REFERENCES

Averianov, A.O. 2004. Interpretation of the Early Cretaceous mammal Peraiocynodon (Docodonta) and taxonomy of some British Mesozoic docodonts. Russian Journal of Theriology, 3:1-4.

Averianov, A.O. and Lopatin, A.V. 2006. Itadodon tatarinovi (Tegotheriidae, Mammalia), a docodont from the Middle Jurassic of Western Siberia and phylogenetic analysis of Docodonta. Paleontological Journal, 40:668-677.

Averianov, A.O., Lopatin, A.V., Skutschas, P.P., Martynovich, N.V., Leshchinskiy, S.V., Rezvyi, A.S., Krasnolutskii, S.A., and Fayngertz, A.V. 2005. Discovery of Middle Jurassic mammals from Siberia. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 50(4): 789-797.

Bhattacharya, A., Roy, S., Datta, P.M., and Maulik, P. 1994. Fossil Charophyta from the Kota Formation of the Pranhita-Godavari valley. Gondwana Nine, Ninth International Gondwana Symposium Volume 1, 471-475. Oxford and IBH Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.

Bonaparte, J.F. 1990. New Late Cretaceous mammals from the Los Alamitos Formation, northern Patagonia, and their significance. National Geographic Research, 6:63-93.

Butler, P.M. 1997. An alternative hypothesis on the origin of docodont molar teeth. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 17:435-439.

Chatterjee, S. and Hotton, N. 1986. The palaeoposition of India. Journal of Southeast Asian Earth Sciences, 1:145-189.

Chatterjee, S. and Scotese, C.R. 1999. The break-up of Gondwana and the evolution and biogeography of the Indian plate. Proceedings of the Indian National Science Academy, 65 A:189-217.

Crompton, A.W. and Jenkins, F.A., Jr. 1968. Molar occlusion in Late Triassic mammals. Biological Reviews, 43:427-458.

Datta, P.M. 1981. The first Jurassic mammal from India. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London, 73:307-312.

Datta, P.M. and Das, D.P. 2001. Indozostrodon simpsoni, gen. et sp. nov., an Early Jurassic megazostrodontid mammal from India. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 21(3):528-534.

Datta, P.M., Manna, P., Ghosh, S.C., and Das, D.P. 2000. The first Jurassic turtle from India. Palaeontology, 43:99-109.

Egerton, P.M.G. 1878. On some remains of ganoid fishes from the Deccan. Palaeontologia Indica, 4:1-8.

Evans, S.E., Prasad, G.V.R., and Manhas, B.K. 2001. Rhynchocephalians (Diapsida: Lepidosauria) from the Jurassic Kota Formation of India. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 133:309-334.

Evans, S.E., Prasad, G.V.R., and Manhas, B.K. 2002. Fossil lizards from the Jurassic Kota Formation of India. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology,22: 299-312.

Feist, M., Bhatia, S.B., and Yadagiri, P. 1991. On the oldest representative of the family Characeae and its relationship with Porocharaceae. Bulletin de la Société botanique de France, Actualites botaniques, 138:25-32.

Freeman, E.F. 1979. A Middle Jurassic mammal bed from Oxfordshire. Palaeontology, 22:135-166.

Gillette, D.D. 2003. The geographic and phylogenetic position of sauropod dinosaurs from the Kota Formation (Early Jurassic) of India. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 21:683-689.

Govindan, A. 1975. Jurassic freshwater Ostracoda from the Kota limestone of India. Palaeontology, 19:207-216.

Gururaja, M.N. and Yadagiri, P. 1987. Stromatolites from Kota Formation (Jurassic), Pranhita-Godavari valley, Andhra Pradesh. Geological Survey of India, Special Publication, 11:213-215.

Jain, S.L. 1973. New specimens of Lower Jurassic holostean fishes from India. Palaeontology, 16:149-177.

Jain, S.L. 1974a. Indocoelacanthus robustus n. gen. n.sp. (Coelacanthidae, Lower Jurassic), the first fossil coelacanth from India. Journal of Paleontology, 48: 49-62.

Jain, S.L. 1974b. Jurassic pterosaur from India. Journal of the Geological Society of India, 15:334-335.

Jain, S.L., Kutty, T.S., Roychowdhury, T., and Chatterjee, S. 1975. The sauropod dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic Kota Formation of India. Proceedings of the Royal Society, London, 188:221-228.

