of the Illinois Academy of Science, 62, 94–7.Google Scholar
Gazin, C. L. (1961). New sciuravid rodents from the lower Eocene Knight Formation of western Wyoming. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 74, 193–4.Google Scholar
Gazin, C. L. (1962). A further study of the lower Eocene mammalian faunas of southwestern Wyoming. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 144, 1–98.Google Scholar
Gunnell,, G. F. and Bartels,, W. S. (2001). Basin margins, biodiversity, evolutionary innovation, and the origin of new taxa. In Eocene Biodiversity: Unusual Occurrences and Rarely Sampled Habitats, ed. Gunnell, G. F., pp. 403–40. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hildebrand,, M. (1985). Digging of quadrupeds. In Functional Vertebrate Morphology, ed. Hildebrand, M., Bramble, D. M., Liem, K. F. and Wake, D. B., pp. 89–109. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, J. E. (1937). Morphology of the pocket gopher, mammalian genus Thomomys. University of California Publications in Zoology, 42, 81–174.Google Scholar
Holliger, C. D. (1916). Anatomical adaptations in the thoracic limb of the California pocket gopher and other rodents. University of California Publications in Zoology, 13, 447–94.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. (2000). Fossil Snakes of North America. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Hough, J. and Alf, R. (1956). A Chadron mammalian fauna from Nebraska. Journal of Paleontology, 30, 132–40.Google Scholar
Howard, W. E. and Smith, M. E. (1952). Rates of extrusive growth of incisors of pocket gophers. Journal of Mammalogy, 38, 485–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (1999). International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, 4th edn. London: International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature.
Kelly, T. S. (1990). Biostratigraphy of the Uintan and Duchesnean land mammal assemblages from the middle member of the Sespe Formation, Simi Valley, California. Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, 419, 1–42.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. (1984). Earliest Tertiary evolution and radiation of rodents in North America. Bulletin of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 24, 1–71.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. (1989). Aplodontid rodents (Mammalia) from the Oligocene (Orellan and Whitneyan) Brule Formation, Nebraska. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 9, 400–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korth, W. W. (1992). Cylindrodonts (Cylindrodontidae, Rodentia) and a new genus of eomyid, Paranamatomys, (Eomyidae, Rodentia) from the Chadronian of Sioux County, Nebraska. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences, XIX, 75–82.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. (1994). Tertiary Record of Rodents in North America. New York: Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kowalski, K. (1974). Middle Oligocene rodents from Mongolia. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 30, 147–78.Google Scholar
Lambe, L. M. (1908). The Vertebrata of the Oligocene of the Cypress Hills, Saskatchewan. Geological Survey of Canada, Contributions to Paleontology, 3, 1–65.Google Scholar
Lander, E. B., Whistler, D. P., Anderson, E. S. and Kennedy, C. L. (2000). Project 97–17: Big Sky Country Club, LLC, Lost Canyons Golf Club (Tapo and Dry Canyon Portions, Whiteface Specific Plan Area), Simi Valley, Ventura County, California Paleontologic Resource Impact Mitigation Program Final Technical Report of Results and Findings. Altadena, CA: Paleo Environmental Associates.
