This category in other languages:

  • Turtles: Business as Usual - Article on turtles which were the most abundant and diverse reptiles in Paleocene faunas with about 50 genera known from Paleocene sediments.
  • SuperCroc - Information on the crocodile Sarchosuchus imperator with interactive games and movie clips.
  • Australia's Lost Kingdoms - Exhibit from the Australian Museum covering Australia's fossil history from 110 million years ago.
  • Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ - Provides a discussion on the explanation for the gaps that exist in the fossil record between different groups of vertebrates.
  • Fossil Amphibians, Reptiles and Birds - Information on these fossils from the American Museum of Natural History with a gallery of fossil images.
  • Vertebrate Paleontology - The Carnegie Museum of Natural History presents current research and news on this topic..
  • Modern Forms: Basal Amniote Evolution - Diagram showing extinctions and diversifications of major groups of amniotes over time.
  • Introduction to the Sphenodontidae - Provides information on the pleurosaurs and the Tuatara, the only species of sphenodontid alive today and little changed in appearance from the sphenodontids living 150 million years ago.
  • Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ - A large, but by no means complete, list of transitional fossils that are known.
  • Palaeozoic Microvertebrates - Microvertebrate page from the University of Alberta.
  • Laboratory for Environmental Biology: Vertebrate Paleobiology - Provides information on the collection of over 70,000 Pleistocene fossils at the Centennial Museum, primarily from New Mexican cave faunas, with a checklist of Late Pleistocene fossil taxa from the El Paso region.
  • So You Want To Be a Paleontologist? - Advice on how to become a paleontologist and which colleges offer programs in vertebrate paleontology.
  • U. Texas - Vertebrate Paleontology Lab - Research and collections information from the VP lab of the Texas Memorial Museum (UT, Austin).
  • Angellis - Images and information about dinosaur genera as well as some non-dinosaur vertebrate taxa.
  • The Archosauria - The great archosaur lineage includes crocodiles, dinosaurs, pterosaurs and many other diapsids. Information on their fossil record, life history, ecology, systematics and morphology.
  • PrehistoricPlanet.com - Dinosaur and fossil news and features including interviews with paleontologists and interactive science modules.
  • Extinct Animal - Learn about prehistoric, recently extinct, and endangered species of vertebrates.
  • Paleoneurology - The study of brain casts of extinct vertebrates.
  • American Museum of Natural History: Proganochelys - Provides information on Proganochelys which is the most primitive turtle known, first appearing about 210 million years ago.