「eocene」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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orphology to the living A.filiculoides and the | Eocene A. intertrappea of India. |
It represents the Late Cretaceous to | Eocene accretion of what is known as the "Insular Sup |
berlite field is a group of Late Cretaceous to | Eocene age diatremes in the Northwest Territories, Ca |
carbonates of Upper Cretaceous, Paleocene and | Eocene age produce in 150 fields on significant horst |
fossil site is a paleontological site of early | Eocene age in south-eastern Queensland, Australia. |
old Hillier Gardens are on younger deposits of | Eocene age, sloping from a ridge of the Nursling sand |
64 m), into the "Point of Rocks" formation, of | Eocene age. |
It includes late Cretaceous to | Eocene aged impure limestone along with coal bearing |
res' diversity exploded, and by the end of the | Eocene, all living orders of Epitheria had appeared. |
This locality is placed in the early | Eocene Allenby Formation,designated the type locality |
lain in the east and the more wooded and hilly | Eocene and Oligocene in the west. |
appeared in the fossil record during the late | Eocene and then died out during the Oligocene. |
France, a geological formation containing Late | Eocene and Early Oligocene deposits. |
dae are a family of cephalopods known from the | Eocene, and bearing close similarity to the sepiid cu |
lived 45-37 million years ago, during the Late | Eocene and the earliest part of the Oligocene. |
ler members of Rhinocerotoidea during the Late | Eocene and Early Oligocene. |
re Basin", an area of relatively non-resistant | Eocene and Oligocene clays and gravels which are prot |
ectonically active during the Late Cretaceous, | Eocene and Early Oligocene periods. |
Fossils date back to the | Eocene and have been found from Hunan, China. |
Mesohippus in north America during the middle | Eocene and thrived until the late Miocene. |
Several skull bones were found in the upper | Eocene and lower Oligocene Jebel Qatrani Formation of |
It is noteworthy for being the largest known | Eocene anomaluroid. |
ran (echolocating) bat that lived in the early | Eocene, approximately 52.2 million years ago. |
merican meiolaniids, including Crossochelys in | Eocene Argentina, and the problematic Niolamia argent |
Tylopoda appeared during the | Eocene around 46.2 million years ago. |
e abundant nature of Cixiidae as inclusions in | Eocene Baltic amber a number of taxa have been descri |
Fairly well preserved in | Eocene Baltic amber, the female individual has a torn |
The genus is solely known from the Early | Eocene Baltic amber deposits in the Baltic Sea region |
tains uranium ore in fluvial sandstones of the | Eocene Battle Spring Formation. |
s From the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi", | Eocene biodiversity: unusual occurrences and rarely s |
One discrepancy is the ratio possessed by the | Eocene bird Limnosa gypsorum, which was only 63% of t |
Paul Gervais describes the | Eocene bird genus Ludiortyx |
ssignable to this genus were found in the Late | Eocene Blanche Point Marls at Witton Bluff near Adela |
This has exposed | Eocene carbonates which could confuse dating. |
oldest sediments which are exposed are Middle | Eocene carbonates found in the Avon Park Formation. |
The species is solely known from the late | Eocene, Chadronian stage, Florissant Formation deposi |
is known only from fossilised pollen found in | Eocene deposits of East Germany. |
otenic salamander from late Paleocene to early | Eocene deposits of Cherkassy Region, central Ukraine. |
Daphoenus lambei fossils found in | Eocene Duchesnean rocks at the Big Red Horizon Site, |
toceratidae, endemic to North America from the | Eocene epoch (Uintan to Chadronian stage) 40.2-33.9 |
toceratidae, endemic to North America from the | Eocene epoch (Duchesnean to Chadronian stage) 40.2-33 |
ich existed in northern Italy during the early | Eocene epoch (Ypresian age). |
atidae, endemic to North America from the Late | Eocene epoch (Chadronian stage) 37.2-33.9 |
iidae endemic to North America during the Late | Eocene epoch (38-33.9 |
e that lived during the middle division of the | Eocene epoch of Egypt. |