Landry, S. O. (1999). A proposal for a new classification and nomenclature for the Glires (Lagomorpha and Rodentia). Mitteilungen aus dem Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, Zoologische Reihe, 75, 283–316.Google Scholar
Leidy, J. (1871). Notice of some extinct rodents. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1871, 230–2.Google Scholar
Leidy, J. (1873). Contributions to the extinct vertebrate fauna of the western territories. Report of the United States Geological Survey of the Territories, 1, 7–358.Google Scholar
Lessa, E. P. and Thaeler, C. S. Jr. (1989). A reassessment of morphological specializations for digging in pocket gophers. Journal of Mammalogy 70, 689–700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lillegraven, J. A. (1977). Small rodents (Mammalia) from Eocene deposits of San Diego County, California. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 158, 221–62.Google Scholar
Maas, M. C. (1985). Taphonomy of a late Eocene microvertebrate locality, Wind River Basin, Wyoming (USA). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 52, 123–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manaro, A. J. (1959). Extrusive incisor growth in the rodent genera Geomys, Peromyscus, and Sigmodon. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences, 22, 25–31.Google Scholar
Marivaux, L. and Welcomme, J.-L. (2003). New diatomyid and baluchimyine rodents from the Oligocene of Pakistan (Bugti Hills, Balochistan): systematic and paleobiogeographic implications. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 23, 420–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marsh, O. C. (1872). Preliminary description of new Tertiary mammals. Part II. American Journal of Science, Third Series, 4, 202–4.Google Scholar
Martin, T. (1992). Schmelzmikrostructur in den Inzisiven alt- und neuweltlicher hystricognather Nagetiere. Palaeovertebrata, Mémoire Extraordinaire, 1–168.Google Scholar
Matthew, W. D. and Granger, W. (1923). Nine new rodents from the Oligocene of Mongolia. American Museum Novitates, 102, 1–10.Google Scholar
Matthew, W. D. and Granger, W. (1925). New creodonts and rodents from the Ardyn Obo formation of Mongolia. American Museum Novitates, 193, 1–7.Google Scholar
McKenna, M. C. and Bell, S. K. (1997). Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Meng, J. and McKenna, M. C. (1998). Faunal turnovers of Palaeogene mammals from the Mongolian Plateau. Nature, 394, 364–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, G. S. and Gidley, J. W. (1918). Synopsis of the supergeneric groups of rodents. Journal of the Washington Academy of Science, 8, 431–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, R. S. (1958). Rates of incisor growth in the mountain pocket gopher. Journal of Mammalogy, 39, 380–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphey,, P. C. (2001). Stratigraphy, fossil distribution, and depositional environments of the upper Bridger Formation (middle Eocene) of southwestern Wyoming, and taphonomy of an unusual Bridger microfossil assemblage. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Colorado, Boulder.
Ostrander, G. E. (1983). New early Oligocene (Chadronian) mammals from the Raben Ranch local fauna, northwest Nebraska. Journal of Paleontology, 57, 128–39.Google Scholar
Ostrander,, G. E. (1985). Correlation of the early Oligocene (Chadronian) in northwestern Nebraska. [In Fossiliferous Cenozoic Deposits of Western South Dakota and Northwestern Nebraska, ed. Martin, J. E..] Dakoterra, 2, 203--51.Google Scholar
Parmley, D. and Holman, J. A. (2003). Nebraskophis Holman from the late Eocene of Georgia (USA), the oldest known North American colubrid snake. Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia, 46, 1–8.Google Scholar
Peterson, O. A. (1919). A report upon the material discovered in the upper Eocene of the Uinta Basin by Earl Douglass in the years 1908–1909, and by O. A. Peterson in 1912. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 12, 40–168.Google Scholar
Prothero, D. R. and Heaton, R. H. (1996). Faunal stability during the early Oligocene climate crash. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 127, 257–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rasmussen, D. T., Conroy, G. C., Friscia, A. R., Townsend, K. E., and Kinkel, M. D. (1999). Mammals of the middle Eocene Uinta Formation. [In Vertebrate Paleontology in Utah, ed. Gillette, D. D..] Utah Geological Survey Miscellaneous Publication, 99–1, 401–20.Google Scholar
Rensberger, J. M. (1971). Entoptychine pocket gophers (Mammalia, Geomyoidea) of the early Miocene John Day Formation, Oregon. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, 90, 1–163.Google Scholar
