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         Mammoths Paleontology:     more books (59)
  1. Big Bone Lick: The Cradle of American Paleontology by Stanley Hedeen, 2008-02-15
  2. Frozen Fauna of the Mammoth Steppe: The Story of Blue Babe by R. Dale Guthrie, 1989-10-15
  3. Mammoth Bones and Broken Stones: The Mystery of North America's First People by David L. Harrison, 2010-09-01
  4. Mammoth Book of Dinosaurs by Modern Publishing, modern publishing, 1996-12
  5. Mammoths by Dick Mol, 1993-10
  6. Osteology for the Archaeologist: American Mastadon and the Woolly Mammoth; North American Birds: Skulls and Mandibles; North American Birds: Postcranial ... and Ethnology. Papers, Vol 56, No 3-5) by Stanley J. Olsen, 2004-12-01
  7. Why Why Why Were Mammoths Woolly?
  8. Fauna and flora associated with the West Richland mammoth from the Pleistocene Touchet beds in south-central Washington (Research report of the Thomas Burke Memorial Washington State Museum) by James E Martin, 1983
  9. Dinosaurs, Mammoths, and Cavemen by Sylvia Massey Czerkas, Donald F. Glut, 1982
  10. Parelephas floridanus from the Upper Pleistocene of Florida compared with P. jeffersonii (American Museum novitates) by Henry Fairfield Osborn, 1930
  11. Giants in the Storm by Mark Renz, 2005-05-01
  12. A mounted skeleton of the Columbian mammoth (Elephas columbi) (Bulletin / American Museum of Natural History) by Henry Fairfield Osborn, 1907
  13. A Letter From Silvanus Miller To DeWitt Clinton, L.L.D: On The Fossil Bones Of The Mammoth, Discovered In The State Of New-York, With Some Observations On The Adjacent Country, &c by Silvanus Miller, 1815
  14. Fossil jaw of a mammoth by Charles Drayton Gibbes, 1882

61. Woolly Mammoth Study Shows Complexity Of Evolution
This Story Archaeology paleontology. Two researchers studying the fossil recordof European and Siberian mammoths have traced the evolution of the woolly
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/11/1101_WoolyMammoth.html
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Woolly Mammoth Study Shows Complexity of Evolution Hillary Mayell
for National Geographic News
November 1, 2001
The woolly mammoth is the rock star of Ice Age mammals. It's been immortalized in Stone Age cave paintings and carvings and in museum displays as the quintessential Ice Age animal.
How did this Ice Age icon evolve from an elephant-type species grazing in Africa to a highly specialized Arctic dweller? Ice Age Star

A woolly mammoth replica was constructed for this exhibit at a museum in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Photograph by Jonathan Blair/CORBIS More News Diary of the Planet The Environment Travel National Geographic Today Special Series Digital Lifestyles: feature by Sony EarthPulse National Geographic Out There ... Mount Everest Expedition Two researchers studying the fossil record of European and Siberian mammoths have traced the evolution of the woolly mammoth. The research has raised a few questions about current evolutionary theories. "Our study has shown that the origin and evolution of the mammoth is not as simple as many have believed until now," said Andrei Sher, a paleontologist with the Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution in Moscow. "The real story here is how much more complicated evolution is."

62. National Geographic News: Archaeology & Paleontology
Archaeology paleontology Most Recent First. November 1, 2001 — Two researchersstudying the fossil record of European and Siberian mammoths have traced
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/archaeology_06.html
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Diary of the Planet

The Environment

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EarthPulse
National Geographic Out There ... Did "Iceman" of Alps Die as Human Sacrifice? After the frozen mummy of a 5,000-year-old man was found in the Alps a decade ago, scientists speculated he had been a victim of bad weather, a hunting accident, or foul play. Now, an archaeologist has proposed that the man was killed as a sacrifice to the gods. GO Killer Cats Hunted Human Ancestors Three South African scientists have identified several carnivores that may have preyed upon human ancestors 2.5 million years ago. Analysis of fossilized tooth enamel indicates that Megantereon, an extinct saber-toothed cat with oversize fangs, the leopard, and spotted hyena hunted and ate early hominids. GO Search for "Lost" Atlantis Centers on Strait of Gibraltar The search for the truth of the lost island Atlantis has intrigued scientists and historians for 2,000 years. French geologist Jacques Collina-Girard suggests that Atlantis existed, was located in what is now the Strait of Gibraltar, and succumbed to rising sea levels at the end of the last ice age 11,000 years ago. GO Opinion: How Do You Miss a Whole Elephant Species?

