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List of works by Nicholas J. Czaplewski

A NEW BAT (CHIROPTERA: NATALIDAE) FROM THE EARLY MIOCENE OF FLORIDA, WITH COMMENTS ON NATALID PHYLOGENY

scholarly article by Gary S. Morgan & Nicholas J. Czaplewski published May 2003 in Journal of Mammalogy

A New Mormoopid Bat from the Oligocene (Whitneyan and Early Arikareean) of Florida, and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Major Clades of Mormoopidae (Mammalia: Chiroptera)

scientific article published on 17 June 2019

A late-surviving apatemyid (Mammalia: Apatotheria) from the latest Oligocene of Florida, USA

scientific article

A new box turtle from the Miocene/Pliocene boundary (latest Hemphillian) of Oklahoma and a refined chronology of box turtle diversification

scientific article published in 2012

A new vespertilionid bat (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the Early Miocene (Hemingfordian) of Florida, USA

scientific article published on 19 January 2001

ADDITIONS TO KNOWLEDGE OF PALEOCENE MAMMALS FROM THE NORTH HORN FORMATION, CENTRAL UTAH

scholarly article published in 1995

AMylagaulus(Mammalia, Rodentia) with nasal horns from the Miocene (Clarendonian) of western Oklahoma

First fossil record of Amorphochilus schnablii (Chiroptera: Furipteridae), from the late Quaternary of Peru

scientific article published in 1999

First report of bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the Gray Fossil Site (late Miocene or early Pliocene), Tennessee, USA.

scientific article

Heloderma (Helodermatidae; Squamata) from the Apache Local Fauna, Pleistocene, Southwestern Oklahoma

scientific article published in 2021

Idionycteris phyllotis

scientific article published on 15 December 1983

LATE PLEISTOCENE BATS FROM ARKENSTONE CAVE, ARIZONA

Late Miocene Bats from the Jurua River, State of Acre, Brazil, with a Description of a New Genus of Thyropteridae (Chiroptera, Mammalia)

scientific article

Late Pleistocene Vertebrates from a Rockshelter in Cimarron County, Oklahoma

scientific article published in December 2012

Late Pleistocene shrews and bats (Mammalia: Soricomorpha and Chiroptera) from Térapa, a neotropical–nearctic transitional locality in Sonora, Mexico

Late Tertiary Bats (Mammalia, Chiroptera) from the Southwestern United States

scholarly article by Nicholas J. Czaplewski published June 1993 in Southwestern Naturalist

Mesquite bugs, other insects, and a bat in the diet of pallid bats in southeastern Arizona

article

Middle Miocene carnivorans from the Monarch Mill Formation, Nevada

scientific article published in 2014

Molossid Bats from the Late Tertiary of Florida with a Review of the Tertiary Molossidae of North America

scientific article published in June 2003

Myotis volans

scientific article published on 14 November 1984

New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina

scientific article published in 2009

New basal noctilionoid bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the Oligocene of subtropical North America

article

New species ofPostcopemys(Cricetidae: Rodentia) from the early Pliocene of Lago de Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico

Phenacomys ungava (Rodentia: Cricetidae)

scientific article published on 30 May 2013

Pizonyx wheeleriDalquest and Patrick (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from the Miocene of Texas referred to the genusAntrozousH. Allen

Pleistocene Bats from Cave Deposits in Bahia, Brazil

scholarly article from 'Journal of Mammalogy' published in 1998

Pleistocene Peccaries (Mammalia: Tayassuidae) from Western Oklahoma

scientific article published in March 2012

Presence of Myotis auriculus (Vespertilionidae) in Northern Arizona

Radiometric Age Assignment for Papago Springs Cave Deposits, Southeastern Arizona

Sigmodont rodents (Mammalia; Muroidea; Sigmodontinae) from the Pliocene (early Blancan) Verde Formation, Arizona

scientific article published on 18 June 1987

Synopsis of bats of Nebraska

[Lubbock] :Museum, Texas Tech University,1979. | Museum of Texas Tech University

TROPICAL MARSH AND SAVANNA OF THE LATE PLEISTOCENE IN NORTHEASTERN SONORA, MEXICO

The oldest record of South American bats

Three New Early Middle Eocene Bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera) from Elderberry Canyon, Nevada, USA

scientific article published on 25 May 2022