Ji, Q., Luo, Z.-X., Yuan, C.-X., and Tabrum, A.R. 2006. A swimming mammaliaform from the Middle Jurassic and ecomorphological diversification of early mammals. Science, 311:1123-1127.

Kermack, K.A., Lee, A.J., Lees, P.M., and Mussett, F. 1987. A new docodont from the Forest Marble. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 89:1-39.

Kielan-Jaworowska, Z., Cifelli, R.L., and Luo, Z.-X. 2004. Mammals from the age of dinosaurs-Origins, evolution, and structure. Columbia University Press, New York, 630p.

Kietzke, K.K. and Lucas, S.G. 1994. Ostracoda and Gastropoda from the Kayenta Formation (Lower Jurassic) of Arizona, U.S.A. Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science, 28:23-32.

Kretzoi, M. 1946. On Docodonta, a new order of Jurassic mammals. Annale Historico-Naturales Musei Nationalis Hungarici, 39:52-56.

Kron, D.G.1979. Docodonta. In: Mesozoic Mammals: The First Two-Thirds of Mammalian History, Lillegraven, J.A., Kielan-Jaworowska, Z., Clemens, W.A. (eds), p. 91-98, University of California Press, Berkeley.

Krusat, G. 1980. Contribuição para o conhecimento da fauna do kimeridgiano da Mina de lignito Guimarota (Leiria, Portugal). IV parte Haldanodon exspectatus Kühne & Krusat 1972. Memórias dos Serviços Geológicos de Portugal, 27:1-79.

Kühne, W.G. and Krusat, G. 1972. Legalisierung des Taxon Haldanodon (Mammalia, Docodonta). Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie Mitteilungen, 5:300-302.

Lopatin, A.V. and Averianov, A.O. 2005. A new docodont (Docodonta, Mammalia) from the Middle Jurassic of Siberia. Doklady Biological Sciences, 405:434-436.

Marsh, O.C. 1881. New Jurassic mammals. American Journal of Science, Series 3, 21: 511-513.

Marsh, O.C. 1887. American Jurassic mammals. American Journal of Science, Series 3, 33:327-348.

Martin, T. and Averianov, A.O. 2004. A new docodont (Mammalia) from the Middle Jurassic of Krygyzstan, Central Asia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 24(1): 195-201.

Maschenko, E.N., Lopatin, A.V., and Voronkevich, A.V. 2003. A new genus of the tegotheriid docodonts (Docodonta, Tegotheriidae) from the Early Cretaceous of West Siberia. Russian Journal of Theriology, 1(2):75-81.

Misra, R.S. and Satsangi, P.P. 1979. Ostracodes from Kota Formation. Geological Survey of India, Miscellaneous Publications, 45:81-88.

Nath, T.T., Yadagiri, P., and Moitra, A.K. 2002. First record of armoured dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic Kota Formation, Pranhita-Godavari valley, Andhra Pradesh. Journal of the Geological Society of India, 59:575-577.

Owen, R. 1852. Note on the crocodilian remains accompanying Dr. T.L. Bell's paper on Kotah. Proceedings, Royal Society of London, 7:233.

Pascual, R., Goin, F.J., González, P., Ardolino, A., and Puerta, P.F. 2000. A highly derived docodont from the Patagonia Late Cretaceous: Evolutionary implications for Gondwanan mammals. Geodiversitas, 22:395-414.

Pfretzschner, H.-U., Martin, T., Maisch, M.W., Matzke, A.T., and Sun, G. 2005. A new docodont mammal from the Late Jurassic of the Junggar Basin in Northwest China. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 50(4):799-808.

Prasad, G.V.R. and Manhas, B.K. 1997. A new symmetrodont mammal from the Lower Jurassic Kota Formation, Pranhita-Godavari valley, India. Geobios, 30: 563-572.

Prasad, G.V.R. and Manhas, B.K., 1999. Discovery of a pseudotribosphenic-like mammal from the Early Cretaceous Kota Formation, peninsular India. In Leanza, H.A. (ed.), VII International Symposium on Mesozoic Terrestrial Ecosystems, Abstract: 53, Buenos Aires.

Prasad, G.V.R. and Manhas, B.K. 2001. First docodont mammals of Laurasian affinity from India. Current Science, 81:1235-1238.

Prasad, G.V.R. and Manhas, B.K. 2002. Triconodont mammals from the Jurassic Kota Formation of India. Geodiversitas, 24:445-464.