63. Mammoth Site Museum Shop Page 1
A brief history of the pygmy mammoths of the Channel Islands in Eurasia (Large Mammals),Author Kahlke, RalfDietrich, Quaternary paleontology Section Weimar
http://www.mammothsite.com/shop.html

64. UM Research Resources: Museum Of Paleontology
Research Faculty, staff, and students of the Museum of paleontology are currently theRocky Mountain west; life history of Pleistocene mammoths and mastodons
http://www.research.umich.edu/proposals/proposal_dev/UM_Resources/Paleontology.h
Home Site Map Queries: UMresearch@umich.edu
Museum of Paleontology
Philip D. Gingerich, Director
Organization
The University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology was established in 1837 by the Board of Regents as the Cabinet of Natural History. Acquisition of fossil plants and animals has continued from that time. The museum is recognized as a leading national repository for fossil specimens. Among University museums, it ranks fourth in the country in size of invertebrate and vertebrate collections. The museum now houses approximately 2,150,000 fossil plant and animal specimens. The Museum of Paleontology is a research unit of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts . It operates under a Director appointed by the President and Board of Regents. Professional staff consists of five curators, five research scientists, a collection manager, a fossil preparator, an illustrator, and two office staff members. The museum supports two publication series, "Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology," established in 1924 for short articles, and "Papers on Paleontology," established in 1972 for monographs of longer length. Both series are published periodically and present primary research on collections housed in the museum. Financial support for the museum comes from annual allocations from the University's General Fund and from sponsored research programs.

65. Graduate Degree Programs In Paleontology And Paleobiology
and Professor of Zoology and Geology; mammalian paleontology, diversity and 1999.Tracking mammoths and mastodons; reconstruction of migratory behavior using
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/vertpaleo/gradprgs.htm
Graduate Degree Programs in Paleontology and Paleobiology at the Florida Museum of Natural History
The Florida Museum of Natural History, a research and educational unit within the University of Florida, has an active program in paleontology and paleobiology. There are three large, relevant research collections, including invertebrate paleontology, paleobotany and vertebrate paleontology , which taken together, include over one million specimens. The research facilities within the museum or in the affiliate departments are modern, comprehensive and include screenwashing and preparation laboratories, stereo, light, and scanning electron microscopes, mass spectrometer, image analysis systems, and paleomagnetic laboratory. In addition to the main UF libraries, the FLMNH includes the George Gaylord Simpson and Paleobotany research libraries, which together contain about 3,000 books, runs of 25 specialized journals, and 50,000 reprints.
Prospective graduate students intending to pursue Master's or Doctoral studies in paleontology and paleobiology can apply to the departments of Anthropology, Botany, Geology, or Zoology

