Allison, one source would be to either go online or else contact the
University of Nebraska at Lincoln, Morrill Hall, and ask for the index to
the Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences (TNAS). Also I would
search the American Museum Library/Frick Laboratory publications which are
all free PDF's available online -- the titles are the AMNH monographs, the
Novitates, and the Bulletin of the AMNH. One more would be to search the
U.C. Berkeley library for the Bulletin of the Department of Geological
Sciences. Again there is also the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (JVP)
-- all of these classic vert. paleo. publications, where you would expect
to find papers on Arctodus, the short-faced bear of the Pleistocene.
> Dear zooarchs,
>
> Does anyone have in their possession (or have access to) an Arctodus
> canine tooth? I am looking for the dimensions of the canine (on
> average)...
>
> Thanks,
> Allison Grunwald
>
>
>
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