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         Mammoths Paleontology:     more books (59)
  1. On the discovery of mammoth and other remains in Endsleigh Street: And on sections exposed in Endsleigh Gardens, Gordon Street, Gordon Square, and Tavistock Sqaure, London by Henry Hicks, 1892
  2. The Naco mammoth by Emil W Haury, 1952
  3. The Lehner Mammoth site, Southeastern Arizona (University of Arizona. Program in Geochronology, contribution) by Emil W Haury, 1959
  4. On the question of the nature of formation of the "mammoth graveyard" at Gari =: K voprosu o prirode obrazovanii¸ a¸¡ "kladʹishcha mamontov" v Garii¸ a¸¡kh by I¸ U¸¡. B Serikov, 1983
  5. A new mammoth, Elephas hayi, from Crete, Nebraska (Nebraska Geological Survey) by Erwin Hinckley Barbour, 1915
  6. Paleontological salvage excavations at the Canton Lake Mammoth Site (OMNH V1085) by Roger J Burkhalter, 1998
  7. Mammoth: The Resurrection of an Ice Age Giant by Richard Stone, 2002-09
  8. Mammoths on the Move by Lisa Wheeler, 2006-04-01
  9. The Fate of the Mammoth: Fossils, Myth, and History by Claudine Cohen, 2002-04-02
  10. Mammoths by Adrian Lister, Paul Bahn, 1998-08
  11. Mysterious Mammoths: Book 5 of PaleoJoe's Dinosaur Detective Club by Wendy Caszatt-Allen, 2008-04-01
  12. Osteology for the Archaeologist: American Mastadon and the Woolly Mammoth; North American Birds: Skulls and Mandibles; North American Birds: Postcranial ... Harvard University, V. 56, No. 3 and 4.) by Stanley J. Olsen, 1972
  13. Mammoths, Mastodonts, and Elephants: Biology, Behavior and the Fossil Record by Gary Haynes, 1993-05-28
  14. Outside and Inside Woolly Mammoths (Outside and Inside (Walker & Company)) by Sandra Markle, 2007-05-15

21. Demise Of Atlantis And The Pleistocene Extinction
Woolly mammoths, mastodons, toxodons, sabretoothed tigers, woolly rhinos, giantground sloths, and many other large Pleistocene animals are simply no longer
http://www.atlantisquest.com/Paleontology.html
  • HOME Page
  • PALEONTOLOGICAL
    TESTIMONY
    The Pleistocene Extinction
    Paleontologists the world over know that something catastrophic happened to the large mammals roaming the world during the Pleistocene Epoch. Woolly mammoths, mastodons, toxodons, sabre-toothed tigers, woolly rhinos, giant ground sloths, and many other large Pleistocene animals are simply no longer with us. In fact, well over 200 species of animals (involving millions of individuals) totally disappeared at the end of the Pleistocene some 10,000-12,000 years ago in what is known to Paleontologists as the Pleistocene Extinction (Click for table)
    THE AMERICAN REMAINS
    Back in middle 1940s Dr. Frank C. Hibben, Prof. of Archeology at the University of New Mexico mounted an expedition to Alaska to look for human remains. The remains he found were not human, but what he found was anything but evidence of gradualism or uniformitarianism. Instead he found miles of muck filled with the remains of mammoth, mastodon, several kinds of bison, horses, wolves, bears and lions. Just north of Fairbanks, Hibbens and his associates watched as bulldozers pushed the half-melted muck into sluice boxes for the extraction of gold. Animal tusks and bones rolled up in front of the blades "like shavings before a giant plane". The carcasses were found in all attitudes of death, most of them "pulled apart by some unexplainable prehistoric catastrophic disturbance" (Hibben, 1946).
    The evidence of the violence of nature combined with the stench of rotting carcasses was staggering. The ice fields containing these remains stretched for hundred of miles in every direction (Hibben, 1946). Trees and animals, layers of peat and mosses, twisted and mangled together like some giant mixer had jumbled them some 10,000 years ago, and then froze them into a solid mass (Sanderson, 1960). The evidence immediately suggests an enormous tidal wave which raged over the land, tumbling animals and vegetation within its mass, which was then quick-frozen. But the extinction is not limited to the Arctic.

