2020-2021 Annual Report | Florida Museum of Natural History https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/feature/annualreport20-21/
Aiello, B., M. Tan, U.B. Sikandar, A.J. Alvey, B. Bhinderwala, K.C.
Aiello, B., M. Tan, U.B. Sikandar, A.J. Alvey, B. Bhinderwala, K.C.
Tapirus webbi Quick Facts Common Name: Webb’s tapir The oldest known species of Tapirus from Florida. Starting with this species, tapirs were a common component of Florida’s fauna for about 9 million years, until their extinction about 12,000 years ago. Some features of the skull sugge
A) lower p2, B) upper P4, C) upper M1, and D) upper M2, where p and m mean premolar
TESI), Gainesville, Florida 32611-2710 bmacfadd@ufl.edu Professional Preparation B.S
MacFadden, B. J. 2019. Broader Impacts of Science on Society.
Florida Pottery Bibliography Pottery Type Descriptions Ashley, Keith H. and Vicki L. Rolland 1997Â Â Â Grog-Tempered Pottery in the Mocama Province. The Florida Anthropologist 50(2):51-65. Online Austin, Robert J. 1996Â Â Â Ceramic Seriation, Radiocarbon Data, and Subsistence Data from the
Bullen, Adelaide K., and Ripley P.
Haliaeetus leucocephalus Quick Facts Common Name: bald eagle Fossils of this species are very rare. Only known from the late Pleistocene. Eagles are known from the early Pleistocene of Florida, but they are extinct species not closely related to the bald eagle. Age Range Late Pleis
Skull of a modern Haliaeetus leucocephalus in A) lateral, B) dorsal, and C) ventral
TESI Founding Director Phone: 352-273-1937 Email: bmacfadd@flmnh.ufl.edu Bruce J. MacFadden, TESI’s founding director (2018-2023) is a distinguished professor and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Florida’s Florida Museum of Natural History. On the UF faculty since 1977, h
New York: Cambridge University Press, 369 pp. MacFadden, B. J. 2019.
Welcome to the Florida Museum of Natural History’s annual report for fiscal year 2023. It’s been an exciting year with many changes for both the University of Florida and the museum!
Florida Museum photographer Kristen B.
Melbourne University of Florida Vertebrate Fossil Locality BR002 Location Western part of the city of Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida, at about 28.1° N, 80.6° W. Three separate localities were reported by Gidley and Loomis (1926), of which two produced almost all of the fossils in museum colle
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In Yat Kitischee: A Prehistoric Coastal Hamlet 100 B.C. – A.
Read online Bullen, Ripley P. 1968 A Guide to the Identification of Florida Projectile
Palmetto Fauna University of Florida Vertebrate Fossil Locality PO005, along with over 85 individual mines or specific areas within mines. A list of mines and their locality numbers provided below. Location The Palmetto Fauna derives from the Central Florida Phosphate District, a region of commer
P. caelata Pseudemys sp. cf. P. nelsoni †Pseudemys n. sp. Terrapene sp.