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The Cenozoic: After Impact
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Paleocene (66 to 56 MYA)
A Very Peculiar Mammal
Meridosuchus: Southern Crocodile
Platydiprotodon: Armored Notosuchian
Brontavis: The Siberian Giant
Borealosuchus: A Maastrichtian Holdover
Nimbatherium: Nimba's Beast
Taeniodonts of The Paleocene
Kapoavis: The Fire Bird
Duntosuchus: The Cute Boi
Amphicaiman: The First Arrival
Antarcticolestes: Antarctic Robber
Eohadrorhyncus: A peculiar Monotreme
Didelphofelis, Oppossum Cat
Plesiosauria: Surviviors, but at a cost
Infantoavis: The Baby Eater
Lepsidopodus: The Limb Gar
Latiocephalus: The Giant Salamander
Ammonites of the Paleocene
Trypantotherium: Digging Beast
Eoastrapocornus: The beginning of the Trembundetheres
Silvacervidae: Early Members
Platyrhynchosuchus: The Duckigator
Hesperornithimimine Lectavids of the Paleocene
Ecosystem: South Asian Swamps
Thalassoalligatorans of the Paleocene
Liosuchus: A real Champ
Early Eocene (56 to 45 MYA)
Pseudocarnivorans of the Early Eocene
Argentoporcus: The Silvery Pig
Ecosystem: Northern and Central Africa
Rhynchocursorians of the Early Eocene
Taeniodonts of the Early Eocene
Anatocetids of the Early Eocene
The First Austrornithids
Spur Squirells and Ratmonkeys
Two Flying Mammals
Hyaenadonts of the Early Eocene
The last Eutriconodont
Eosilvasiren: The First Unicorn Manatee
Trembundetheres: The Quake Beasts
Stagodonts: A new Beginning and an end
Ogretheromorphs: The Australian Colonizers
The "Cat" and the "Canary"
Gwimblydon: Gwimbly Tooth
Ecosystem: Australian Open Woodlands
The Rise of Ungulates
Late Eocene (45 MYA to 33 MYA)
Oligocene (33 MYA to 23 MYA)
Early Miocene (23 MYA to 16 MYA)
African-Eurasian Biotic Interchange
Late Miocene (16 MYA to 5.3 MYA)
Resources
The Cenozoic: After Impact
The Early Eocene
Warm, Wet, and Wild
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