Search:
Go
English
Deutsch
Français
Japanese
Chinese Simplified
Chinese Traditional
Korean
Russian
Arabic
Česky
Greek
Italiano
Afrikaans
Aragonés
Armenian
Asturianu
Azerbaijani
Bahasa Indonesia
Bahasa Melayu
Bangla
Bashkir
Belarusian
Bosanski
Brezhoneg
Bulgarian
Català
Cymraeg
Dansk
Eesti
Español
Esperanto
Euskara
Frysk
Furlan
Føroyskt
Gaeilge
Gàidhlig
Galego
Gujarati
Hebrew
Hindi
Hrvatski
Interlingua
Íslenska
Kannada
Kaszëbsczi
Kazakh
Kiswahili
Kurdî
Kyrgyz
Latviski
Lëtzebuergesch
Lietuvių
Lingua Latina
Magyar
Makedonski
Marathi
Nederlands
Nordfriisk
Norsk
O'zbekcha
Occitan
Ossetian
Persian
Polski
Português
Punjabi Gurmukhi
Română
Rumantsch
Sardu
Seeltersk
Shqip
Sicilianu
Sinhala
Slovensko
Slovensky
Srpski
Suomi
Svenska
Tagalog
Taiwanese
Tamil
Tatarça
Telugu
Thai
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
Türkmençe
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uyghurche
DMOZ Internet Directory
Presented by
DMOZLive.com
Home
About
Submit Site
Tweet
Home
Science
Earth Sciences
Paleontology
Vertebrates
Mammals
Multituberculata
4 Sites
The multituberculates are a major branch of mammals that survived for a long period of time but eventually became extinct at the end of the Paleogene period.
Sites
[ Submit ]
Multituberculata
- Information from Wikipedia on these rodent-like mammals that first appeared in the middle Jurassic and became extinct in the early Oligocene.
Introduction to Multituberculates
- Provides information on this major branch of mammals with a 100 million year fossil history which became completely extinct and have no living descendants.
Order Multituberculata
- Information on the mammals of this extinct order, their characters and anatomy, paleobiology, major subgroups, fossil record, literature and web links.
Paleocene Mammals of the World: Multituberculates
- Provides information on this diverse lineage of Mesozoic to early Cenozoic mammals with details of its biology and anatomy and an illustration of the Paleocene multituberculate, Ptilodus.
Click
[ Submit ]
above to Add a New Site, Update a Site, or Remove a Site from this Category.
This directory is made available through a Creative Commons Attribution license from the
DMOZ Organization.