toceratidae, endemic to North America from the | Eocene epoch (Uintan to Chadronian stage) 46.2-33.9 |
toceratidae, endemic to North America from the | Eocene epoch (Uintan to Duchesnean stage) 40.2-33.9 |
f lacertibaenian lizard which lived during the | Eocene epoch (Lutetian stage, about 47 million years |
ng chalk beds some 56 million years ago in the | Eocene epoch and were transported by water action to |
endemic to southwestern North America from the | Eocene epoch (Late Uintan stage) 46.2-42 Ma, existing |
is a genus of paleognath bird from the middle | Eocene epoch of central Europe. |
ke Pogonodon and Nimravus, it lived during the | Eocene epoch (30.8mya). |
deposits but a few examples are known from the | Eocene epoch onwards. |
Ma) within the Middle | Eocene epoch of the Paleogene used more specifically |
he Ypresian to the Lutetian ages of the Middle | Eocene epoch (55.8 to 40.4 million years ago). |
Ma) within the | Eocene epoch of the Paleogene used more specifically |
Ma) within the Late | Eocene epoch of the Paleogene used more specifically |
fish which existed in Russia during the middle | Eocene epoch (Bartonian age). |
Ma) within the Early | Eocene epoch of the Paleogene used more specifically |
illion years ago (in the Lutetian stage of the | Eocene epoch) the climate was tropical and an ancient |
In the | Eocene epoch, the pit was a swampy freshwater lake th |
ed from the Early Cretaceous epoch through the | Eocene epoch, and perhaps through the Oligocene as we |
et covered northern and central Belgium in the | Eocene epoch. |
elaletidae endemic to North America during the | Eocene epoch. |
al South American Land Mammal Age of the lower | Eocene epoch. |
It lived during the | Eocene epoch. |
s more recently come to be considered from the | Eocene epoch. |
This species dates from the | Eocene epoch. |
during the Early Cenozoic era, during the Late | Eocene epoch. |
s dates back millions of years ago to the late | Eocene Epoch. |
tion around the Northern Hemisphere during the | Eocene epoch. |
y Paleocene epoch to the Lutetian stage of the | Eocene epoch. |
h that lived during the middle division of the | Eocene epoch. |
Generation began in | Eocene era and continues to present. |
out 50 million years ago during the late early | Eocene era, with specimens found in Central Wyoming. |
It lived in | Eocene Europe, and is closely related to Hyrachyus. |
The Lower | Eocene Floras of Southeastern North America |
e single known Sassafras species leaf from the | Eocene Florissant formation. |
i, and D. wilsoni have all been recovered from | Eocene fossil sites in British Columbia, Canada and W |
ting structure found in the early Ypresian age | Eocene fossils found in British Columbia, Canada. |
The nearby Messel pit is an important site for | Eocene fossils. |
tion, New Jersey and from leaves dating to the | Eocene found in the Klondike Mountain Formation, Wash |
modern horse family Equidae, that lived in the | Eocene, from 46 to 38 million years ago. |
The Ocala Limestone is a late | Eocene geologic formation of exposed limestones near |
The Avon Park Formation is a Middle | Eocene geologic formation and is the oldest exposed s |
The crater dates to the late | Eocene geological time period (about 35 million years |
E. antelios and Eurotamandua of | Eocene Germany helped to support a hypothesis that th |
eged European phorusrhacid Aenigmavis, also of | Eocene Germany. |
†Peltandra primaeva - | Eocene, Golden Valley Formation, North Dakota, USA |
es were described after fossils from the Early | Eocene Green River Formation (c.49 million years ago) |
te Wasatchian (51-52 MYA) stratum of the Early | Eocene Green River Formation of the Western-Central U |
us only being described and found in the Early | Eocene Green River Formation. |
ilarly aged species, A. berry, from the Middle | Eocene Green River Formation. |
The Middle | Eocene Hassiavis, a more recently described bird from |
Fossils of the species from the Late | Eocene Hoko River Formation are noted as one of the t |
N. cookanum fossils from the late | Eocene Hoko River Formation in Washington state are t |
astropod that lived from the Cretaceous to the | Eocene in Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, and So |