    22. Paleontology Resources For K-12
    Metasite where teachers, librarians, parents and students can preview curriculum related materials.Category Science Earth Sciences paleontology Education Pre-College...... Oceans of Kansas paleontology, Mosasaurs (extinct marine reptiles), plesiosaurs,art and more. From Berkeley Mammoth Saga Virtual exhibit of mammoths and other
    http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/paleontology.htm

    23. Santa Barbara Museum Of Natural History
    and the Channel Islands pygmy mammoths. The most complete Pygmy Mammoth skeletonever found inspired the centerpiece of the Geology and paleontology Hall a
    http://www.sbnature.org/exhibits/geopaleo/
    The Geology and Paleontology Hall
    The formation and history of our region
    are described and highlighted with examples of living things that occurred here in the past. Among the unique and important fossils exhibited here are a 19,000-year-old toothed bird, a Miocene giant toothed whale, and the Channel Islands pygmy mammoths.
    The most complete Pygmy Mammoth skeleton ever found inspired the centerpiece of the Geology and Paleontology Hall a re-creation of the skeleton as it appeared in situ . Adjacent to this is an exhibit with an articulated Pygmy Mammoth skeleton and a painting of a full-sized Columbian Mammoth and American Mastodon. Columbian Mammoths swam to Santarosae, a large island off our coast during Pleistocene times. As sea levels rose and Santarosae became several smaller islands, the mammoths evolved into a pygmy form better suited to survival in the limited habitat.
    Channel Islands Pygmy Mammoth ( Mammuthus exilis
    A fantastic new discovery has been brought to the forefront of science with the recent discovery of the most complete skeleton to date of a Channel Islands Pygmy Mammoth ( Mammuthus exilis ). The skeleton was excavated on Santa Rosa Island in August of 1994 by a team of National Park Service researchers led by Dr. Larry Agenbroad, a Museum Research Associate.

    24. PAST LIVES: CHRONICLES OF CANADIAN PALEONTOLOGY - Chapter 38
    PAST LIVES CHRONICLES OF CANADIAN paleontology. Chapter 38. David Thompson mammothhunter. David Thompson’s quest for mammoths transcended the living and the
    http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/gsc/calgary/canpal/pastlives/38_e.html
    Français Contact Us Help Search ... GSCC Home
    Calgary Introduction
    1. Earth's Bones

    2. Deep Time

    3. Pethei Stromatolites
    ...
    About the Authors
    PAST LIVES: CHRONICLES OF CANADIAN PALEONTOLOGY
    Chapter 38. David Thompson: mammoth hunter David Thompson’s quest for mammoths transcended the living and the fossil realm. He looked, in vain, in stream banks throughout the west for fossil bones and tusks and then was challenged by the possibility of meeting a living mammoth in a pass through the Rockies A tusk, third molar and large bone of a mammoth from the Yukon Territory. Tusk is over 1.1 m across curvature. University of Alberta Collections. Photo by BDEC (c). The scientific and systematic search for fossils in Canada started in 1797 when the celebrated geographer and cartographer David Thompson quit the Hudson’s Bay Company to go to work for the North West Company. Among the explicit instructions he received from his new bosses was a most unusual one that had nothing to do with surveying or map making or with the fur trade. They requested that, "in the interests of science and history he was to look for the fossils of large animals, and any monuments". No written record exists that explains the rationale for this remarkable directive, but it might have been "in the interests of commerce", alluding to mammoth ivory which was already the object of a lucrative trade in Siberia.

    25. Paleontology On The Learning Channel
    My wife mentioned she had read about a new TV series about paleontology to be Prevby Date No Subject; Next by Date Two mammoths Found in Idaho; Prev by thread
    http://www.cmnh.org/dinoarch/1994Sep/msg00059.html
    Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Author Index
    Paleontology on the Learning Channel

    26. Two Mammoths Found In Idaho
    Heavy equipment operators turned up the first evidence of the mammoths Sept. It showswhat the public interest is in paleontology, said Robert Yohe II, the
    http://www.cmnh.org/dinoarch/1994Sep/msg00062.html
    Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Author Index
    Two Mammoths Found in Idaho

    27. Paleontology And Geology Glossary: Ma
    If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in MAMMOTH mammoths(genus name Mammuthus) are extinct herbivorous mammals that had long, dense
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/dinosaurs/glossary/indexm.shtml
    EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site. Click here to learn more.
    ZoomDinosaurs.com

