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         Mammals:     more books (100)
  1. Field Guide to the Mammals of Southern Africa: Revised Edition (Field Guide To... (Struik Publishers)) by Chris Stuart, Tilde Stuart, 2007-07-27
  2. Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals, Second Edition
  3. Wild Mammals in Captivity: Principles and Techniques for Zoo Management, Second Edition
  4. Beasts of Eden: Walking Whales, Dawn Horses, and Other Enigmas of Mammal Evolution by David Rains Wallace, 2005-09-13
  5. Peterson First Guide to Mammals of North America by Peter C. Alden, 1998-05-15
  6. Birds, Mammals, and Reptiles of the Galapagos Islands: An Identification Guide, 2nd Edition by Andy Swash, Rob Still, 2006-02-28
  7. A Field Guide to Mammal Tracking in North America by James C. Halfpenny, 1986-05
  8. Whales and Other Sea Mammals (New True Books: Animals (Paperback)) by Elsa Z. Posell, 1982-09
  9. Pocket Photoguide to Mammals of Southern Africa by Burger Cillie, 2009-04-17
  10. Mammals of the Neotropics (Volume 3 ): The Central Neotropics: Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil by John F. Eisenberg, Kent H. Redford, 2000-05-15
  11. The Life of Mammals by David Attenborough, 2002-10-22
  12. Mammals Of Wisconsin by Hartley H.T. Jackson, 1961-01-15
  13. Mammals Of Wisconsin by Hartley H.T. Jackson, 1961-01-15
  14. CRC Handbook of Marine Mammal Medicine: Health, Disease, and Rehabilitation

41. Untitled
Collaborative Thematic Unit Theme mammals by Cody Carlton and Ann Riza FocusStudents will explore mammals of different regions of the world.
http://www.libsci.sc.edu/miller/Mammals.htm
Collaborative Thematic Unit Theme: Mammals
by Cody Carlton and Ann Riza Grade Level: Grades 2-3 Focus : Students will explore mammals of different regions of the world. Objectives : On completion of this unit, students will:
1) Know the general characteristics of mammals.
2) Be able to name at least five mammals from their specific assigned region.
3) Be able to name at least one mammal from the other regions.
4) Identify at least two adaptations of a mammal to its specific region. Resources and Materials
Hiller, Ilo. Introducing Mammals to Young Naturalists Schell, Karen D. Theme Book: Animal Habitats (Grade 2). Frank Schaffer Publications, Inc., 1992. Tryon, Leslie. Who Am I? . Monterey, CA:Evan-Moor Corp., 1987. Western Regional Environmental Education Council. Project WILD . Published by author, 1992. Western Regional Environmental Education Council. Aquatic Project WILD . Published by author, 1992. Internet Resources:
Sea World Animal Information Database
http://www.bev.net/education/SeaWorld
Includes animal facts, photos, and resources. Students can join Jack Hanna on a safari via the internet (March, 1997). Check for other "tours" at later dates.

42. SCZ: Animals
Learn all about amphibians, birds, fishes, mammals and reptiles from this page sponsored by the Sedgwick County Zoo.
http://www.scz.org/animals/home.html
Find answers to the most commonly asked questions about our animals! Select an animal from one of the pull down menus, or click on a link for a text index. Amphibians Birds Fishes Mammals ... Reptiles Select an Amphibian Frog, Poison Dart/Arrow Frog, Tomato Salamander, Barred Tiger Toad, Puerto Rican Crested Toad, Surinam Select a Bear Asiatic Black Bear Sloth Bear Polar Bear Panda Sun Bear Select a Bird Amazon, Yellow-Shouldered Cassowary, Double-Wattled Chicken, Dominique Cockatoo,Goffins Cockatoo, Salmon-Crested Crane, Demoiselle Crane, Sandhill Duck, Cayuga Duck, Penciled Runner Eagle, Bald Eagle, Golden Emu Goose, Bar-Headed Goose, Brown African Goose, Egyptian Goose, White Chinese Ibis, Puna Ibis, Sacred Ibis, Straw-Necked Kea Kookaburra Macaw, Scarlet Mynah, Bali Owl, Spectacled Parrot, Hawk-Headed Pigeon, Mauritius Pink Pigeon, Nicobar Spoonbill, Roseate Stork, Painted Swan, Black Swan, Trumpeter Toucan, Toco Turkey, Brush Turkey, Narragansett Vulture, Lappet-Faced Select a Fish Gourami, Giant Lungfish, South American* Knifefish,Clown Piranha, Red