s a genus of brontothere that lived during the | Eocene, in the Western United States, especially in D |
, may have come from deposits as early as Late | Eocene in age. |
arsus is an extinct genus of flamingo from the | Eocene in the USA. |
pread, first being found in Asia in the middle | Eocene, in Europe during the latest Eocene, and havin |
lived during the Lutetian epoch of the middle | Eocene, in Monte Bolca. |
ian that lived from the Late Cretaceous to the | Eocene in North America. |
Following the | Eocene intrusive and volcanic events of the Solitario |
Having also been dated to the late | Eocene, it is possible that this crater may have been |
tinct species Corylopsis reedae described from | Eocene leaf fossils found in Washington State, USA. |
rontothere endemic to North America during the | Eocene living from 55.8-48.6 mya, existing for approx |
rontothere endemic to North America during the | Eocene living from 48.6-37.2 |
nd tapirs) endemic to North America during the | Eocene living from 46.2-33.9 |
rontothere endemic to North America during the | Eocene living from 50.3-42 mya, existing for approxim |
astline of the ancient Tethys Ocean during the | Eocene living from 55.8-40.4 |
astline of the ancient Tethys Ocean during the | Eocene living from 55.8-48.6 mya, existing for approx |
astline of the ancient Tethys Ocean during the | Eocene living from 55.8-48.6 mya, existing for approx |
astline of the ancient Tethys Ocean during the | Eocene living from 48.6-37.2 |
E. aberensis (Middle to Late | Eocene, Loch Aber). |
n Lake Formation deposits, dated to the middle | Eocene Lutetian stage (49 to 40 million years ago), f |
The formation consists of early | Eocene marine clay and sand. |
Fossils have been found from the | Eocene Messel Pit in Germany. |
e bulk of the oil is found in deltaic sands of | Eocene Mirador and the Upper Cretaceous formation. |
constellationfishes are known since the Early | Eocene, more than 40 million years ago. |
hat the genus was already distinct in the Late | Eocene, more than 35 million years ago. |
Entomacodon (Middle | Eocene, North America; synonym: Centracodon) |
idae), perhaps comparable in size to the Early | Eocene Odontopteryx toliapica. |
oid that lived from the Middle Triassic to the | Eocene of Asia, Europe, North America, and New Zealan |
flying squirrel) rodent from the earliest late | Eocene of the Birket Qarun Formation from northern Eg |
of a new species of Protictis from the middle | Eocene of northwestern Wyoming. |
pecies, A. eocaenicus is known from the Middle | Eocene of the Kumsky Horizon, in what is now the Nort |
ct genus of notoungulate mammal from the early | Eocene of South America and the only member of the fa |
odents known from the late Paleocene and early | Eocene of Asia and North America (McKenna and Bell, 1 |
merica, and its fossils come from the earliest | Eocene of the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming. |
lived during the Lutetian epoch, of the Middle | Eocene of Monte Bolca, Italy. |
. Mook for material from the Bridgerian (early | Eocene) of Wyoming, but was reassigned to Procaimanoi |
"High bat (Chiroptera) diversity in the Early | Eocene of India". |
Garatherium (Early | Eocene of Algeria) - possibly an adapisoriculid euthe |
Pyrazus pentagonatus (Schlotheim, 1820) - from | Eocene of Hungary |
the Miocene of Spain and F. exusta is from the | Eocene of the Florissant Formation, Colorado. |
Paleocene of Alberta; and B. wilsoni, from the | Eocene of Wyoming. |
leodon is a genus of brontothere from the late | Eocene of North America |
Wyoming; and L. wilsoni (Mook, 1959), from the | Eocene of Wyoming. |
enus of tomistomine crocodilian from the early | Eocene of Morocco. |
nct genus of dyrosaurid crocodyliform from the | Eocene of North Africa. |
orrisi is a species of fossil lobster from the | Eocene of southern England. |
Fossil Mammalia of the Huerfano Formation, | Eocene, of Colorado by Peter Robinson |
tinct genus of horned entelodont from the Late | Eocene of Death Valley, California. |
extinct genus of bivalve mollusk from the late | Eocene of Europe. |
a is an extinct genus of parrot from the lower | Eocene of Denmark. |
haeophis is an extinct genus of snake from the | Eocene of Monte Bolca. |
