Synapsida
A random wander through the world of mammals
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Saturday, 29 November 2025
Viverrids: Civets Great and Small
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Small Indian civet Most species of true civet weigh somewhere between 7 and 9 kg (16 to 20 lbs), somewhat larger than a domestic cat, and si...
3 comments:
Sunday, 23 November 2025
Climate, Cloud Forests, and Cotton Rats
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The Cricetidae is the single largest family of mammals in terms of the number of species, at least according to the current count from the ...
7 comments:
Sunday, 16 November 2025
Splitting the Troop
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Primates are, for the most part, social, group-living animals. This underlies many aspects of human behaviour and likely played a role in ou...
2 comments:
Sunday, 9 November 2025
Viverrids: Civets of Southeast Asia
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Large Indian civet Our definition of the Viverridae family has, as I noted previously , undergone some ups and downs over the centuries. It ...
Sunday, 2 November 2025
The Air Conditioning in Your Nose
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The nasal cavities are not mere holes running through the head. Anatomically, at least, that's broadly true at either end - in the vesti...
3 comments:
Sunday, 26 October 2025
Oligocene (Pt 18): Sawfish-Dolphins and Baleen Whales with Teeth
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Olympicetus , a simocetid whale Although the oldest fossils of seal-like animals may date back to the end of the Oligocene, there are ve...
7 comments:
Sunday, 19 October 2025
Viverrids: Rise and Fall of a Wastebasket
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The carnivorous mammals have been recognised as a taxonomic order since the official dawn of biological classification in 1758. In that firs...
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