Voorbeelden van het gebruik van Edward drinker in het Engels en hun vertalingen in het Nederlands
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Pogonodon was described in 1880 by Edward Drinker Cope.
In 1869 Edward Drinker Cope renamed Laelaps gallicus into Poekilopleuron gallicum.
The rule is named for the palaeontologist Edward Drinker Cope.
American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope named Typothorax in 1875 and Episcoposaurus in 1877.
External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward Drinker Cope.
Edward Drinker Cope(July 28,
The accepted scientific name and original description were published in 1863 by Edward Drinker Cope.
In 1878 Edward Drinker Cope described two dinosaur teeth as belonging to Thecodontosaurus gibbidens.
Taxonomy==The Arizona toad was first described by the American herpetologist Edward Drinker Cope in 1867.
In North America, Edward Drinker Cope found another mosasaur in 1869,
The type species Peltosaurus granulosus was named in 1873 by American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope.
In 1892, Edward Drinker Cope renamed Ceratosaurus nasicornis Marsh 1884 into Megalosaurus nasicornis.
Robert and his younger brother lived in the Smithsonian Castle during the war along with Edward Drinker Cope and other noted naturalists.
Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh had started out as friends,
Coelurus was described in 1879 by Othniel Charles Marsh, an American paleontologist and naturalist known for his"Bone Wars" with Edward Drinker Cope.
In 1876 Edward Drinker Cope named Zapsalis abradens based on a tooth found in Montana, presently specimen AMNH 3953.
Hayden's Geological Survey of the Territories, and notified paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope of the find.
In 1874, the American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope discovered another fragmentary set of fossils in the Wasatch Formation of New Mexico.
From that time S. cuvieri was generally accepted in the literature as the valid name, though some workers split off the theropod remains from the crocodilian bones, Edward Drinker Cope in 1867 naming a Laelaps gallicus
named by Edward Drinker Cope in 1876, is Paronychodon lacustris, from the Judith River Formation of Montana,