66. Vertebrates
Catalog 4 / Vertebrate paleontology / 2002. Augusta, J. / A BOOK OF mammoths,London, 1963, cl, 50 pages plus full page color illustrations, 3 -, SOLD.
http://home.earthlink.net/~msbooks/vertebrates.htm
MS Book and Mineral Company
ms book and mineral company PALeontology BOOKS Vertebrate Paleontology (excluding dinosaurs) This catalog was last updated on 25 January 2003 Please include the catalog # below when ordering items from this catalog. Catalog: # 1 / Vertebrate Paleontology / 2003 Augusta, J. / A BOOK OF MAMMOTHS, London, 1963, cl, 50 pages plus full page color illustrations, - 3 -, SOLD Augusta, J. / THE AGE OF MONSTERS, London, 1966, cl, dust cover present, 79 pages plus full page color illustrations, - 3 -, $ 100 Benton, M. / VERTEBRATE PALAEONTOLOGY, London, 1990, pb, 377 pages, - 1 -, $ 30 Carroll, R. L. / VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, New York, 1988, cl, 698 pages, - 1 -, $ 90 Chatterjee, S. / THE RISE OF BIRDS, Baltimore, 1997, cl, 312 pages, - 1 -, $ 55 Cohen, D. / THE AGE OF GIANT MAMMALS, New York, 1969, cl, 160 pages, - 5 -, $ 10 Colbert, E. H. / THE AGE OF REPTILES, New York, 1965, cl, 228 pages, 20 plates, 66 figs., $ 25 Cope, E. D. / THE VERTEBRATA OF THE TERTIARY FORMATIONS OF THE WEST, Report of the United States Geological Survey of the West, 1884, Volume 3, cl (rebound with original covering attached to new binding), 1009 pages, 38 figs., 134 plates, covers Eocene vertebrate fauna of the Puerco, Wasatch and Bridger Formations and the lower and middle vertebrate fauna of the White River and John Day formations, $ 450 Corbet, G. B. and Hill, J. E. / A WORLD LIST OF MAMMALIAN SPECIES, 3

67. Make Payments With PayPal - It's Fast, Free And Secure! HOME UNIT
What killed the mammoths? paleontology Read portions of The Mysteryof the Mammoth Bones and How It Was Solved by James Cross Giblin;
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Wild and Woolly Mammoths
by Aliki
Mammoth
(The Extinct Species Collection)
by Heather Amery,
Tony Gibbons (Illustrator) Woolly Mammoth : Life, Death, and Rediscovery by Windsor Chorlton The Mystery of the Mammoth Bones and How It Was Solved by James Cross Giblin A Mammoth Imagination by Philip Ross Norman Mik's mammoth by Roy Gerrard Our Mammoth Goes to School by Adrian Westland Mammoth (The Extinct Species Collection) by Heather Amery The Woolly Mammoth by William R. Sanford Woolly mammoth by Ron Wilson Websites (1) Adaptations - From Mammoth to Man (2) Wooly Mammoth (3) Mammuthus What killed the Mammoths? ... Animals of Beringia - The Wooly Mammoth
The Mammoth
Objectives (First - Third Grade)
At the end of this unit, the child will be able to:

68. Earth Sciences: Paleontology
Deep Time; Schindewolf, Otto H. Basic Questions in paleontology; VanRiper, A. Bowdoin Men among the mammoths; Weigelt, Johannes Recent
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Books in Earth Sciences: Paleontology from the University of Chicago Press

69. UM Paleontology: Fisher
Museum of paleontology The University of Michigan 1535 Ruthven Museums Building morphology;Phylogenetic inference; Human association with mastodons and mammoths;
http://www.paleontology.lsa.umich.edu/Peoplepages/Fisher.htm
Daniel C. Fisher
Professor of Geological Sciences
Curator, Museum of Paleontology
Ph.D.: Geology, Harvard University, 1975
Invertebrate and vertebrate paleontology
Museum of Paleontology
The University of Michigan
1535 Ruthven Museums Building
1109 Geddes Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1079
Email: dcfisher@umich.edu
Research Interests
  • Functional morphology
  • Phylogenetic inference
  • Human association with mastodons and mammoths
  • Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions
Links Page updated Feedback

70. ­÷¨ÅÃþ
; Vertebrate paleontology, University of Nebraska State Museum; Ashfall Life Giantsloths, mammoths, sabre tooth cats etc. (***; Rancho La Brea Tar Pits (**).
http://www.moeacgs.gov.tw/CGSWeb/Education/Studio/Fossil/mammel.htm
¥xÆW¤]¦³¤Æ¥Û°O¿ý³á!! Section of Vertebrate Paleontology Synapsids Tetrapods start ¥j­÷¨Åþ PALEONEUROLOGY Fossil Brain of Extinct animal skull »Å Faunmap Database mammal species ¬ã¨sªÌ:

71. Travelsd.com -- Archaeology And Paleontology In South Dakota
paleontology for Families will be offered June 26, 2003, in Rapid City. Since itsdiscovery in 1974, 52 Columbian and woolly mammoths have been found, but an
http://www.travelsd.com/events/archaeology/paleo.htm
Bone Zone - Archaeology - Paleontology - Museums
archaeology
museums Movie Draw, Custer State Park (Note as of 2/18/03: this information
is pending confirmation for 2003.)
Movie Draw in Custer State Park was aptly named because it was the film site of "How the West was Won" and "A Man Called Horse," to name just a few classics. The archeological richness of the area dates even further back to when prehistoric hunters and gatherers lived among the shelter of the draw's rocks. Tools that have been found here indicate fascinating changes in hunting cultures. Sponsored by the State Historical Society, The Journey Museum and Custer State Park, this project is scheduled for Aug. 26-Sept. 4 and Sept. 9-18, 2002 . Volunteers must sign up for one full session. Free of charge. For more information, call (605) 394-1936.
email: mike.fosha@state.sd.us www.sdsmt.edu/wwwsarc Big Pig Dig, Badlands National Park Sometimes considered the birthplace of the science of vertebrate paleontology, Badlands National Park has a rich source of fossil beds containing such things as three-toed horses, saber-toothed cats, and giant pigs. Even seasoned paleontologists will enjoy the quarter-mile Fossil Exhibit Trail, which proves to be an easy walk with an exceptional view of extinct creatures preserved in the rock. Professional paleontologists invite the public to the Big Pig Dig

72. Magazine Articles On Archaeology & Paleontology (191-200)
Magazine articles on archaeology, paleontology, artifacts, prehistoric origins.Old Articles Older 191200 Newer How about excavating ancient mammoths?
http://www.magportal.com/c/soc/archae/old.php3/20
all
category Location: Categories Magazine articles on archaeology, paleontology, artifacts, prehistoric origins.
Old Articles Smithsonian
November 2002
Donovan Webster Lasting Impressions Scientists cast tall shadows but find themselves hard pressed to explain the blues to Mongolians. That is, in order to make a cast of a Mongolian bronze age monument, they had to paint it with an unfamiliar blue latex to be removed later. Science News
October 19, 2002
Sid Perkins Dear Mummy: Rare fossil reveals common dinosaur's soft tissue A mummified dinosaur unearthed in Montana a year ago is giving scientists a rare peek at what the creature's muscles and other soft tissues may have looked like. Outside
October 2002
Bill Vaughn The Snow on the Sweetgrass For newcomers meaning most of us they are merely picturesque. But for Native Americans, the sacred places of the Great Plains and Northern Rockies are alive with centuries of memory and meaning and something much, much bigger. The Scientist
September 30, 2002
Tom Hollon Two Weeks in the Pit as Indiana Jones Looking for variety in your next vacation? How about excavating ancient mammoths?

73. Mayor, A.: The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology In Greek And Roman Times.
modern scientific discoveries, Adrienne Mayor illuminates a lost world of ancientpaleontology. a good deal here about the remains of mammoths and protoceratops
http://pup.princeton.edu/titles/6811.html
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The First Fossil Hunters:
Paleontology in Greek and Roman Times
Adrienne Mayor
With a foreword by Peter Dodson
Shopping Cart Reviews Table of Contents Griffins, Centaurs, Cyclopes, and Giantsthese fabulous creatures of classical mythology continue to live in the modern imagination through the vivid accounts that have come down to us from the ancient Greeks and Romans. But what if these beings were more than merely fictions? What if monstrous creatures once roamed the earth in the very places where their legends first arose? This is the arresting and original thesis that Adrienne Mayor explores in The First Fossil Hunters . Through careful research and meticulous documentation, she convincingly shows that many of the giants and monsters of myth did have a basis in factin the enormous bones of long-extinct species that were once abundant in the lands of the Greeks and Romans. As Mayor shows, the Greeks and Romans were well aware that a different breed of creatures once inhabited their lands. They frequently encountered the fossilized bones of these primeval beings, and they developed sophisticated concepts to explain the fossil evidence, concepts that were expressed in mythological stories. The legend of the gold-guarding griffin, for example, sprang from tales first told by Scythian gold-miners, who, passing through the Gobi Desert at the foot of the Altai Mountains, encountered the skeletons of Protoceratops and other dinosaurs that littered the ground.

