TABLE 8S:

Montana, Idaho, Wyoming

Table 6S: Summary Data -- Miocene Mammals in the Northern U.S. Rocky Mountains

Table 8S. References Cited in Table 7S.

Alroy, J. 1999. North American Mammalian Paleofaunal Database. http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~alroy/nampfd.html.

Barnosky, Anthony D. 1981. A skeleton of Mesoscalops (Mammalia, Insectivora) from the Miocene Deep River Formation, Montana, and a review of the proscalopid moles: Evolutionary, functional and stratigraphic relationships. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 1:285-339.

Barnosky, Anthony D. 1986. Arikareean, Hemingfordian, and Barstovian mammals from the Miocene Colter Formation, Jackson Hole, Teton County, Wyoming. Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 26 69 pp.Barnosky, Anthony D., and Wayne J. Labar. 1989. Mid-Miocene (Barstovian) environmental and tectonic setting near Yellowstone Park, Wyoming and Montana. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 101:1448-1456.

Black, C.C. 1961a. New rodents from the early Miocene deposits of Sixty-six Mountain, Wyoming. Berviora 146:1-7.

Black, C.C. 1961b. Rodents and lagomorphs from the Miocene Fort Logan and Deep River formations of Montana. Postilla 48:1-20.

Burbank, Douglas W., and Anthony D. Barnosky. 1990. The magnetochronology of Barstovian mammals in southwestern Montana and implications for the initiation of Neogene crustal extension in the northern Rocky Mountains. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 102:1093-1104.

Cassiliano, M. 1980. Stratigraphy and vertebrate paleontology of the Horse Creek-Trail Creek area, Laramie County, Wyoming. Univ. Wyoming Contr. Geol. 19:25-68.

Hibbard, C. W., and K. A. Keenmon. 1950. New evidence of the Lower Miocene age of the Blacktail Deer Creek formation in Montana. Contrib. Mus. Pal. Univ. Mich. 8:193-204, 3 figs., 1 map.

Janis, C.J., Scott, K.M., and Jacobs, L. 1998. Evolution of Tertiary Mammals of North America, Cambridge University Press.

McKenna, M.C. and Love, J.D. 1972. High-level strata containing earlly Miocene mammals on the Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming. Amer. Mus. Novit. 2400:1-31.

Munthe, J. 1988. Miocene mammals of the Split Rock area, Granite Mountains Basin, central Wyoming. Univ. Calif. Publ. Geol. Sci. 126 vii + 136 pp. + 3 pl.

Nichols, R. 1976. Early Miocene mammals from the Lemhi Valley of Idaho. Tebiwa 18:9-47.

Nichols, R. 1979. Additional early Miocene mammals from the Lemhi Valley of Idaho. Tebiwa Misc. Pap. 17:1-12.

Nichols, R. 1998. The Lemhi Valley Oligo-Miocene: An overview. Pp. 10-12, in Akersten, W.A., MacDonald, H.D. Meldrum, D.J., and Flint, M.E.T., And Whereas ... Papers on the Vertebrate Paleontology of Idaho, Idaho Museum Natural History Occasional Paper 36.

Rasmussen, 1977. Geology and mammalian paleontology of the Oligo-Miocene Cabbage Patch Formation, central-western Montana. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Univ. Kansas, Lawerence, 775 pp.

Rensberger, J.M. 1979. Promylagaulus, progressive aplodontid rodents of the early Miocene. Los Angeles Co. Mus. Sci. Contr. 312:1-18.

Sutton, J.F., 1977. Mammals of the Anceney local fauna (late Miocene) of Montana. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 257 pp.

Sutton, J.F. and Korth, W. W. Rodents (Mammalia) from the Barstovian (Miocene) Anceney local fauna, Montana. Ann. Carnegie Mus. 64, 267-314 (1995).


Use of this resource in publications should be cited as:
Carrasco, M.A., B.P. Kraatz, E.B. Davis, and A.D. Barnosky. 2005. Miocene Mammal Mapping Project (MIOMAP). University of California Museum of Paleontology https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/miomap/