43. Erickson - Origin Of Dinosaurs And Mammals
A gravity reduction in the early Mesozoic caused a faunal transition from small robust synapsid reptiles (therapsids) to large gracile diapsid reptiles (archosaurs), including many families of gigantic dinosaurs.
http://microlnx.com/dinosaurs/OriginOfDinosaursAndMammals.html
On the Origin
of
Dinosaurs and Mammals by William Carnell Erickson PDF Version Abstract The coincidence in time of incipient rifting of Pangea and the origin of dinosaurs during the Carnian age (230-225 Ma) of the Late Triassic suggests a fundamental link between the two. That link may have been the onset of Earth expansion, triggered by the Pangean thermal anomaly and resulting in a 20% reduction in surface gravity. In reduced gravity, animals will have less skeletal mass and thinner bones than equally massive animals adapted to normal gravity; a significant increase in maximum body size will also ensue. These predictions, inferred from allometric scaling principles and supported by biomedical space research and gravity tolerance experiments, are borne out in the fossil record: the Late Triassic witnessed the transition from Paleozoic faunas dominated by relatively small and robust synapsid reptiles (therapsids) to Mesozoic faunas dominated by large and gracile diapsid reptiles (archosaurs), including many families of gigantic dinosaurs. Dynamical principles of locomotion indicate that a gravity reduction will lower the speed at which animals change gait.

44. Mammals Of Washington Re-direct
Sponsored by the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture. Organized by order.
http://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/mammalogy/mamwash2.html
The Mammals of Washington website has been moved. This page should refresh in a couple seconds, if it doesn't click here to be taken to its new location.

45. Class Mammalia
Introduction to mammals, with detailed information about subclasses and orders of mammals, from the Category Science Biology Animalia Chordata Mammalia......All mammals share three characteristics not found in other animals 3 middle earbones; hair; and the production of milk by modified sweat glands called
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/chordata/mammalia.html
The University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Animal Diversity Web About us ... Glossary
Mammalia
All mammals share three characteristics not found in other animals: 3 middle ear bones hair ; and the production of milk by modified sweat glands called mammary glands Mammals hear sounds after they are transmitted from the outside world to their inner ears by a chain of three bones, the malleus incus , and stapes . Two of these, the malleus and incus, are derived from bones involved in jaw articulation in most other vertebrates. Mammals have hair . Adults of some species lose most of their hair, but hair is present at least during some phase of the ontogeny of all species. Mammalian hair, made of a protein called keratin , serves at least four functions. First, it slows the exchange of heat with the environment (insulation). Second, specialized hairs (whiskers or " vibrissae ") have a sensory function, letting the owner know when it is in contact with an object in its external environment. These hairs are often richly innervated and well-supplied with muscles that control their position. Third, through their color and pattern, hairs affect the appearance of a mammal. They may serve to camouflage, to announce the presence of especially good defense systems (for example, the conspicuous color pattern of a skunk is a warning to predators), or to communicate social information (for example, threats, such as the erect hair on the back of a wolf; sex, such as the different colors of male and female capuchin monkeys; presence of danger, such as the white underside of the tail of a whitetailed deer). Fourth, hair provides some protection, either simply by providing an additional protective layer (against abrasion or sunburn, for example) or by taking on the form of dangerous spines that deter predators (porcupines, spiny rats, others).

46. The Society For Marine Mammalogy
evaluates and promotes the educational, scientific and managerial advancement of marine mammal science. Any person is qualified for full membership who is a professional in natural science or the management, husbandry, conservation or training of marine mammals.
http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~smm/
The Society for Marine Mammalogy
(Web Page Space Courtesy of the University of Central Florida)
Please report errors to: Daniel K. Odell NOTICE www.marinemammalogy.org
The current site will be up for a brief period of overlap but information herein will not be updated.
Please bookmark the new site in the browser of your choice.
- The Management -
Strategies for Pursuing a Career in Marine Mammal Science
Marine Mammal Science - The Journal
14 July 2002

47. The Incredible World Of Mammals
would like to keep them that way, however making and running this site, and the othersites I am currently making or have made, on Birds, mammals, Insects and
http://www.earthlife.net/mammals/
Have You Seen The Other Earthlife Web Chapters These pages are here free for you to use, I would like to keep them that way, however making and running this site, and the other sites I am currently making or have made, on Birds, Mammals, Insects and Fish and Bacteria and all the other invertebrates costs money. There are two simple ways you can help. The first is by using the search engines here, that way you make me 2 or 3 cents a time, not a lot but it adds up.
The second, and perhaps better way is to buy a copy of my recently published book of poetry. It is called Poetry for All the Family , follow the link for more information. It is not expensive and should be thoroughly enjoyable, so if you like it please tell people about it, or better still give it to someone as a present for Christmas of a birthday. Why not use the special Earthlife Web search page for all your future searches.
Go there now

