Identifier: scienceguide1630amer (
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Guide leafletYear:
1901 (
1900s)Authors:
American Museum of Natural HistorySubjects:
American Museum of Natural History Natural historyPublisher:
New York : The MuseumContributing Library:
American Museum of Natural History LibraryDigitizing Sponsor:
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view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:rmediate betweenthe two types. The limbs and feet are also intermediate. Itis probable, therefore, that the Dogs and Raccoons are derivedfrom a common ancestral stock. Specimens found in Europe in-dicate that the Bears are likewise derived from this commonstock, and that the three families have diverged, the Dogs becom-ing terrestrial flesh-eaters, living largely in open country, theBears omnivorous and living in the woods, the Raccoons omniv-orous and arboreal. FOSSIL CARMlORA 21 CaniDjB, or Dogs. The living species of Canidae Wolves, Coyotes, Foxes arefound only in the most recent deposits (Pleistocene). A variety of extinct species is known, sonic of vi ich are th