Prasad, G.V.R., Manhas, B.K., and Arratia, G. 2004. Elasmobranch and actinopterygian remains from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of India. In: Mesozoic Fishes 3-Systematics, Paleoenvironments and Biodiversity, Arratia, G. and Tintori (eds.), pp. 625-638, Verlag, Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, München.

Prasad, G.V.R., Verma, O., and Parmar, V. 2006. An overview of the Mesozoic mammalian fossil record of India. In Barett, P.M. and Evans, S.E. (eds.), IX p. 101-104, Cambridge Publications, U.K.International Symposium on Mesozoic Terrestrial Ecosystems and Biota,

Rao, C.N. and Shah, S.C. 1959. Fossil insects from the Gondwanas of India. Indian Minerals, 13:3-5.

Rao, C.N. and Shah, S.C. 1963. On the occurrence of pterosaur from the Kota-Maleri beds of Chanda District, Maharashtra. Records of the Geological Survey of India, 92:315-318.

Rauhut, O.W.M., Martin, T., Ortiz-Jaureguizer, E., and Puerta, P. 2002. A Jurassic mammal from South America. Nature, 416:165-168.

Rougier, G., Novacek, M., Ortiz-Jaureguizar, E., and Puerta, P. 2003. Reinterpretation of Reigitherium bunodontum as a Reigitheriidae dryolestoid and the interrelationships of the South American dryolestoids. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 23, Supplement to Number 3:90A-91A.

Rudra, D.K. 1982. Upper Gondwana stratigraphy and sedimentation in the Pranhita-Godavari valley, India. Quarterly Journal of the Geological, Mining and Mettallurgical Society of India, 54:56-79.

Rudra, D.K. and Maulik, P.K. 1987. Stromatolites from Jurassic freshwater limestone, India. Mesozoic Research, 1:135-146.

Scotese, C.R. 1997. Paleogeographic Atlas, PALEOMAP Progress Report, Dept. of Geology, University of Texas, Arlington 90-0497, 45pp.

Sigogneau-Russell, D. 2001. Docodont nature of Cyrtlatherium, an Upper Bathonian mammal from England. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 46:427-430.

Sigogneau-Russell, D. 2003. Docodonts from the British Mesozoic. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 48:357-364.

Sigogneau-Russell, D. and Godefroit, P. 1997. A primitive docodont (Mammalia) from the Upper Triassic of France and the possible therian affinities of the order. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris, 324, Serie IIa:135-140.

Simpson, G.G. 1928. A catalogue of the Mesozoic Mammalia in the Geological Department of the British Museum, London. 215pp. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Simpson, G.G. 1929. American Mesozoic Mammalia. Peabody Museum. (Yale University) Memoir, 3:1-171.

Sykes, C. 1851. On a fossil fish from the table land of the Deccan, in the peninsular India, with a description of the specimens by P.M.G. Egerton. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society London, 7:272-273.

Tasch, P., Sastry, M.V.A., Shah, S.C., Rao, B.R.J., Rao, C.N., and Ghosh, S.C., 1973. Estherids of the Indian Gondwana: Significance for continental drift. In: Gondwana Geology, p. 445-452. Australian National University Press.

Tatarinov, L.P. 1994. An unusual mammal tooth from the Jurassic of Mongolia. Paleontological Journal, 28:121-130.

Vijaya and Prasad, G.V.R. 2001. Age of the Kota Formation, Pranhita-Godavari valley, India: A palynological approach. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, 46:77-93.

Waldman, M. and Savage, R.J.G. 1972. The first Jurassic mammal from Scotland. Journal of the Geological Society, London, 128:119-125.

Yadagiri, P. 1984. New symmetrodonts from Kota Formation (Early Jurassic), India. Journal of the Geological Society of India, 25:514-621.

Yadagiri, P. 1985. An amphidontid symmetrodont from the Early Jurassic Kota Formation, India. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London, 85: 411-417.

Yadagiri, P. 1986. Lower Jurassic lower vertebrates from Kota Formation, Pranhita-Godavari valley, India. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, 31: 89-96.

Yadagiri, P. 1988. A new sauropod Kotasaurus yamanapalliensis from Lower Jurassic Kota Formation, India. Records of the Geological Survey of India, 116: 102-127.

Yadagiri, P. and Prasad, K.N. 1977. On the discovery of new Pholidophorous fishes from the Kota Formation, Adilabad District, Andhra Pradesh. Journal of the Geological Society of India, 18:436-444.