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231:, the revision of related material resulted in the publication of this species. The type material was obtained at the Bitesantennary Site in early Miocene deposits composed of fossilised bat skulls and bones and snails. The holotype and syntypes are incomplete skulls selected from the large amount of fragmentary material stratigraphically dated to the Miocene. The systematic treatment was as family Hipposideridae Miller 1907, placed with superfamily
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The site was a cave, open to the nearby environment, and contains the remains of probably over ten other microchiropteran species and shells of freshwater snails. The preservation state of a large amount of the type material indicates the fossilisation process began shortly after their deposit. The
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188:, which occurs in two isolated populations across the north of Australia. The genus name is derived from ancient Greek, combining terms for nose,
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318:"New Miocene leaf-nosed bats (Microchiroptera: Hipposideridae) from Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland"
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period. The fossil records are the earliest example of an endemic lineage of
Australian
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Prehistoric
Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution
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in 1997. The nearest relative is regarded as the only living species of the family,
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Gray, 1866. The remains of the species have been found at several locations of the
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The description of the fossil specimens as an extinct species was published by
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material at
Riversleigh dates from the Miocene through to the present period.
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presence of snails suggests the site was submerged at some period. The
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compared material from a microsite with an earlier description of a
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208:, in identifying tertiary mammals in the fossil beds.
170:, known from fossil material found in Australia.
166:is an extinct species of microbat, of the order
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253:Australian Fossil Mammal Sites (Riversleigh)
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361:. Canberra: Department of the Environment.
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355:(Pilbara form) — Pilbara Leaf-nosed Bat"
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359:Species Profile and Threats Database
206:American Museum of Natural History
204:at Riversleigh, on behalf on thee
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322:Memoirs of the Queensland Museum
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379:Long, J.A.; Archer, M. (2002).
289:floor of site contains a large
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433:Fossil taxa described in 1997
428:Miocene mammals of Australia
235:Weber, 1928 of the suborder
222:Brachipposideros nooraleebus
385:. UNSW Press. p. 184.
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32:Scientific classification
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247:A species of the family
196:. The specific epithet
353:Rhinonicteris aurantia
265:Rhinonicteris tedfordi
228:Rhinonicteris aurantia
185:Rhinonicteris aurantia
163:Rhinonicteris tedfordi
145:Rhinonicteris tedfordi
25:Rhinonicteris tedfordi
423:Fossils of Australia
200:honours the work of
16:Extinct bat species
351:"Species profile:
438:Riversleigh fauna
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124:R. tedfordi
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418:Rhinonycteridae
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267:existed in the
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249:Rhinonycteridae
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237:Microchiroptera
225:and the extant
213:Suzanne J. Hand
202:Richard Tedford
180:Suzanne J. Hand
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99:Rhinonycteridae
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328:(2): 335–349.
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233:Rhinolophoidea
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279:Rhinonicteris
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274:Rhinonicteris
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269:early Miocene
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133:Binomial name
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110:Rhinonicteris
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413:Miocene bats
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263:The species
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217:hipposiderid
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243:Description
211:The author
192:, and bat,
407:Categories
314:Hand, S.J.
297:References
291:stalagmite
287:travertine
168:Chiroptera
89:Chiroptera
334:0079-8835
117:Species:
55:Kingdom:
49:Eukaryota
316:(1997).
219:species
198:tedfordi
194:nycteris
174:Taxonomy
95:Family:
79:Mammalia
69:Chordata
65:Phylum:
59:Animalia
45:Domain:
259:Ecology
142:†
121:†
105:Genus:
85:Order:
75:Class:
389:
332:
387:ISBN
330:ISSN
190:rhis
154:1997
152:Hand
409::
367:^
357:.
342:^
326:41
324:.
320:.
305:^
293:.
255:.
239:.
395:.
336:.
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