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Fig. 3 | Swiss Journal of Palaeontology

Fig. 3

From: The Genus Eomyops Engesser, 1979 (Rodentia, Eomyidae) from the youngest deposits of the German part of the North Alpine Foreland Basin

Fig. 3

Scatter diagram of the Eomyops molars from Germany, and comparison with the tooth length of selected Eurasian samples. The data from Nebelbergweg (Eomyops aff. catalaunicus and E. aff. oppligeri) come from Kälin and Engesser (2001); the Felsőtárkány sections (E. oppligeri) from Hír (2003, 2006) and Hír and Kókay (2009, 2010); Mátrazőlős (E. oppligeri) from Gál et al. (2000) and Hír and Kókay (2004); Tauţ (E. oppligeri) from Hír et al. (2011); Rudabánya (E. catalaunicus) from Daxner-Höck (2005); Giggenhausen (E. oppligeri) and Can Llobateres (E. catalaunicus) from Fahlbusch (1975); Anwil (E. oppligeri) from Engesser (1972); Austrian records (Eomyops catalaunicus) from Daxner-Höck and Höck (2009); Tunggur (Leptodontomys lii) from Qiu (1996); Lufeng and Yuanmou (Plesieomys mirabilis, Heteroeomys yunnannensis, L. pusillus) from Qiu (2006); Morteral-20A (Eomyops noeliae) from Ruiz-Sánchez et al. (2009); Osztramos 1 (E. bodvanus) from Jánossy (1972); Chatzloch (E. hebeiseni) from Kälin (1997); Borský Sv. Jur (Eomyops catalaunicus) from Joniak (2005); Pentabuneomys rhodanicus, compiled data from France, Germany and Switzerland (Hugueney and Mein 1968; Fahlbusch 1970; Engesser 1990)

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