    Dinosaur and Paleontology Dictionary A B C D ... Z
    Click on an underlined word for more information on that subject.
    If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in the dictionary, please e-mail me and I'll add it.
    Ma Ma Me Mi Mo Mu-My ...
    MAASTRICHTIAN AGE

    The Maastrichtian age was the last part of the Cretaceous period . It lasted from about 71 to 65 million years ago, at the very end of the Mesozoic Era . Many dinosuars existed during this age, but it ended with a major mass extinction (the K-T extinction MACHAIRODUS
    Machairodus ( meaning "knife tooth") was a common saber-toothed cat that lived from about 15 million years ago until about 2 million years ago. Species of this scimitar cat have been found in Africa, Europe, Asia, and North America. This lion-sized meat-eating mammal had slender limbs and a short tail; the upper jaw canine teeth were large. Machairodus was named by Kaup in 1833. Classification: Family Felidae, Subfamily Machairodontinae, Genus Machairodus, many species. MACHAEROPROSOPUS
    (pronounced ma-KEER-oh-pro-SOH-pus) Machaeroprosopus ( meaning "knife face") was a phytosaur (not a dinosaur). This marine reptile had a thin, knife-like crest of its skull (hence its name). This crocodile-like animal had four short legs, a long tail, armored skin, sharp teeth in elongated jaws, and nostrils near the eyes. It lived during the late Triassic period. Fossils have been found in North America. Machaeroprosopus was named by Mehl in 1916; the type species is

    28. E-STREAMS Vol. 6, No. 2 - February 2003
    areas of paleontology as a science. In this manner, Cohen interweaves questionsand issues like plot threads, swinging away from mammoths from time to time
    http://www.e-streams.com/es0602/es0602_2329.htm
    E-STREAMS Vol. 6, No. 2 - February 2003 Paleontology
    Fate of the Mammoth: Fossils, Myth, and History
    , by Claudine Cohen, translated by William Rodarmor, foreword by Stephen Jay Gould. Chicago, IL, University of Chicago Press, 2002. 297p., illus., bibliog., index. ISBN 0-226-11292-6 [ GOBI GOBI 2 ]. $30.00. LC Call no.: QE882.P8C6413 2002. Subjects: Mammoths. Reviewer: Peter Hepburn, Visiting Circulation Librarian/Visiting Instructor, University of Illinois at Chicago Daley Library, phepburn@uic.edu Table of Contents: Part I. Images
  • The Mammoth Appears 1
  • Part II. Myths
  • Saint Augustine and the Giants 23 Leibniz's Unicorn 41 Identifying and Elephant 61
  • Part III. Stories
  • The "Vast Mahmount and the Birth of the American Nation 85 the Mammoth and the Revolutions of the Surface of the Globe 105 The Mammoth in Victorian Times 125 Of Mammoths and Men 144 The Mammoth in the Trees 167 From Africa to Alaska 190 Cloning the Mammoth 211 Life and Death of Mammoths 229
  • Conclusion: the Future of Paleontology 249 Notes 255 Bibliography 279 Index 291 Claudine Cohen's work, now translated into English, has the semblance of a novel, and a good one at that. Using the mammoth as her central character, in a sense, she traces not simply the theories of its existence, but the existence and evolution of paleontology itself.

    29. Oxford Mammoths
    My field work in Oxford, England, excavating mammoths and other vertebrates, as well 4thgraders unless they had first been exposed to paleontology and geology
    http://www.lausd.k12.ca.us/NH_Zoo_Magnet/earthwatch/oxford_mammoths_jorden.html
    OXFORD MAMMOTHS
    Oxford, England
    Principal Investigator:
    Dr. Katherine Scott
    Oxford University
    Team II
    June 20-July 6, 1997
    Original Lesson Written By:
    Carol Jorden
    Central Elementary School
    Grade 3
    Meter Square Lesson
    BACKGROUND:
    OBJECTIVES:
    After completing this lesson, students should be able to:
  • understand the concepts of layering, channeling, and fossilizing. take notes and make appropriate journal entries use critical-thinking skills to postulate explanations for questions asked. write a one-page report, utilizing appropriate vocabulary and writing mechanics, detailing what was unearthed in their excavations.
  • MATERIALS NEEDED:
    • Background Information (see below) Cardboard or styrofoam containers for every 4 students. Ample supplies of layering materials (i.e., soils, pebbles, gravel, shells, sand, sticks, twigs, grasses, rocks, water, etc.). Ample supplies of items to be utilized as fossils (bones, shells, coins, twigs, leaves, or other artifacts). One set of excavating tools for every 4-member cooperative team which should include a shovel, trowel, pail, and brush. Other excavating tools may include toothbrushes, dental picks, butter knives, and small garden shovels. *Pencils, pens, colored pencils, crayons and/or markers. Paper, journal type and graph paper, as well as report paper.

