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Pleistocene Mammals of North America

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The article was published on 1980-10-15 and is currently open access. It has received 907 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Platygonus & Homotherium.

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The Metallic, Nonmetallic, and Industrial Mineral Industry of Washington—1997

TL;DR: The metallic, nonmetallic, and industrial mineral industry of Washington as discussed by the authors, 1997, p. 3 Washington’s coal industry, and its coal mines, including the coal mines of the Cascade Range of Washington.
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The failure of evolution: Late quaternary mammalian extinctions in the holarctic

TL;DR: The mass extinction of large mammals in the late Pleistocene can be viewed as the failure of evolution to adapt to climatic and/or biotic changes as discussed by the authors, leading to a greatly accelerated rate, seriously depleting the megafauna on a global scale.
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Implications of introgression for wildlife translocations: the case of North American martens

TL;DR: The results highlight the importance of understanding phylogeographic variation prior to identifying source populations for wildlife translocations and caution the use of genetic rescue for North American marten populations.
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Horses, the Fossil Record, and Evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors pointed out that fossil horses do indeed provide compelling evidence in support of evolutionary theory, and that the horse sequence has been cited as evidence for practically every evolutionary principle that has ever been coined.
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Origin of the Red Wolf: Response to Nowak and Federoff and Gardener

TL;DR: Nowak and Federoff as mentioned in this paper argued that the red wolf lineage diverged first from the same ancestral stock that later gave rise to coyotes and gray wolves (Fig. 1).