Thanks, I appreciate your custom. By gordon@earthlife.net

48. Kasten COBOL Page: Coding Style And Techniques
Coding style and techniques, Guerrilla and OO COBOL, pointers, data structures, text parsing, finite state machines. Despite what you may have heard, this old fossil of a language can survive, thrive, and even coexist with those hairy little mammals who have been acting so smug and uppity.
http://home.swbell.net/mck9/cobol/cobol.html
The Kasten COBOL Page
From one of the dinosaurs who still writes COBOL the language which is on the brink of extinction, and always will be welcome to my COBOL page. Despite what you may have heard, this old fossil of a language can survive, thrive, and even coexist with those hairy little mammals who have been acting so smug and uppity.
Coding Guidelines
The COBOL Style Forum suggests ways to make your COBOL readable, well-structured, and bug-resistant. Not everyone will agree with me; I hope others will contribute their points of view.
Rewriting Spaghetti Code
These pages describe a systematic approach to eliminating GO TOs and fall-through logic, even from the most tangled programs. [Note: this section isn't complete yet. I still haven't finished all the pages on loops but I'm working on them. Really.]
Object Oriented COBOL
Here's what I've learned so far about IBM's implementation of object-oriented COBOL.
Guerrilla COBOL
Do you suffer from C-envy? Would you like to try some of the tricks that are so common in C and other languages? You can. With a reasonably modern dialect of COBOL, and a little ingenuity, you can do almost anything that a C programmer can do: Dynamic Memory Allocation Pointer Variables Global Variables Environmental Variables Data Structures Text Parsing Techniques Finite State Machines
The Iron Laws of Software Development
I've never seen them fail on a non-trivial project.

49. Marine Mammals: Dolphins & Whales ...
Baleen Whales Bottlenose Dolphins Cestacean Society International (Save the Whales)CoastWatch For Kids Sea Lions Dolphins Biology Natural History Dolphin
http://www.oregoncoast.com/Whales.htm
Baleen Whales
Bottlenose Dolphins

Cestacean Society International
(Save the Whales)
CoastWatch For Kids: Sea Lions

Dolphin Circle

Harbor Seals

Jimmy's Sea Otter Page
... Satellite News Updated: June 21, 2001
412 Pacific Avenue, Tillamook, OR 97141
South County
Portland: 1-800-625-1991
Questions: System Operator or Webmaster for website information

50. Meerkat's Mammals
Meerkat's guide to mammals for *all* sorts! Meerkats meerkats meerkats galore!!!!!Meerkat's mammals. BEWARE!!!! This page is, and always will be !
http://www.meerkat.org/mammals/
Meerkat's Mammals
BEWARE!!!! This page is, and always will be
Mammals we're warm-blooded, our babies come out without a shell (most of the time), our mothers feed us milk, we have hair, and we dominate the world at this time. There are so many of us. I have here some interesting facts about them that you maybe won't find out in the encyclopedia (and some you will!) Quick fact: There are 4,267 species of mammals in the world. For more info, go take a peak at my FAQ Welcome! You are visitor number since April 26, 2001! For sounds of your favorite mammal, go to Tim Knight's Wildlife Sounds . it has thousands of links to every animal, I bet. Here 's the main part and probably what you want. It's got links to sounds, pix, other homepages, and it's updated regurally. I really like it. It's probably on of the best online! Go there (after you're finished with my page!) I'd also like to point you to Herman Miller's homepage where there are lots of sounds. Even though it's mostly birds, you get to the end of the page and there they are. Primates, horses, Sea Lions, Canines, Hyenas, Felines, Elephants, Pigs, Deers, Cows, Sheep, Goats, Whales, Dolphins, and Bats. It's really amazing. Acknowledgements: I thank Spiders-web.com

51. Desert Animals & Wildlife Index - DesertUSA
Articles on desert mammals, birds, reptiles, and insects.
http://www.desertusa.com/animal.html
How Do Animals Survive the Desert? Fortunately, most desert animals have evolved both behavioral and physiological mechanisms to solve the heat and water problems the desert environment creates. Among the thousands of desert animal species, there are almost as many remarkable behavioral and structural adaptations developed for avoiding excess heat. For more information see our page on Desert Animal Survival You can find more information about the Desert's Wildlife
by clicking on one of the links below
Mammals Birds Amphibians

52. Thew2001
Wildlife in Oils and fine art prints. Birds, mammals, wetland creatures, and scenery in the western U.S.
http://allanthew.com
This Page has been generated by IXLA Technology...
Allan Thew
Please wait a moment, the Web Site is being loaded...

