Mada bats

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Miniopterus mites

Fossil Miniopterus

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MP 29
  • Herrlingen 9, Germany: M. cf. fossilis (Ziegler, 2000)
MN 4/5
  • Vieux-Collonges, France: M. fossilis (Ziegler, 2003)
MN 6
  • Devinska Nova Ves fissures, Slovakia: M. fossilis (Zapfe, 1950 in Mein and Ginsburg, 2002; Ziegler, 2003)
  • Goldberg, Germany: M. fossilis (Rachl, 1983 in Mein and Ginsburg, 2002; Ziegler, 2003)
MN 7/8
  • La Grive M, France: M. fossilis, M. zapfei (Mein and Ginsburg, 2002)
  • La Grive L7, France: M. fossilis (Mein and Ginsburg, 2002)
  • Anwil, Switzerland: ?M. fossilis (Engesser, 1972; Mein and Ginsburg, 2002)
  • Petersbuch 6, Germany: M. rummeli (Ziegler, 2003)
  • Petersbuch 10, Germany: M. rummeli (Ziegler, 2003)
  • Petersbuch 18, Germany: M. fossilis, M. rummeli (Ziegler, 2003)
MN 10
  • Lo Fournas 1993, France: M. sp.
MN 13
  • Salobrena, Spain: M. fossilis (Ziegler, 2003)
  • Lissieu, France: M. fossilis
MN 14
  • Podlesice, Poland: M. approximatus (Woloszyn, 1987)
MN 15
  • Muselievo, Bulgaria: M. cf. approximatus (Popov, 2004)
MN 16
  • Olduvai, Tanzania: (?) M. schreibersii (?Leakey, 1965, Olduvai Gorge 1951-61 (Volume I): a preliminary report on the geology and fauna. Camb)
  • Gundersheim 1, near Worms, Germany: M. aff. schreibersii (Tobien, 1980 ex Heller, 1936, Neues Jahrb. Min. 76B:99-160; 1963, N. Jb. Geol. Palaeontol. Abh. 118:1-20)
MN 17
  • Almenara-Casablanca 1, Spain: M. sp., M. aff. schreibersii (Furio, 2007)
Pleistocene
Europe
  • Artenac c10, France: M. schreibersii (Delagnes et al., 1999 [1])
  • Emirkaya, Turkey: M. schreibersii (?Sen, 1991, Bull. Mus. Nat. Hist. Nat. 12:243)
  • Ghar Dalam, Malta: M. schreibersii (Storch, 1974 in Ziegler, 2003)
  • Deutsch-Altenburg 2, 3, 4, Austria: M. schreibersii (Rabeder, 1973 in Ziegler, 2003)
  • Punta Padrebellu-Omo Morto, Italy: M. schreibersii (Kostakis, 1987 [2])
China
  • Hexian, China: M. schreibersii (Zheng, 1983 [3])
  • Zhoukoudian 1, China: M. tao (Woloszyn, 1986)
  • Zhoukoudian 3, China: M. schreibersii (Pei (1936). On the mammalian remains from locality 3 at Choukoutien. Palaeontologia Sinica, Series C VII (5): 1-108.)
  • Xiaoxishan, China: M. schreibersii (Zheng et al., 1998 [4])
  • Huanglong, China: M. schreibersii (Liu et al., 2010 [5])
Africa
Holocene
  • Andrahomana, Madagascar: M. gleni (Burney et al., 2006)
  • Matupi, DR Congo: M. schreibersii (?W. Van Neer. 1984. The use of fish remains in African archaeozoology. Centre de Recherches Archeol. Notes et Monogra. Tech. 16:155-167 [K. Behrensmeyer/K. Behrensmeyer/M. Kosnik] - according to PaleoDB)
  • Wonderwerk Cave, S Africa: M. schreibersi (?R. G. Klein. 1979. Paleoenvironmental and Cultural Implications of Late Holocene Archaeological Faunas from the Orange Free State and North Central Cape Province, South Africa. South African Archaeological Bulletin 34:34-49 - according to PaleoDB)
To check
  • Boll. Serv. Geol. Ital. 101:49-76
  • Palaeont. Afric. 7:59-118
  • D. Janossy. 1986. Pleistocene vertebrate faunas of Hungary. Developments in Palaeontology and Stratigraphy, 8. Elsevier, Amsterdam 1-208

Myotis

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Original description of Aeorestes. This is significant because Aeorestes was proposed as the subgenus name for American Myotis, but the type species is actually Aeorestes villosissimus, a Lasiurus (Gardner, 2007). That means (see synonymy in Gardner, 2007:468–469) the earliest available name for New World Myotis is Pizonyx Miller, 1900, but it appears that no one has actually used it as the subgeneric name.

Gondwanathere abstracts

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