74. K-12: Paleontology : OTHER ANCIENT LIFEFORMS
Text, photos, graphics Part One Elephants http//rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/discover/ds24295/index_fs.htmlPart Two The Rise and Fall of mammoths in North America
http://www.ceismc.gatech.edu/busyt/paleo_o.html

Paleontology
DINOS OTHER ANCIENT LIFEFORMS GENERAL ... Teachers' Reference Section
OTHER ANCIENT LIFEFORMS
Eocene [Insect] Fossils:
A collection of excellently preserved fossil insects now housed in the Smithsonian, dating back to about 50 million years ago. Text, photos
http://www.coloradomtn.edu/campus_rfl/staff_rfl/kohls/eocene.html

Feathered Dinosaurs: The Origins of Birds
Provides photographs of these extremely important fossils recently unearthed in China that support the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Part of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History Web site. Text, photos
http://192.204.3.4/cmnh/exhibits/feathered/index.html

The Mammoth Story
Three-part article from Discover Magazine . Unfortunately, they didn't link the articles together, so you will have to return to this page for the continuation. Very well-written and detailed look at ancient elephants. Text, photos, graphics
Part One: Elephants
http://rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/discover/ds24295/index_fs.html
Part Two: The Rise and Fall of Mammoths in North America http://rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/discover/ds24395/index_fs.html

75. DINOSAURS
paleontology News Bulletin Online access to the newsletter published by the Societyof Vertebrate paleontology. Swedish mammoths - Information about mammoths
http://www.bodnarchuk.com/prehistoric/dinosaurs.html
L k what we found! PLEASE help us GROW!
    Dinosaur Art
    - a wonderful online magazine dedicated to providing a forum for artists and modelers specializing in dinosaurs.
    Dinosaur Art Gallery
    - Pencil, Ink, Digital, and Photographic works of dinosaur art by Mike Keesey, Brendan Smith, and Rachel Clark.
    Dinosaur Artwork
    - Scientifically accurate dinosaur artwork from Saurian Studios!
    Dinosaur Books
    - A listing of recommended references for dinosaur enthusiasts of all ages.
    Dinosaur Buzzwords
    - Find out what the basic principles of science are, and how paleontologists have struggled to follow these rules in their dinosaur research.
    Dinosaur Checklist
    - developed and maintained Robert B. Hole, Jr.
    Dinosauria Cladogram
    - A cladogram showing the relationships among the dinosauria.
    Dinosaur Database
    - Shareware program for windows for children.
    Dinosaur Debate
    - Fascinating exposition of the ongoing Volcano vs Greenhouse debate about the cause of the dinosaur extinction 65 million years ago. Dinosaur Dictionary - Important paleontological terms defined Dinosaur Dictionary - The proper english name translations of dinosaur genera names and related taxon.

76. Paleontology
paleontology. Discovering Fossil Fishes (Henry Holt Reference Book). TheCall of Distant mammoths Why the Ice Age Mammals Disappeared.
http://www.agiweb.org/bookstore/paleontology.html

77. Daniel C. Fisher, Ph.D.---Curator, Museum Of Paleontology; Professor, Geological
Daniel C. Fisher, Ph.D. Curator, Museum of paleontology; Professor, Geological Sciences oncauses of extinction and seasonal behavior of mastodons and mammoths.
http://www.umich.edu/~newsinfo/Experts/fisher.html
Daniel C. Fisher, Ph.D.
Curator Museum of Paleontology Professor Geological Sciences
Phone : office-(734) 764-0488 home-(734) 996-1719
Email dcfisher@umich.edu
http://www.geo.lsa.umich.edu/dept/faculty/fisher/index.html

