Hyrax (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Hyrax" in English language version.

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  • "Dassie, n.". Dictionary of South African English (web ed.). Dictionary Unit for South African English. 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2019.

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gutenberg.org

  • Wood, John George (2014) [1888]. Story of the Bible Animals (scanned ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Charles Foster's Publications. p. 367–371. OCLC 979571526. Retrieved 12 June 2024 – via Project Gutenberg. A description of the habits and uses of every living creature mentioned in the scriptures, with explanation of passages in the Old and New Testament in which reference is made to them
    see also Wood (1877)

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  • Barrow, Eugenie; Seiffert, Erik R.; Simons, Elwyn L. (2010). "A primitive hyracoid (Mammalia, Paenungulata) from the early Priabonian (Late Eocene) of Egypt". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 8 (2): 213–244. Bibcode:2010JSPal...8..213B. doi:10.1080/14772010903450407. S2CID 84398730.
  • Asher, R.J.; Novacek, M.J.; Geisher, J.H. (2003). "Relationships of endemic African mammals and their fossil relatives based on morphological and molecular evidence". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 10: 131–194. doi:10.1023/A:1025504124129. S2CID 39296485.
  • Tabuce, R.; Seiffert, E.R.; Gheerbrant, E.; Alloing-Séguier, L.; von Koenigswald, W. (2017). "Tooth enamel microstructure of living and extinct hyracoids reveals unique enamel types among mammals". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 24 (1): 91–110. doi:10.1007/s10914-015-9317-6. S2CID 36591482.

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  • Hispania, the name that the Romans gave to the peninsular, derives from the Phoenician i-spn-ya, where the prefix i would translate as "coast", "island", or "land", ya as "region" and spn[,] in Hebrew saphan, as "rabbits" (in reality, hyraxes). The Romans, therefore, gave Hispania the meaning of "land abundant in rabbits", a use adopted by Cicero, Caesar, Pliny the Elder and, in particular, Catulo, who referred to Hispania as the cuniculus peninsula.[53]

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