Rensberger, J. M. (1973). Pleurolicine rodents (Geomyoidea) of the John Day Formation, Oregon. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, 102, 1–95.Google Scholar
Rensberger, J. M. (1975). Haplomys and its bearing on the origin of the aplodontid rodents. Journal of Mammalogy, 56, 1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rinaldi, C. and Cole, T. M. III. (2004). Environmental seasonality and incremental growth rates of beaver (Castor canadensis) incisors: implications for paleobiology. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 206, 289–301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, L. S. (1972). Tertiary Mammals of Saskatchewan, Part II: The Oligocene fauna, non-ungulate orders. Contributions of the Royal Ontario Museum, Life Sciences, 84, 1–63.Google Scholar
Shevyreva, N. S. (1972). New rodents from the Paleogene of Mongolia and Kazakhstan. Paleontological Journal, 3, 399–408.Google Scholar
Simpson, G. G. (1945). The principles of classification and a classifcation of mammals. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 85, 1–350.Google Scholar
Stains, H. J. (1959). Use of the calcaneum in studies of taxonomy and food habits. Journal of Mammalogy, 40, 392–401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storer, J. E. (1978). Rodents of the Calf Creek local fauna (Cypress Hills Formation, Oligocene, Chadronian), Saskatchewan. Contributions of the Saskatchewan Museum of Natural History, 1, 1–54.Google Scholar
Storer, J. E. (1984). Mammals of the Swift Current Creek Local Fauna (Eocene, Uintan, Saskatchewan). Contributions of the Saskatchewan Museum of Natural History, 7, 1–158.Google Scholar
Storer, J. E. (1988). The rodents of the Lac Pelletier lower fauna, late Eocene (Duchesnean) of Saskatchewan. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 8, 84–101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storer, J. E. (1994). A latest Chadronian (late Eocene) mammalian fauna from the Cypress Hills, Saskatchewan. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 31, 1335–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sutton, J. F. and Black, C. C. (1975). Paleontology of the earliest Oligocene deposits in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Part 1. Rodents exclusive of the Family Eomyidae. Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 45, 299–315.Google Scholar
Szalay,, F. S. (1985). Rodent and lagomorph morphotype adaptations, origins, and relationships: some postcranial attributes analyzed. In Evolutionary Relationships Among Rodents: A Multidisciplinary Analysis, ed. Luckett, W. P. and Hartenberger, J.-L., pp. 83–132. New York: Plenum Press.Google Scholar
Tabrum,, A. R., Prothero,, D. R., and Garcia,, D. (1996). Magnetostratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the Eocene–Oligocene transition, southwestern Montana. In The Terrestrial Eocene–Oligocene Transition in North America, ed. Prothero, D. R. and Emry, R. J., pp. 278–311. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tong, Y. (1997). Middle Eocene small mammals from Liguanqiao Basin of Henan Province and Yuanqu Basin of Shanxi Province, Central China. Paleontologia Sinica Series C, 26, 1–256. [In Chinese, English summary.]Google Scholar
Troxell, E. L. (1923). The Eocene rodents Sciuravus and Tillomys. American Journal of Science (Series 5), 5, 383–96.Google Scholar
Turnbull, W. D. (1991). Protoptychus hatcheri Scott, 1895. The mammalian faunas of the Washakie Formation, Eocene age, of southern Wyoming. Part II. The Adobetown Member, middle division (= Washakie B), Twka/2 (in part). Fieldiana Geology New Series, 21, 1–33.Google Scholar
Tyut'kova, L. A. (1997). A new cylindrodontid (Rodentia, Mammalia) from the Indricotherium fauna. Paleontological Journal, 31, 662–6.Google Scholar
Wahlert, J. H. (1968). Variability of rodent incisor enamel as viewed in thin section, and the microstructure of the enamel in fossil and recent rodent groups. Breviora, 309, 1–18.Google Scholar
Wahlert, J. H. (1973). Protoptychus, a hystricomorphous rodent from the late Eocene of North America. Breviora, 419, 1–14.Google Scholar
Wahlert, J. H. (1974). The cranial foramina of protrogomorphous rodents: an anatomical and phylogenetic study. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 146, 363–410.Google Scholar
Walsh, S. L. (1991). Late Eocene mammals from the Sweetwater Formation, San Diego County, California. [In Eocene Geologic History San Diego Region, ed. Abbott, P. L. and May, J. A.]. Pacific Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, 68, 149–59.Google Scholar