Additional interests: patterns of evolution, functional morphology, phylogenetic inference (incorporating stratigraphic data), chelicerate arthropods, receptaculitid algae, primitive echinoderms, cause of late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions Return to Experts
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78. The Dinosauria
Extensive information about the dinosaurs from the University of California Museum of paleontology.Category Science Earth Sciences paleontology Dinosaurs Exhibits...... of the archosaurs, a group that includes crocodiles and birds, whereas mammothsand mastodons A current update of dominant thinking in dinosaur paleontology.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/dinosaur.html

Michael Skrepnick
The Dinosauria:
Truth is Stranger than Fiction
Dinosaurs occupy a vaunted niche in the public mind; the very word conjures up images of gargantuan, now-defunct beasts that ruled the Earth long ago, holding a reign of terror for some 160 million years, and then mysteriously vanishing with only their titanic bones as evidence of their existence. "Dinosaur" reaches deep into our psyche and drags out nightmares from culturally-embedded monster myths. What is the truth about dinosaurs that underlies the popular awe and mystique that shrouds them? What does modern science have to say about the dinosaurs? Are they truly obsolete, long-extinct relics of a more primitive and experimental stage in the history of life, or is there more to the Dinosauria than meets the eye? Dinosaurs are animals that evolved into many sizes and shapes. Dinosaurs were and are quite diverse, and often one person will think of an animal like a long-necked sauropod, while another person will think of a large, fierce meat-eater like Tyrannosaurus rex . It should be clear then that the term "dinosaurs", or the scientific version "Dinosauria", is describing a diverse group of animals with widely different modes of living. The term was invented by

79. Learning From The Fossil Record
Round Rocks Teaching the Principles Of Earth Science and PaleontologyWarren D. Allmon and David H. Griffing. Can mammoths Go To School?
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/fosrec/Learning.html
Learning From
the Fossil Record
An Introduction
Judy Scotchmoor
Building a Topographic Model
Submarine Mountains ...
Marsha Barber and Diana Scheidle Bartos
Determining Age Of Rocks and Fossils
Frank K. McKinney
Sequencing Time ...
Warren D. Allmon and David H. Griffing
Can Mammoths Go To School?
Paleo Cookie Dig
Tennis Shoe Detectives ...
Craig A. Munsart and Karen Alonzi-Van Gundy
The Dinosaur Education Project
Two Kinds of Dinosaurs
The Dinosaur Body Structure ...
Scott W. Snyder and Brian T. Huber
Using Microfossils In Petroleum Exploration
Brian J. O'Neill
Foraminifera In the Middle School Classroom ...
Return to top
Other Learning From the Fossil Record Areas
Paleontology and Scientific Literacy
Why are fossils important to science and society?
Learning From the Fossil Record
A handy list of student activities
National Science Standards Matrix
Suggested grade levels for and content of activities
The Geologic Time Scale

80. Paleontology And Geology Glossary: W
If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not WOOLLY MAMMOTH WoollyMammoths (scientific name Mammuthus primigenius) are extinct herbivorous
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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. W WAKINOSAURUS
(pronounced wah-KEER-ee-ah) Wakinosaurus ( meaning "Wakino [Japan] lizard") was a meat-eating dinosaur from the early Cretaceous period , about 144-125 million years ago. Fossils of this theropod were found in northern Kyushu Island, Japan. The type species is W. satoi . Wakinosaurus was named by Okazaki in 1992 . Wakinosaurus is a doubtful genus since only a partial tooth (serrated) has been found. WALGETTOSUCHUS (pronounced WALL-get-tuh-SOOK-us) Walgettosuchus ( meaning "Walgett [a town in New South Wales, Australia ] crocodile") was a meat-eating dinosaur from the early Cretaceous period , about 119-113 million years ago. This large, bipedal theropod was a tetanuran. Fossils have been found in Australia. The type species is

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