Examples of using Pliocene in English and their translations into Russian
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The marine Pliocene- Eopleistocene bivalves of Atlantic origin of the western part Russian Arctic
These molluscs have important significance for corellation Lower Pliocene- Lower Eopleistocene deposits of the western part of Russian Arctic and the Western Europe.
which was active in the period of 3.9-1.6 million years BC, in the Pliocene epoch.
which cover the formation sages of the valley from the early Pliocene till Holocene.
then intensified at the end of the Pliocene.
yellow sand from the Pliocene epoch.
during the early Pliocene, in response to a change in plate motions.
This last movement caused the Alpine orogeny including the raising of the Pyrenees during the Miocene and Pliocene.
and the traces of Pliocene man discovered by Professor Capellini in Italy, are witnesses to the fact.
He studied the bony remains of the Pliocene bird Gryzaja odessana,
As it follows from the geological data, the impact occurred in the period of time between the late Cretaceous and the Pliocene, so the crater is approximately 38.9 million years old.
It was so widely believed to be a hoax that Bret Harte famously wrote a satirical poem called"To the Pliocene Skull" in 1899.
Fossil teeth have also been found in Pliocene strata at the Cava Serredi quarry in Tuscany, Italy.
Marine mollusks of Atlantic origin from the Pliocene- Eopleistocene deposits in western Russian Arctic
the youngest was Ceratogaulus hatcheri-formerly in Epigaulus-which was found barely into the Pliocene, some 5 Mya.
In the period from 3.9 to 1.6 million years BC, in the Pliocene epoch, there was a volcano, the last activity
The appearance of mountains in the western United States during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, a period of some 25 million years, created a continental climate
Bulgaria The former yugoslav Republic of macedonia Pliocene, predominantly, and Quaternary lake sediments
Pliocene, predominantly, and Quaternary lake sediments and alluvial sands,
Indeed, it had been earlier suggested that the original Gibraltar macaques were a remnant of populations that had spread throughout Southern Europe during the Pliocene, up to 5.5 million years ago.