53. Mammals Of Washington
mammals of Washington. Welcome to this special area of Burke Mammalogy's webpages, where you can explore the biodiversity of Washington's mammals.
http://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/mammalogy/mamwash/
Home
Mammals of Washington
Welcome to this special area of Burke Mammalogy's web pages, where you can explore the biodiversity of Washington's mammals. All species in the state are found on our checklist, and you can click on each name for an account of its natural history, geographic distribution, and further information. Washington's mammal fauna consists of 148 species that belong to nine of the world's 26 orders of mammals. Of the 148 species, nine have been introduced, leaving 139 natives Thirty-two of the species are marine mammals, and we have 16 species of flying mammals, the bats. This leaves 91 species of land mammals. Jim Kenagy
Curator of Mammals and Professor of Zoology Enter Checklist Maps of geographic distribution within Washington in our individual species accounts are taken from "Terrestrial Mammals of Washington State, a Washington Gap Analysis Project," by R. E. Johnson and K. M. Cassidy (1997) . Maps of geographic distribution in North America are taken from "Land Mammals of Oregon," by B. J. Verts and L. N. Carraway (1998), University of California Press www.ucpress.edu

54. IOA Zooarchaeology Laboratory
Profile of this laboratory which maintains a collection of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals, native and domestic, from California, Central America, and Peru.
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/ioa/labs/zooarch/zooarch.html
Director: Thomas Wake
E-mail: zooarch@ucla.edu
Phone: 310.206.1782
Room: A 357 Fowler Dr. Elsie Sandefur, Lab Founder The UCLA Institute of Archaeology Zooarchaeology Laboroatory was established in 1989 in order to facilitate the identification and analysis of animal remains from archaeological sites. The lab is located in Room A-357, in the "A" level of the Fowler Museum of Cultural History at the north end of campus. With over 650 square feet of space, the lab provides ample work space for students and researchers, as well as a number of computers for data entry and analysis. An intensive laboratory based zooarchaeology course is taught every other spring by the lab's director, Dr. Thomas Wake. Dr. Wake is available to consult with students, set up volunteer or independent study projects, and develop research designs, sampling protocols, and evaluate results of interested investigators. One of the most important aspects of any zooarchaeological laboratory is the modern comparative collection available for use in identification of archaeological faunal remains. The UCLA Zooarchaeology Laboratory maintains an expanding collection of over 1200 vertebrate specimens including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Native Californian species predominate, but domestic, Central American, and Peruvian taxa are well represented. A collection of over 10,000 mollusk specimens is currently being cataloged and available for use as well. The UCLA Department of Biology maintains a large collection of fish skeletons and a large bird and mammal skeletal collection is included in the Dickey Natural History Collection.

55. European Association For Aquatic Mammals
European Association for Aquatic mammals. These pages have been designedto operate in frames. Unfortunately, your browser does not frames.
http://www.eaam.org/
European Association for Aquatic Mammals
These pages have been designed to operate in frames. Unfortunately, your browser does not frames. Click here to view the pages without frames

56. The Mammals Of Texas - Online Edition
Guide to the 181 species of Texas mammals, based on Davis and Schmidly's classic printed handbook.
http://www.nsrl.ttu.edu/tmot1/
Search
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Comments
By William B. Davis and David J. Schmidly
In The Mammals of Texas , Drs. William B. Davis and David J. Schmidly bring together over 70 years of experience in the study of Texas mammals. A completely revised and updated version of William B. Davis's classic text, which was first published in 1947, The Mammals of Texas is a perennial favorite, going through four reprints and revisions during the past 47 years. A basic reference for the wildlife enthusiast, the book contains information on the distribution, physical characteristics and life histories of the 181 species of Texas mammals. Included are photographs, a comprehensive set of distribution maps and identification keys to the orders and species of mammals found in Texas. Also included is a brief introduction to the study of mammals. This online edition of The Mammals of Texas Preface Acknowledgements About the Authors

