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Recent Discoveries of Dinosaurs in India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Until the last few years the Asiatic Continent has yielded remarkably few remains of Dinosaurs. The recent discoveries in Mongolia have revolutionized our knowledge of their distribution in Northern Asia, and now much new information has come to light from collections made from the Cretaceous rocks of India.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

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References

page 275 note 1 Synopsis of Indian Pre-Tertiary Reptilia and Amphibia”: Pal. lad., 4, i, pt. 5, 1885, 37Google Scholar. Recently Das-Gupta, H. C. has described a tooth from the Panchet Beds as Teratosaurus (?) bengalensis. Jour. As. Scc. Bengal, N.S., xxiv, 1928, 476–8.Google Scholar

page 275 ntoe 2 Matley, C. A., “On the stratigraphy, fossils, and geological relationships of the Lameta Beds of Jubbulpore”: Rec. G.S.I., liii, 1921, 152–7.Google Scholar

page 276 note 1 Note on an Armoured Dinosaur from the Lameta Beds of Jubbulpore”: Rec. G.S.I., lv, 1923, 105–9.Google Scholar

page 280 note 1 The Cretaceous Dinosaurs of the Trichinopoly District and the Rocks associated with them”: Rec.G.S.I., lxi, 1929, 337–9.Google Scholar

page 280 note 2 C. R. Narayan Rao and B. R. Seshachar, “A short Note on Certain Fossils taken in the Ariyalur Area (S.India)”; and Rao, L. Rama, “Notes on the Upper Cretaceous Rocks near Ariyalur, S.India”: Half-Yearly Jour. Mysore Univ., i, No. 2, 144–152 and 153–7.Google Scholar