Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia  


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"Zalmout, Iyad Saleh"

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Zalmout, Iyad Saleh; Haq, Munir Ul-; Gingerich, Philip D. (detail)
   
2003
New species of Protosiren (Mammalia, Sirenia) from the early Middle Eocene of Balochistan (Pakistan).
Contr. Mus. Pal. Univ. Michigan 31(3): 79-87. 1 tab. 4 figs. Aug. 15, 2003.
–Abstr.: Jour. Vert. Pal. 21(3), Suppl.: 117A, Aug. 22, 2001. Describes Protosiren eothene, n.sp., based on a partial thorax of early Lutetian age. It is the smallest and oldest in a series of species also comprising P. fraasi, P. sattaensis, and P. smithae and spanning some 8 million years.
x
 
Peters, Shanan E.; Antar, Mohammed Sameh M.; Zalmout, Iyad Saleh; Gingerich, Philip D. (detail)
   
2009
Sequence stratigraphic control on preservation of late Eocene whales and other vertebrates at Wadi Al-Hitan, Egypt.
Palaios 24: 290-302. 1 tab. 9 figs.
–Describes the occurrence and preservation of fossil dugongids at various stratigraphic levels (294, 296-297, 299-301).
 
 
Samonds, Karen E.; Zalmout, Iyad Saleh; Irwin, Mitchell T.; Krause, David W.; Rogers, Raymond R.; Raharivony, Lydia L. (detail)
   
2009
Eotheroides lambondrano, new middle Eocene seacow (Mammalia, Sirenia) from the Mahajanga Basin, northwestern Madagascar.
Jour. Vert. Paleo. 29(4): 1233-1243. 2 tabs. 7 figs. Dec. 12, 2009.
–Notice: Brian Fisher Johnson, Earth Magazine 55(3): 28. 1 fig. March 2010.
 
 
Domning, Daryl Paul; Zalmout, Iyad Saleh; Gingerich, Philip D. (detail)
   
2010
Sirenia. Chap. 14 in: L. Werdelin & W. J. Sanders (eds.), Cenozoic mammals of Africa.
Berkeley, Univ. of California Press (xxi + 986): 147-160. 1 tab. 5 figs.
–Updates Domning, 1978c.
 
 
Zalmout, Iyad Saleh; Gingerich, Philip D. (detail)
   
2012
Late Eocene sea cows (Mammalia, Sirenia) from Wadi Al Hitan in the Western Desert of Fayum, Egypt.
Univ. Michigan Papers on Paleontology No. 37: xiii + 158. 44 tabs. Frontisp. 101 figs. Dec. 17, 2012.

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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