    30. Compare Prices And Read Reviews On Science Paleontology Books At Epinions.com
    We found 23 results for Science paleontology Books. Hutt, Steve 1 review Lowestprice $13 Compare Prices Compare The Call of Distant mammoths Why Ice Age
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    Tattersall, Ian
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    31. Compare Prices And Read Reviews On Science Paleontology Books At Epinions.com
    We found 23 results for Science paleontology Books. Dussling, Jennifer 1 review Lowestprice $4 Compare Prices Compare The Call of Distant mammoths Why Ice
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    Tattersall, Ian
    2 reviews
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    Gould, Stephen Jay
    3 reviews
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    Compare The Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt Nothdurft, William, Smith, Josh 1 review Lowest price: Compare Cradle of Life: The Discovery of Earth's Earliest Fossils Schopf, J. William 1 review Lowest price: Compare Tyrannosaurus Sue Fiffer, Steve 1 review Lowest price: Compare Guide to Dinosaurs Hutt, Steve 1 review Lowest price: Compare Magic School Bus in the Time of the Dinosaurs Cole, Joanna 1 review Lowest price: Compare No image available. The Magic School Bus in the Time of the Dinosaurs Cole, Joanna 1 review Compare Dinosaur Days Milton, Joyce 1 review Lowest price: Compare Dinosaur Babies: A Step One Book Penner, Lucille Recht 1 review Lowest price: Compare Dinosaurs Are Different Aliki 1 review Compare The Dinosaur Alphabet Book Pallotta, Jerry 1 review Lowest price: Compare The Call of Distant Mammoths: Why Ice Age Mammals Disappeared 1 review Lowest price: Compare No image available.

    32. The Real America - Paleontology Tour
    Long before paleontology became popular, sites within our region were famous attentionfor containing the largest concentration of Columbian mammoths found in
    http://www.rmi-realamerica.com/paleo.asp
    Tours: National Park Western Heritage Museums Attractions ... Oregon Trail - Paleontology - Natural History Fishing the Northern Rockies Nez Perce Golf the Rockies ... Agricultural
    There is a big advantage to viewing the many dinosaurs located within The Real America compared to those in "Jurassic Park." Our dinosaurs are dead and have been for 65 million years. Long before paleontology became popular, sites within our region were famous worldwide for the extremely rich fossil beds and accessible dinosaur skeletons. New and exciting finds are still being made every year, including the first-ever discovery of dinosaur eggs in Montana and the first full-sized Allosaurus in Wyoming. The region was, and is, a true "Jurassic Park." Day 1/2 - Arrive Denver
    One of the most extensive dinosaur exhibits in the nation is at the Denver Museum of Natural History . Called "Prehistoric Journey," the $7.7 million exhibit will offer visitors a unique look at prehistoric life, following a cobblestone path and entering an "enviroroama" where they’ll be immersed in a 3.5 billion year old landscape.

    33. Text
    Long before paleontology became popular, sites within our region were famous attentionfor containing the largest concentration of Columbian mammoths found in
    http://www.rmi-realamerica.com/itinerary/paleontology_tour/paleomtology_text.htm
    To print the itineraries download the pdf. file or
    open the html. file and choose print.
    Down load itineray.pdf
    Open itinerary.htm There is a big advantage to viewing the many dinosaurs located within The Real America compared to those in "Jurassic Park." Our dinosaurs are dead and have been for 65 million years Long before paleontology became popular, sites within our region were famous worldwide for the extremely rich fossil beds and accessible dinosaur skeletons. New and exciting finds are still being made every year, including the first-ever discovery of dinosaur eggs in Montana and the first full-sized Allosaurus in Wyoming. The region was, and is, a true "Jurassic Park." Day 1/2 - Arrive Denver
    One of the most extensive dinosaur exhibits in the nation is at the Denver Museum of Natural History . Called "Prehistoric Journey," the $7.7 million exhibit will offer visitors a unique look at prehistoric life, following a cobblestone path and entering an "enviroroama" where they’ll be immersed in a 3.5 billion year old landscape.