57. Aquatic Mammals
Aquatic mammals. Introduction. Aquatic mammals is the scientific, peerreviewed journal of the European Association for Aquatic mammals.
http://www.eaam.org/aquamamm.htm
Aquatic Mammals
Introduction
Aquatic Mammals is the scientific, peer reviewed journal of the European Association for Aquatic Mammals. In this journal, papers dealing with all aspects of the care, conservation, medicine and science of aquatic mammals are published. The journal appears 3 times per year. The annual subscription price is $95 US per year, including shipping and handling. Subscription requests and mailing inquiries should be directed to the Editor. Download a subscription form in PDF format You need the Acrobat Reader to view this file
Editor
The current Editor of the journal is:
Dr. Jeanette A. Thomas
Laboratory of Sensory Biology
Western Illinois University Regional Center
3561 60th Street
Moline, IL 61265, USA
Phone +1 309 762 9481, ext. 262 Fax E-mail aquatic_mammals@eaam.org
Editors Emeritus
The following people have served Aquatic Mammals as editor in the past:
  • Willem H. Dudok van Heel Victor J.A. Manton Paul E. Nachtigall

58. The Fossil Mammal Hall
A summary of the diversity of fossil mammals with the objective in mind to convey information on fundamental aspects of mammalian paleontology.
http://paleo.amnh.org/bjburger/fossilmammal/index.html
THE FOSSIL MAMMAL HALL THE FOSSIL MAMMAL HALL

59. InfoNatura - Birds And Mammals Of Latin America
Translate this page InfoNatura Birds and mammals of Latin America Conservation informationfor more than 5500 species in 44 countries. NatureServe,
http://www.natureserve.org/infonatura/
NatureServe in collaboration with Conservation Data Centers in 12 Latin American and Caribbean countries. Español Português
You can easily search InfoNatura to find: scientific and common names conservation status distribution maps NatureServe
Species Index

Search InfoNatura
About the Data ... Thanks to...
InfoNatura Aves y Mamíferos de América Latina
Búsqueda InfoNatura
Acerca de los Datos Acerca de Nosotros Contáctenos ... Português Actualmente, la interface de InfoNatura está en inglés. Una interface en español está planeada para un futuro cercano. InfoNatura es un producto de en colaboración con los Centros de Datos para la Conservación que existen en 12 países en América Latina y el Caribe. Derechos reservados NatureServe
Indice de especies
InfoNatura Pássaros e Mamíferos da América Latina
Busca InfoNatura Sobre os Dados Sobre Nós Entre em Contato ... Español Atualmente, os dados de InfoNatura estão em inglês; contaremos em breve com estes dados tambêm em português. InfoNatura é um produto da 'NatureServe' em colaboração com os Centros de Dados para a Conservação de 12 países da América Latina e do Caribe. Direitos reservados NatureServe
Indice de espécies

60. MAMMALS: Aardvark, Addax, African Hunting Dog, Alpaca...
Small paragraphs of information about several mammals, including scientific classification, dimensions, habitat, and interesting facts.
http://www.4to40.com/earth/geography/htm/mammals.asp
4to40.com Home My Page Feedback Search ... Mammals :: Index Page No :
: Aardvark, Addax, African Hunting Dog, Alpaca, Anteater, Armadillo, Ass, Aye-Aye, Babirusa, Baboon
: Badger, Bandicoot, Banteng, Barbary Ape, Bat, Bear Black, Bear Brown, Bear Polar, Beaver, Beluga
: Bighorn, Bison, Blesbok, Bobcat, Bongo, Buffalo, Cacomistle, Camel, Capuchin, Capybara
: Caribou, Chamois, Cheetah, Chevrotain, Chimpanzee, Chipmunk, Civet, Coatimundi, Colugo, Coyote
: Cuscus, Deer Mouse, Deer, Desman, Dhole, Dingo, Dolphin, Drill, Duck-billed Platypus, Duiker
: Elephant, Elk, Ermine, False Paca, Ferret, Flying Squirrel, Fossa, Fox, Galago, Gazelle
: Gemsbok, Gerbil, Gerenuk, Gibbon, Giraffe, Gopher, Gorilla, Grison, Groundhog, Guenon
: Guereza, Guinea Pig, Hamster, Hare, Hartebeest, Hedgehog, Hippopotamus, Hyena, Hyrax, Impala
: Indri, Jackal, Jaguar, Jerboa, Kaffir Cat, Kangaroo, Kangaroo Rat, Kiang, Kinkajou, Koala
: Kudu, Langur - Hanuman, Lemming, lemur, Leopard, Lion, Llama, Lynx, Macaque, Mandrill : Marmoset, Marten, Mink, Mole, Mongoose, Monkey, Moose, Mountain Goat, Mouse, Muntjac

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