Dawn of the Age of Mammals in the northern part of the Rocky Mountain Interior, North America

The biogeographic origins of late Paleocene–early Eocene mammalian immigrants to the Western Interior of North America
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Published:January 01, 1990
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CiteCitation
David W. Krause, Mary C. Maas, 1990. "The biogeographic origins of late Paleocene–early Eocene mammalian immigrants to the Western Interior of North America", Dawn of the Age of Mammals in the northern part of the Rocky Mountain Interior, North America, Thomas M. Bown, Kenneth D. Rose
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South America, Central America, the southeastern United States, Arctic Canada, Europe, Asia, and Africa all have been suggested as possible or probable biogeographic sources for taxa that appeared in the Western Interior of North America during the late Paleocene and early Eocene. Recent compilations of the geographic and temporal distributions of Paleocene and Eocene mammals and new data, derived primarily from recent collections from early Tiffanian (late Paleocene) quarries in the Crazy Mountains Basin of south-central Montana, permit tests of these hypotheses, particularly those involving a southern New World origin.
Significant first appearances of mammalian higher taxa in the Western...
- Adapidae
- Amblypoda
- Artiodactyla
- Beringia
- biogeography
- Cenozoic
- Chordata
- Clarkforkian
- Crazy Mountains
- Dinocerata
- Eocene
- Eutheria
- faunal list
- lower Eocene
- lower Paleocene
- Mammalia
- Montana
- North America
- Notoungulata
- Omomyidae
- Paleocene
- paleoclimatology
- Paleogene
- paleogeography
- paleotemperature
- Perissodactyla
- phylogeny
- Primates
- Prosimii
- Rodentia
- species diversity
- stratigraphy
- Tertiary
- Tetrapoda
- Theria
- Tiffanian
- Tillodontia
- Torrejonian
- United States
- upper Paleocene
- Vertebrata
- Wasatchian
- Western Interior
- Hyaenodontidae
- Palaeanodonta
- Arctostylopidae