enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Late Pleistocene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Pleistocene

    The Late Pleistocene is an unofficial age in the international geologic timescale in chronostratigraphy, also known as the Upper Pleistocene from a stratigraphic perspective. It is intended to be the fourth division of the Pleistocene Epoch within the ongoing Quaternary Period. It is currently defined as the time between c. 129,000 and c ...

  3. Quaternary glaciation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaternary_glaciation

    The Quaternary glaciation, also known as the Pleistocene glaciation, is an alternating series of glacial and interglacial periods during the Quaternary period that began 2.58 Ma (million years ago) and is ongoing.

  4. Discus macclintocki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discus_macclintocki

    The 775-acre (3.14 km 2) Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1989 to protect native flora and fauna, including endangered and threatened species such as the Iowa Pleistocene snail. [4] The refuge conserves the algific talus slope habitat and other local habitat such as cold, moist sinkholes. [4]

  5. Geodispersal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geodispersal

    In biogeography, geodispersal is the erosion of barriers to gene flow and biological dispersal (Lieberman, 2005.; [1] Albert and Crampton, 2010. [2]). Geodispersal differs from vicariance, which reduces gene flow through the creation of geographic barriers. [3]

  6. Late Pleistocene extinctions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Pleistocene_extinctions

    Late Pleistocene in northern Spain, by Mauricio Antón.Left to right: wild horse; woolly mammoth; reindeer; cave lion; woolly rhinoceros Mural of the La Brea Tar Pits by Charles R. Knight, including sabertooth cats (Smilodon fatalis, left) ground sloths (Paramylodon harlani, right) and Columbian mammoths (Mammuthus columbi, background)

  7. Early expansions of hominins out of Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_expansions_of...

    Until the early 1980s, early humans were thought to have been restricted to the African continent in the Early Pleistocene, or until about 0.8 Ma; Hominin migrations outside East Africa were apparently rare in the Early Pleistocene, leaving a fragmentary record of events. [4] [5]

  8. Paleontology in Rhode Island - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleontology_in_Rhode_Island

    The Paleogene and Neogene periods are also missing from Rhode Island's rock record. During the Pleistocene the state was subjected to glacial activity. Notable local fossil finds have included previously unknown kinds of insect and abundant ancient amphibian trackways. [1]

  9. Mata Menge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mata_Menge

    Mata Menge is an early Middle Pleistocene paleoanthropological site located in the Ola Bula Formation in the So'a Basin on the island of Flores, Indonesia. Lithic artefacts and hominin remains have been discovered at the site. The level of sophistication of the Mata Menge lithic artefacts is described as being 'simple'. [4]