    34. DINO RUSS's LAIR - Other VP Exhibits
    Swedish mammoths Exhibits and Information about mammoths and other Pleistocene mammalsfrom of Nebraska State Museum Division of Vertebrate paleontology A very
    http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/dinos/other_vp_exhibits.html
    Illinois State Geological Survey - Geoscience Education and Outreach Unit
    Other VP Exhibits
    King of the North 2001 Acrylic on stretched canvas. 30"x40". Joe Tucciarone and is used by his permission;. Permission to reproduce any image must be obtained by written request to Joe. Address requests to: INTERSTELL@aol.com

    35. Jack's Stacks: Subject Index
    Ward mammoths , Lister and Bahn Men among the mammoths, Victorian Science andthe Discovery of Human Prehistory, Van Riper. History of paleontology.
    http://drydredgers.org/jackidx4.htm

    By Jack Kallmeyer, jackk@corecomm.net
    Subject Index
    Dinosaurs
    Other Vertebrates

    Trilobites

    Other Invertebrates
    ...
    Stratigraphy
    Dinosaurs
    Dinosaur in a Haystack , Gould
    The Dinosauria

    Dinosaurs of the Flaming Cliffs
    , Novacek
    Dinosaurs Rediscovered,
    Lessem
    Dinosaurs Spitfires and Sea Dragons,
    McGowan
    The End of the Dinosaurs, Chicxulub Crater and Mass Extinctions
    , Frankel The Great Dinosaur Extinction Controversy , Officer The Horned Dinosaurs , Dodson Kings of Creation , Lessem The Little Dinosaurs of Ghost Ranch , Colbert Paleontological Society Special Publication No. 7 , Rosenberg and Wolberg, eds. Seismosaurus the Earth Shaker , Gillette The Sternberg Fossil Hunters - A Dinosaur Dynasty, Rogers T. rex and the Crater of Doom , Alvarez Tracking Dinosaurs, A New Look at an Ancient World , Lockley Walking on Eggs, The Astonishing Discovery of Thousands of Dinosaur Eggs in the Badlands of Patagonia , Chiappe and Dingus
    Other Vertebrates
    Mammoths , Lister and Bahn Megalodon, Hunting the Hunter

    36. Jack's Stacks: February 1998
    a recent paper with W. Bruce Saunders in the Journal of paleontology (Volume 71 largeland animals of the most recent ice age including mammoths and mastodons.
    http://drydredgers.org/jack9802.htm

    Mammoth Extinction and Human Hunger
    Earlier this year a book caught my eye at my favorite book store: The Call of Distant Mammoths - Why the Ice Age Mammals Disappeared , by Peter D. Ward. This 241-page book is published by Copernicus/Springer-Verlag at $26 in hardcover. Ward is also the author of other books of note such as: The End of Evolution , and On Methuselah’s Trail . I have not read these other works but after having read this one I will probably read them as well. Why? I was very impressed with Ward’s writing and having read many books by many authors I can assure you that not everyone can write this well. Peter Ward is Professor of Geological Sciences, Professor of Zoology, and Curator of Paleontology at the University of Washington, Seattle. He has a recent paper with W. Bruce Saunders in the Journal of Paleontology (Volume 71, No. 6, 1997) wherein he establishes a new genus of the living nautiloid cephalopods. Ward’s premise is to determine a cause for the extinction of the large land animals of the most recent ice age including mammoths and mastodons. It appears from the beginning that he favors the rise of human populations as a major force in their demise. Ward does consider this to be a mass extinction while other authors that I have read do not since its effects were primarily on large land animals. "The Time Machine", chapter one, begins with Ward taking the reader to three specific and significant times and places in pre-history: 115,000 years before present near the Cape of Good Hope on the coast of South Africa. Here we observe some of the earliest modern humans known; 35,000 years before present on the northern coast of Australia where we see the earliest arrival of humans to this continent; and lastly 11,000 years before present in the American southwest. We see no humans here but only stone spear points amidst drying mammoth bones at an equally dry seasonal lake bed. Ward begins to set the reader’s thoughts to the great human successes in reproduction and technology which have allowed our global expansion at the expense of the lesser creatures.

