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Topic: Liotomus


In the News (Sun 26 May 13)

  
  Anconodon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It is also known as Ectopodon (Russell 1967); Ectypodus (partly); Liotomus (partly); and Ptilodus (partly).
russelli (Simpson 1935; Jepsen 1940); Ectopodon cochranensis (Russel 1967); Ectypodus cochranensis (Simpson 1937a); Ectypodus russelli (Simpson 1935d); Liotomus russelli; and Ptilodus cochranensis (Russell 1929).
Fossil remains have been found in the Tiffanian (Middle-Upper Paleocene)-age strata of Alberta (Canada) and Montana and Wyoming (USA).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Anconodon   (318 words)

  
 Liotomus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liotomus is a genus of extinct mammal from the Paleocene of Europe and North America, and thus lived just after the "age of the dinosaurs.
It was a member of the extinct order Multituberculata, lying within the suborder Cimolodonta and possibly the family Cimolodontidae.
Liotomus sinclairi, which also seems to have been known as Ptilodus sinclairi, has probably since become Parectypodus sinclairi.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liotomus   (268 words)

  
 Liotomus
Liotomus is a mammal genus from the Paleocene of Europe and North America, and thus lived just after ‘the age of the dinosaurs'.
Further remarks: Liotomus sinclairi, (which also seems to have been known as Ptilodus sinclairi), has probably since become Parectypodus sinclairi.
The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/li/Liotomus.html   (191 words)

  
 Liotomus - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Liotomus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Liotomus is a mammal genus from the Paleocene of Europe and North America, and thus lived just after "the age of the dinosaurs." It was a member of the extinct order of Multituberculata, lying within the suborder Cimolodonta and possibly the family Cimolodontidae.
This genus is sometimes placed within Eucosmodontidae (Jepsen, 1940).
Known from the Upper Paleocene of Cernay, France.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Liotomus.html   (217 words)

  
 Cimolodontidae   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
After McKenna and Bell, 1997 and Kielan-Jaworowska and Hurum, 2001
<==o &#8224;Cimolodontidae Marsh, 1889 ?- †Liotomus marshi (Lemoine, 1882) Cope, 1884 [Neoctenacodon marshi Lemoine, 1882?] ?- †Essonodon browni Simpson, 1927 [treated as a cimolomyid by Kielan-Jaworowska and Hurum (2001)] --o †Anconodon Jepsen, 1940
cochranensis (Russell, 1929) [Liotomus russelli (Simpson, 1935); Ectopodon cochranensis Russell, 1967] `--o †Cimolodon Marsh, 1889 [Nanomys Marsh, 1889, Nonomyops Marsh, 1892] -- †C.
www.fmnh.helsinki.fi /users/haaramo/metazoa/deuterostoma/chordata/synapsida/basal_mammalia/Allotheria/Cimolodontidae.htm   (150 words)

  
 'MESOZOIC' MAMMALS; Ptilodontoidea, an internet directory
This is surely also known as Liotomus sinclairi.
I don't know who might have referred this species to Liotomus, when, or indeed whether.
Such an interpretation doesn't seem to be in line with present thinking, (eg.
home.arcor.de /ktdykes/ptilodon.htm   (8679 words)

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