Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia  


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"Kretzoi, Miklós"

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Kretzoi, Miklós (detail)
   
1941
Sirenavus hungaricus n.g., n.sp., ein neuer Prorastomide aus dem Mitteleozän (Lutetium) von Felsőgalla in Ungarn.
Ann. Hist.-Nat. Mus. Natl. Hungarici (Min. Geol. Pal.) 34: 146-156. 1 fig. 1 pl.
–Hungarian summ. Describes S. hungaricus (147), proposes the new names Masrisiren Abeli (152) and Halysiren (153) together with several new names for higher taxa, and proposes a general classification for the Sirenia.
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Kretzoi, Miklós (detail)
   
1951
Új sziréna-tipus a Magyar Miocénből. (Neuer Sirenen-Typus aus dem ungarischen Miozän.)
Földt. Közlöny (Bull. Hung. Geol. Soc.) 81(10-12): 438-441. Oct.-Dec. 1951?
–Text in Hungarian and German; Russian summ. Describes Haplosiren legányii, n.gen.n.sp., on the basis of two lower molars from the Miocene ("Tortonian"; ?= Badenian) of Hungary, and compares it with other sirs., concluding that it lies between Metaxytherium and Felsinotherium.
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Kretzoi, Miklós (detail)
   
1953
A legidősebb Magyar ősemlős-lelet. (Le plus ancien vestige fossile de mammifère en Hongrie.)
Földt. Közlöny (Bull. Hung. Geol. Soc.) 83(7-9): 273-277. June-Sept. 1953.
–In Hungarian; Russian & French summs. Reports sir. vertebra and rib fragments from the Early Eocene (Ypresian) of Dudar, Hungary, and comments on the functional significance of pachyostosis in hydrostasis. These specimens are now considered Middle Eocene in age.
 
 
Kretzoi, Miklós (detail)
   
1955
A hazai emlősállatok fejlődéstörténete. [Evolution of mammals in our country.]
Űtmutató A Társadalom- és Természettudományi Ismerretterjesztő Társulat Előadói Számára [Guide for Lecturers of the Public Association for Social Science & Science] (Budapest, A Társadalom- és Természettudományi Ismerretterjesztő Társulat [Public Association for Social Science & Science]) No. 29.
–Briefly discusses the fossil sirs. reported from Hungary (9-10).

Daryl P. Domning, Research Associate, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560, and Laboratory of Evolutionary Biology, Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, Howard University, Washington, D.C. 20059.
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