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Kellogg, Remington
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1924 |
Tertiary pelagic mammals of eastern North America.
Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer. 35: 755-766.
–Sirs., 755.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1925 |
A new fossil sirenian from Santa Barbara County, California.
Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ. No. 348: 57-70. Pls. 9-11. Apr. 1925.
–Describes Metaxytherium jordani, n.sp., from the Upper Miocene of Lompoc and discusses its relationship to Hydrodamalis. Refers Dioplotherium manigaulti Cope to Metaxytherium (59) without, however, writing out the implied new combination.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1929a |
Extinct ocean-living mammals from Maryland.
Explor. Field Work Smithson. Inst. 1928 [1929]: 27-32. 4 figs.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1929b |
A new fossil toothed whale from Florida.
Amer. Mus. Novit. No. 389: 1-10.
–Mentions Felsinotherium, 1.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1931 |
Pelagic mammals from the Temblor Formation of the Kern River region, California.
Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. (4)19(12): 217-397. 134 figs. Jan. 30, 1931.
–Reviews the distribution of desmostylians (219-227) and gives the synonymy and type localities for Cornwallius sookensis, Desmostylus cymatias, D. californicus, D. hesperus, and D. japonicus, all of which he provisionally recognizes. Reports a Desmostylus tooth from the Upper Miocene of Washington (226), and illustrates and describes a tooth from the Temblor (225-227, figs. 1-3).
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Kellogg, Remington
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1936 |
A review of the Archaeoceti.
Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ. No. 482: xv + 366. 87 figs. 37 pls. Dec. 14, 1936.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1942 |
Tertiary, Quaternary, and Recent marine mammals of South America and the West Indies.
Proc. 8th Amer. Sci. Congr. 3: 445-473.
–See also Kellogg (1943).
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Kellogg, Remington
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1943 |
Past and present status of the marine mammals of South America and the West Indies.
Ann. Rept. Smithson. Inst. 1942 (Publ. no. 3705): 299-316.
–Abridged version of Kellogg (1942). Brief paragraph on Eocene and Oligocene sirs. in the West Indies (299).
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Kellogg, Remington; Whitmore, Frank Clifford, Jr.
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1957 |
Mammals. In: H. S. Ladd (ed.), Treatise on marine ecology and paleocology. Vol. 2. Paleoecology (x + 1077 pp.).
Mem. Geol. Soc. Amer. 67(2): 1021-1024.
–Discusses the paleoenvironments of several Miocene sirs.: Miosiren (Antwerp Basin, Belgium), oceanic coastline (1021); Metaxytherium (Calvert Fm., Maryland), large estuary; Hesperosiren (Hawthorn Fm., Florida), environment similar to present Atlantic coast of Florida (1022).
Vol. 1 (Ecology, J.W. Hedgpeth, ed.; Mem. 67(1): viii + 1296) of this treatise contains an article on "Marine Mammals" by the same authors (1223-1226), with a brief paragraph summarizing Recent sir. distribution on p. 1223. This is not indexed here.
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Kellogg, Remington
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1959 |
Description of the skull of Pomatodelphis inaequalis Allen.
Bull. Mus. Compar. Zool. Harvard Coll. 121(1): 3-26. 1 fig. 6 pls. May 1959.
–Mentions "manatee" (i.e., Metaxytherium floridanum) bones found in the Homeland Mine, Polk County, Florida (m6).
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Kellogg, Remington
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1966 |
Fossil marine mammals from the Miocene Calvert Formation of Maryland and Virginia. 3. New species of extinct Miocene Sirenia.
U.S. Natl. Mus. Bull. 247(3): 65-98. Figs. 32-38. Pls. 33-43.
–Reviews the Miocene Sirenia of the U.S. Atlantic coast; describes Metaxytherium calvertense, n.sp. (71-90), from the Middle Miocene of Maryland; discusses Felsinotherium alleni (new combination; 91) and M. manigaulti from the ?Miocene of South Carolina (91-92); describes M. ortegense, n.sp. (93-94), from the ?Upper Miocene of Colombia. The new combination Felsinotherium ortegense is inadvertently created as a lapsus for M. ortegense (pl. 36). Gives useful reviews of the usage of the names Halianassa, Metaxytherium, Felsinotherium, and many specific names. Considers Hemicaulodon Cope a sir., though it is actually a walrus (see C. E. Ray, 1975). Fixes the type species of Metaxytherium by restriction as M. medium (= M. cuvieri) (70), and inadvertently designates a lectotype for Halianassa studeri (69, pl. 43; see Domning, 1987b).
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