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Desmodus stocki – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/species/desmodus-stocki/

Desmodus stocki Quick Facts Common Name: Stock’s vampire bat With a range extending to Virginia, this species lived further north than any other vampire bat, fossil or living. Desmodus stocki likely weighed about 50% more than the living vampire Desmodus rotundus. Its large, sharp canin
Vertebrate Fossils Desmodus stocki Fossil Species of Florida Vertebrate Fossil Sites

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University of Florida Contributions to Paleobiology – Invertebrate Paleontology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/invertpaleo/resources/uf-paleobiology/

Updated and edited by Roger W. Portell The following bibliography represents a selection of peer-reviewed contributions by present and former staff of the Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville. Citations are not necessarily in order by date published and do not repre
Animal remains from four preceramic sites in Florida.

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Epicyon haydeni – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/species/epicyon-haydeni/

Epicyon haydeni Quick Facts Common Name: none About the size of a grizzly bear, this species is the largest canid ever known. Its known range extended across the United States from Florida to California and Oregon. Age Range Middle to late Miocene epoch; Clarendonian to early Hem
Vertebrate Fossils Epicyon haydeni Fossil Species of Florida Vertebrate Fossil Sites

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Downtown St. Augustine – Historical Archaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/histarch/research/st-augustine/downtown/

In 1565 a fleet of Spanish ships led by Pedro Menéndez de Aviles established the first permanent European settlement in North America at present-day St. Augustine, Florida. After a difficult first decade of conflict with the local Timucua Indians, the city established itself as the capital of Spani
The Fort and Settlement The Fountain of Youth Park The Nombre de Dios Mission Sites

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The Native Peoples of Turks and Caicos – Caribbean Archaeology Program

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/caribarch/education/tc-peoples/

Long before Columbus, the islands of the Caribbean were home to Native American peoples. Over thousands of years, these island inhabitants built rich and diverse cultures, with their own technology, diet, history, religion, and art. Sadly, these people all but disappeared in less than a generation a
Frequent movement of village sites is evident from the absence of deeply stratified

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