2004
DOI: 10.1671/2493
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A new species ofAelurodon(Carnivora, Canidae) from the Barstovian of Montana

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This led to the formation of a land connection between Siberia and Alaska through the Bering Strait. These intercontinental colonizations are contemporary to those of other taxa such as felids (Tedford et al, 1987;Hunt, 2004;Wang et al, 2004), but older than major colonizations of both continents by small and big mammals (Late Miocene, e.g., 7 and 4.5 Myr, and since 9 Myr; Tedford et al, 1987;Hunt, 1998;Webb and Opdyke, 1995;Tedford and Martin, 2001;and Van der Made et al, 2002).…”
Section: Biogeographymentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This led to the formation of a land connection between Siberia and Alaska through the Bering Strait. These intercontinental colonizations are contemporary to those of other taxa such as felids (Tedford et al, 1987;Hunt, 2004;Wang et al, 2004), but older than major colonizations of both continents by small and big mammals (Late Miocene, e.g., 7 and 4.5 Myr, and since 9 Myr; Tedford et al, 1987;Hunt, 1998;Webb and Opdyke, 1995;Tedford and Martin, 2001;and Van der Made et al, 2002).…”
Section: Biogeographymentioning
confidence: 93%
“…We compiled occurrence data for North American fossil canids from the Neogene Mammal Mapping Portal (NeoMap, http://ucmp.berkeley.edu/neomap [47,48]) and Fossilworks/Paleobiology Database (http://www.fossilworks.org; http://www.paleobiodb.org). We last accessed the databases on 24 March 2017, cross-checking database records against the canid monographs by Wang et al [35][36][37] and more recent occurrences in the literature [49][50][51]. In cases of overlap between the two databases, we used the occurrence record from NeoMap, because NeoMap's maximum and minimum age records, when crosschecked against the literature, were more precise than those of Fossilworks/the Paleobiology Database, which assigns dates based on the occurrence or locality's time interval and therefore tends to be of more variable precision.…”
Section: Calculating Success In Space and Time For Fossil Canidsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In practice, this approach has consisted of establishing a succession of ancestor–descendant relationships among fossil taxa within a lineage, based on a combination of known stratigraphic relations between some of them combined with transformation series in chosen key characters, and using this linear arrangement as a proxy for time. Lindsay (2003) recently formalized this method as “the chronologic ordering of faunal assemblages based on morphological (evolutionary) differences observed in members of a single, well‐established phyletic lineage.” SOE analyses have been widely used in Cenozoic mammalian studies (e.g., Woodburne et al., 1993; Eberle, 1999; Lindsay, 2003; Wang et al., 2004), in large part due to the absence of widely distributed correlative strata between disjunct continental depositional basins where the majority of terrestrial vertebrates are preserved. Stage of evolution argumentation was also used in attempts to age and order Mesozoic faunas of the Gobi Desert and adjacent areas of northern China (Kielan‐Jaworowska, 1974; Gradzinski et al., 1977), another continental region that lacks widespread correlative strata, interdigitation with marine sediments, and rocks amenable to radioisotopic age determination (Hicks et al., 1999; Jerzykiewicz, 2000).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stage of evolution argumentation was also used in attempts to age and order Mesozoic faunas of the Gobi Desert and adjacent areas of northern China (Kielan‐Jaworowska, 1974; Gradzinski et al., 1977), another continental region that lacks widespread correlative strata, interdigitation with marine sediments, and rocks amenable to radioisotopic age determination (Hicks et al., 1999; Jerzykiewicz, 2000). Recent practical examples of “stage of evolution” method include cases in which biochronologic age is inferred from observed intermediate character states in a transformation series whose end points are defined by successive taxa with known stratigraphic relationships (Eberle, 1999), as well as examples in which empirically derived phylogenetic hypotheses were employed to support a phylogenetically and therefore temporally intermediate status for a particular fossil taxon (Wang et al., 2004). It should be noted, however, that SOE analysis generally assumes a linear progression of ancestor–descendant taxa, which will only be compatible with pectinate portions of cladograms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%