Walsh,, S. L.(1996). Middle Eocene mammal faunas of San Diego County, California. In The Terrestrial Eocene–Oligocene Transition in North America, ed. Prothero, D. R. and Emry, R. J., pp. 75–119. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Walsh, S. L.(1997). New specimens of Metanoiamys, Pauromys, and Simimys (Rodentia: Myomorpha) from the Uintan (middle Eocene) of San Diego County, California, and comments on the relationships of selected Paleogene Myomorpha. Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History, 32, 1–20.Google Scholar
Wang, B. Y. (1986). On the systematic position of Prosciurus lohiculus. Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 24, 285–94.Google Scholar
Westgate, J. W. (1988). Biostratigraphic implications of the first Eocene land mammal fauna from the North American coastal plain. Geology, 16, 995–8.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westgate,, J. W. (2001). Paleoecology and biostratigraphy of marginal marine Gulf Coast Eocene vertebrate localities. In Eocene Biodiversity: Unusual Occurrences and Rarely Sampled Habitats, ed. Gunnell, G. F., pp. 263–97. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.Google Scholar
Wilson,, J. A. (1986). Stratigraphic occurrence and correlation of early Tertiary vertebrate faunas, Trans-Pecos Texas: Aguna Fria--Green Valley areas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 6, 350–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1934). Two rodents and a lagomorph from the Sespe of the Las Posas Hills, California. Publication of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 453, 11–17.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1938). Review of some rodent genera from the Bridger Eocene. Part II. American Journal of Science, 35, 207–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1940). Pareumys remains from the later Eocene of California. Publication of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 514, 97–108.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1949a). Additional Eocene rodent material from southern California. Publication of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 584, 1–25.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1949b). Early Tertiary rodents of North America. Publication of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 584, 66–164.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. (1949c). Rodents and lagomorphs of the upper Sespe. Publication of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 584, 51–65.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1937). The mammalian fauna of the White River Oligocene. Part II. Rodentia. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 28, 157–269.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1955). A revised classification of the rodents. Journal of Mammalogy, 36, 165–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1962). The early Tertiary rodents of the Family Paramyidae. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, 52 (Part 1), 1–261.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1965). Small rodents from the early Eocene Lysite member, Wind River Formation of Wyoming. Journal of Paleontology, 39, 124–34.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1970). The early Oligocene rodent Ardynomys (Family Cylindrodontidae) from Mongolia and Montana. American Museum Novitates, 2418, 1–18.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1973). Eocene rodents, Pruett Formation, southwest Texas; their pertinence to the origin of the South American Caviomorpha. The Pearce-Sellards Series, Texas Memorial Museum, 20, 1–40.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1974). Early Tertiary vertebrate faunas Vieja Group Trans-Pecos Texas: Rodentia. Bulletin of the Texas Memorial Museum, 21, 1–112.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1975). The problem of the hystricognathous rodents. University of Michigan Papers in Paleontology, 12, 75–80.Google Scholar
Wood,, A. E. (1976). The Oligocene rodents Ischyromys and Titanotheriomys and the content of the Family Ischyromyidae. In Athlon: Essays in Paleontology in Honour of Loris Shano Russell, ed. Churcher, C. S., pp. 244–77. [Royal Ontario Museum Life Science Miscellaneous Publication.] Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1980). The Oligocene rodents of North America. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 70, 5 (Part), 1–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, A. E. (1984). Hystricognathy in the North American Oligocene rodent Cylindrodon and the origin of the Caviomorpha. [In Papers in Vertebrate Paleontology Honoring Robert Warren Wilson, ed. Mengel, R. M..] Special Publication of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 9, 151–60.Google Scholar
Wood, A. E. and Wilson, R. W. (1936). A suggested nomenclature for the cusps of the cheek teeth of rodents. Journal of Paleontology, 10, 388–91.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×