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Floridatragulus dolichanthereus – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/species/floridatragulus-dolichanthereus/

Floridatragulus dolichanthereus Quick Facts Common Name: none The fossils now recognized as one species of the camelid Floridatragulus dolichanthereus were initially assigned to two different families and four species. After better specimens were found and new research was done, it was discover
A) MCZ 646575, right lateral view of the holotype skull; B) MCZ 4086, labial view

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Love Site – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/sites/love-site/

Love Site (also known as LOVE BONE BED) University of Florida Vertebrate Fossil Locality AL001 Location About 1 mile north of Archer, Alachua County, Florida, just off Route 241; 29.55° N, 82.52° W. Age Late Miocene Epoch; latest Clarendonian land mammal age About 9.5 to 9 million y
P. cromis Labridae, genus and species indeterminate Lagodon sp., cf.

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Didelphis virginiana – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/species/didelphis-virginiana/

Didelphis virginiana Quick Facts Common Name: Virginia opossum, North American opossum The family Didelphidae originated in the Cretaceous and today is most diverse in South America. Didelphis virginiana was the last South American mammal to disperse into temperate North America during t
A left dentary of Didelphis virginiana (UF 56221) in A) medial, B) left lateral,

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Thecachampsa americana – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/species/thecachampsa-americana/

Thecachampsa americana Quick Facts Common Name: North American false gharial Thecachampsa americana is a long-snouted crocodile that inhabited Florida from 13 to 6 million years ago. Thecachampsa americana grew to around 6 meters long, slightly larger than its closest living ancestor, the
j, jugal; l, lacrimal; m, maxilla; n, nasal; o, orbit; ocd, occipital condyle; p,

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Hemingfordian North American Land Mammal Age – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/land-mammal-ages/hemingfordian/

Defining taxon: first appearance of 17 mammalian genera dispersing more or less simultaneously from Eurasia (Tedford et al., 2004); among those found in Florida are the bear-dog Amphicyon, the hemicyonine bear Phoberocyon, the mustelid Leptarctus, the rhino Floridaceras, and the dromomerycid Aletome
MacFadden, B. J., J. I. Bloch, H. Evans, D. A. Foster, G. S. Morgan, A. F.

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Land Mammal Ages – Florida Vertebrate Fossils

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/florida-vertebrate-fossils/land-mammal-ages/

Introduction and Definitions Land mammal ages (abbreviated LMAs) are intervals of geologic time characterized by a distinctive set of mammals (usually genera) for a particular geographic region (Lindsay, 2003). The geographic regions for the most commonly used LMAs are entire continents, so there a
Storrs, B. B. Curry, R. H. Fluegeman, M. R. Dawson and M. E. T. Flint. 2001.

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