    37. Paleontology Links
    Nearactica paleontology links including dinosaurs, trilobites, amber, fossils, palynology,plate tectonics, mammoths, dinosaurs, trilobites, amber, collecting
    http://www.esconi.org/Paleontology Links.htm
    E.S.C.O.N.I. PALEONTOLOGY LINKS Sloth World http://www.sloth-world.org/ Sharks' Teeth WWW.ELASMO.COM Paul Sereno's Dinosaur Web Site
    Paul Sereno's web site provides information on Paul Sereno and his paleontology research, including the dinosaurs Eoraptor, Suchomimus, Deltadromius, Herrerasaurus, Afrovenator and Carcharodontosaurus.
    http://dinosaur.uchicago.edu Paul Sereno's Niger Trip Web Site Paul Serono's trip to Niger is chronicled on this web site with the latest daily information. http://www.projectexploration.org/ Dave's Down To Earth Rock Shop www.davesdowntoearthrockshop.com MAPS (Midwest Area Paleontological Society) DINO RUSS's LAIR PaleoPublications www.paleopubs.com Paleoartisans Homepage
    This site contains links to paleontology sites, information about paleontology, and scientifically accurate dinosaur t-shirts
    http://members.tripod.com/~paleoartisans/index.htm Paleo Ring
    A webring with a large selection of different paleontology and anthropology sites.
    http://nav.webring.com/cgi-bin/navcgi?ring=paleoring;list. Field Adventures in Paleontology
    Visit digs North America and Australia and see fossils found there. In English, French and Spanish.

    38. Paleontology
    rain.org/campinternet/channelhistory/science/paleontology.html Using the paleontologyintroduction web hot links using the islands where the mammoths were found
    http://www.clovisusd.k12.ca.us/miramonte/StdLife/paleontology.htm
    Principals Welcome Calendar School Map Staff Paleontology Paleontology Dig 2
  • Let's slip back through history... Back before the European colonization of California, back through the much longer Native American period, back more than 200,000 years ago during the late period of the Pleistocene era that began 600,000 years ago. Create a compare or contrast question in regards to the history of the Channel Islands. Imbed a hot link to this page.
  • http://www.rain.org/campinternet/channelhistory/science/paleontology.html
  • Using the paleontology introduction web site create a question using each of the subtopics (these are in italics.) Imbed the hot link for this page in you document.
  • http://www.rain.org/campinternet/channelhistory/science/paleo-intro.html
  • Ask a prediction question using this page? Imbed the hot link for this page in your document. 1 question
  • http://www.rain.org/campinternet/channelhistory/science2/mammoth1.html
  • Find unfamiliar vocabulary in the context of this page. Cut the sentence that the vocabulary where the word exists.
  • 39. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Fossils (Paleontology)
    HIGH SCHOOL BEYOND Science Earth Sciences paleontology Fossils. Lots offossil vertebrates; Mammallike reptiles; mammoths of the Pleistocene; Mastodons;
    http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Sci
    Home About Us Newsletters My Products ... Product Info Center
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    K-5
    Fossils

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  • Fantastic Fossil Finds
  • Fossil Evidence of Worms Over 1 Billion Years Old
  • Fossil Game
  • Fossil Life in Martian Rock? ... Contact Us
  • 40. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Fossils (Paleontology)
    MIDDLE SCHOOL Science Earth Sciences paleontology Fossils. Lots of fossilvertebrates; Mammallike reptiles; mammoths of the Pleistocene; Mastodons;
    http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/Middle_School/S
    Home About Us Newsletters My Products ... Product Info Center
    Email this page
    to a friend!
    K-5
    Fossils

    document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write('');
  • Fantastic Fossil Finds
  • Fossil Evidence of Worms Over 1 Billion Years Old
  • Fossil Game
  • Fossil Life in Martian Rock? ... Contact Us
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