Fossil nummulitid foraminiferans; | Eocene of the United Arab Emirates; scale in mm. |
an extinct genus of Gastornithidae from Lower | Eocene of Wyoming. |
an extinct genus of primitive bird from Early | Eocene of Wyoming. |
can ungulate, from the late Paleocene to early | Eocene of Argentina. |
ct genus of sebecid mesoeucrocodylian from the | Eocene of western Europe. |
was one of the last Uintatheres, from the Mid | Eocene of Mongolia. |
inct genus of small alligatorid from the early | Eocene of Germany, found at the Messel pit. |
genus of the family Protostrigidae from early | Eocene of Wyoming and the London Clay of England. |
us Remiornis, a putative ratite known from the | Eocene of France. |
s of anthracotheriid artiodactyl from the late | Eocene of Asia, Europe, and North America. |
own true (and scaled) pangolin from the Middle | Eocene of Europe. |
ned as such by Carroll (1998), from the Middle | Eocene of China. |
ong to Diplocynodon instead, is from the Early | Eocene of Belgium. A. polyodon, A. heterodon, and A. |
arently arose from early dugongids in the late | Eocene or early Oligocene. |
Jadwiszczak, Piotr (2006): | Eocene penguins of Seymour Island, Antarctica: Taxono |
It lived during the middle | Eocene period 45 million years ago. |
It lived during the | Eocene period of Europe, in forests, and may have bee |
extinct genus of ancient whale known from the | Eocene period of the United States. |
h existed in what is now Washington during the | Eocene period. |
ch existed in what is now Lithuania during the | Eocene period. |
Protochiton became extinct during the | Eocene period. |
ecies of weasel shark which existed during the | Eocene period. |
t existed in what is now Kazakhstan during the | Eocene period. |
cetacean which existed in Pakistan during the | Eocene period. |
l existed in what is now Kazakhstan during the | Eocene period. |
ct genus of Mecoptera which existed during the | Eocene period. |
ch existed in Alaska and Washington during the | Eocene period. |
eetle which existed in Ukraine during the late | Eocene period. |
existed in what is now China during the early | Eocene period. |
ted in Inner Mongolia, China, during the early | Eocene period. |
existed in what is now Ukraine during the late | Eocene period. |
0 m of ancient lake sediments containing Early | Eocene pollen, this age thus giving a minimum estimat |
mchuck Rock belongs to the upper member of the | Eocene Puget Group. |
he Tertiary of Europe and the Palaeocene-early | Eocene Rekmangiri Coalfield of Garo Hills, Meghalaya, |
Archetypomys is an extinct genus of early | Eocene rodent and the only member of the family Arche |
n the Oligocene Icotea Formation and the older | Eocene sandstones. |
ct genus of camel, lived during middle to late | Eocene some 45-40 million years ago in North America. |
ved in the Al Fayyum in Egypt, during the late | Eocene some 35 million years ago. |
of prehistoric genera are known since the Late | Eocene, some 40-35 million years ago. |
It lived approximately at the end of the | Eocene, some 35 mya in what today is France. |
southern coast of Peru together with an early | Eocene species Perudyptes devriesi (comparable in siz |
s, as its remains were found in Middle or Late | Eocene strata (34-50 MYA) of the La Meseta Formation |
tive entelodont found in slightly older Middle | Eocene strata of Mongolia. |
a Gentoo Penguin), was found in Middle or Late | Eocene strata (34-50 MYA) of the La Meseta Formation |
During the | Eocene through Oligocene (55.8-23 |
to North America, Europe, and Asia during the | Eocene through early Miocene living from 55.8-20 mya, |
It lived during the Late | Eocene through Oligocene epochs. |
subduction, and arc volcanism from the Middle | Eocene to the Early Pliocene. |
ed mammals (artiodactyls) known from the early | Eocene to late Oligocene of North America, Europe, an |
Copedelphys (Late | Eocene to Early Oligocene, North America) |
merica known from compression fossils from the | Eocene to Oligocene (56 to 23 million years ago) foun |
iodactyla, endemic to North America during the | Eocene to Miocene, living 42 to 20.6 million years ag |
ibly Australia, dating from the Middle or Late | Eocene to the Late Oligocene; the Australian Middle M |
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