EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialMegasternum, Print, Pleurosternon is an extinct genus of cryptodire turtle from the late Jurassic period to the early Cretaceous period. Its type species, P. bullocki was described by the paleontologist Richard Owen (noted for coining the word Dinosaur...
EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialMegatherium cuvierii, Print, Megatherium was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to South America, sometimes called the giant ground sloth, that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene.Only a few other land mammals ...
EditorialSeahorse (Hippocampus punctutatus) and flying fish (Exocetus volitans). Handcolored engraving by Oudart from Orbigny's "Dictionnaire Universel d'Histoire Naturelle" (Universal Dictionary of Natural History) 1849.