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1. Ancient DNA of the pygmy marmoset type specimen Cebuella pygmaea (Spix, 1823) resolves a taxonomic conundrum

2. A new family of diprotodontian marsupials from the latest Oligocene of Australia and the evolution of wombats, koalas, and their relatives (Vombatiformes)

5. Earliest known record of a hypercarnivorous dasyurid (Marsupialia), from newly discovered carbonates beyond the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, north Queensland

9. A new family of bizarre durophagous carnivorous marsupials from Miocene deposits in the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, northwestern Queensland

10. Mammalian lineages and the biostratigraphy and biochronology of Cenozoic faunas from the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, Australia

11. A peculiar faunivorous metatherian from the early Eocene of Australia

13. Changes in morphological disparity in eutherian \ud mammals across the K-Pg boundary and Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum using discrete \ud morphofunctional characters

14. Elucidating cryptic diversity in East African frogs : the case of Arthroleptis francei Loveridge, 1953

15. Advancing the use of evolutionary considerations in spatial conservation planning

16. Identification of constrained sequence elements across 239 primate genomes.

17. Complex Evolutionary History With Extensive Ancestral Gene Flow in an African Primate Radiation.

18. A 50-million-year-old, three-dimensionally preserved bat skull supports an early origin for modern echolocation.

19. A probable koala from the Oligocene of central Australia provides insights into early diprotodontian evolution.

20. Multiple modes of inference reveal less phylogenetic signal in marsupial basicranial shape compared with the rest of the cranium.

21. A global catalog of whole-genome diversity from 233 primate species.

22. The landscape of tolerated genetic variation in humans and primates.

23. Total evidence phylogeny of platyrrhine primates and a comparison of undated and tip-dating approaches.

24. Evolution: The evolutionary rat race in New Guinea and Australia.

25. Two hundred and five newly assembled mitogenomes provide mixed evidence for rivers as drivers of speciation for Amazonian primates.

26. Global elongation and high shape flexibility as an evolutionary hypothesis of accommodating mammalian brains into skulls.

27. A new family of diprotodontian marsupials from the latest Oligocene of Australia and the evolution of wombats, koalas, and their relatives (Vombatiformes).

28. Tip dating supports novel resolutions of controversial relationships among early mammals.

29. Improvements in the fossil record may largely resolve current conflicts between morphological and molecular estimates of mammal phylogeny.

30. A new, large-bodied omnivorous bat (Noctilionoidea: Mystacinidae) reveals lost morphological and ecological diversity since the Miocene in New Zealand.

32. Skeleton of an unusual, cat-sized marsupial relative (Metatheria: Marsupialiformes) from the middle Eocene (Lutetian: 44-43 million years ago) of Turkey.

33. The Skull of Epidolops ameghinoi from the Early Eocene Itaboraí Fauna, Southeastern Brazil, and the Affinities of the Extinct Marsupialiform Order Polydolopimorphia.

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