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[1331] "Turtle skulls prove to be shock-resistant",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 36-37, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1331] "Turtle skulls prove to be shock-resistant",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 36-37, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1331] "Turtle skulls prove to be shock-resistant",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 36-37, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1330] "Supreme court wrestles with whales vs. sonar",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 42-43, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1331] "Turtle skulls prove to be shock-resistant",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 36-37, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1331] "Turtle skulls prove to be shock-resistant",
Oceanus, vol. 47, issue 2, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 36-37, 09/2009.
Abstract
[1334] "WHOI Right Whale initiative accelerates research",
Oceanus, vol. 44, issue 3, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 16-17, 12/2005.
Abstract
[1334] "WHOI Right Whale initiative accelerates research",
Oceanus, vol. 44, issue 3, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pp. 16-17, 12/2005.
Abstract
[37] "Topographical distribution of lipids inside the mandibular fat bodies of odontocetes: remarkable complexity and consistency",
IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, vol. 31, issue 1: IEEE, pp. 95-106, 06/2006.
Abstract
[86] "The marine mammal ear: specializations for aquatic audition and echolocation",
The Evolutionary Biology of Hearing, New York, Springer-Verlag, pp. 717-750, 1992.
Abstract
[6781] "Sonars and Strandings: Are Beaked Whales the Aquatic Acoustic Canary",
Acoustics Today, vol. 10, issue 3, pp. 45-55, 08/2014.
Abstract
[55] "Beaked whale heads: is there a smoking sonar?",
Symposium on Environmental Consequences of Underwater Sound, San Antonio, Texas, 05/2003.
Abstract
[72] "Structure and function in whale ears",
Bioacoustics, vol. 8, issue 1, pp. 103-136, 1997.
Abstract
[1293] "America's Grade of Shame",
Live Better Magazine, Nov/Dec 2010, issue 7, pp. 4 pgs, 12/2010.
Abstract
[3583] "Great Ears: Functional comparisons of land and marine leviathan ears",
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 120, issue 5, pp. 3265, 2006.
Abstract
[773] "Marine mammal auditory systems: a summary of audiometric and anatomical data and its implications for underwater acoustic impacts",
NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS, La Jolla, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) / National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) / Southwest Fisheries Science Center, pp. 74, 2008, 1998.
Abstract
[67] "Marine mammal ears: an anatomical perspective on underwater hearing",
International Congress on Acoustics, vol. 3: Elsevier Publishing, pp. 1657-1660, 1998.
Abstract
[1614] "Cochlear structural variants in echolocators",
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 131, issue 4: Acoustical Society of America, pp. 3423-3423, 04/2012.
Abstract
[88] "Three-dimensional reconstructions of the dolphin ear",
Sensory Abilities of Cetaceans: Field and Laboratroy Evidence, Proc. NATO ASI Ser. A, Life Sci., vol. 196, New York and London, Plenum Press, pp. 81-105, 09-Aug-1999, 1990.
Abstract
[17] "Why do whales beach themselves? Are strandings increasing?",
Scientific American, vol. 301, issue 4: Nature Publishing Group, pp. 96, 10/2009.
Abstract
[3585] "Great ears: functional comparisons of land and marine leviathan ears",
sixth Triennial Conference on Secondary Adaptations of Tetrapods to Life in Water, San Diego, CA, 2011.
Abstract
[1293] "America's Grade of Shame",
Live Better Magazine, Nov/Dec 2010, issue 7, pp. 4 pgs, 12/2010.
Abstract
[3582] "Great ears: functional comparisons of land and marine leviathan auditory systems",
International Mammalogical Congress, Sapporo, Japan, 2005.
Abstract
[62] "Cetacean ears",
Hearing by Whales and Dolphins, New York, Springer-Verlag, pp. 43-108, 2000.
Abstract
[86] "The marine mammal ear: specializations for aquatic audition and echolocation",
The Evolutionary Biology of Hearing, New York, Springer-Verlag, pp. 717-750, 1992.
Abstract
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