nkysdb: 共著者関連データベース
KOHNO Naoki 様の 共著関連データベース
+(A list of literatures under single or joint authorship with "KOHNO Naoki")
共著回数と共著者名 (a list of the joint author(s))
12: KOHNO Naoki
3: BARNES Lawrence G., HASEGAWA Yoshikazu, HIROTA Kiyoharu, RAY Clayton E.
2: HORIKAWA Hideo, KIMURA Masaichi, MIYAZAKI Shigeo, TOMIDA Yukimitsu
1: AGEMATSU Sachiko, AKAZAKI Hiroshi, CHIBA Kentaro, FIORILLO Anthony R., JACOBS Louis L., KIMURA Yuri, KOBAYASHI Yoshitsugu, MARX Felix G., MATSUI Kumiko, MORI Hirotsugu, NAKAYA Hideo, NISHIDA Yosuke, POLCYNC Michael J., SASHIDA Katsuo, TANAKA Kohei, TSUBAMOTO Takehisa, YANAGISAWA Yukio
発行年とタイトル (Title and year of the issue(s))
1991: A New Occurrence of Imagotariine Pinniped from the Middle Miocene Goudo Formation in Higashimatsuyama City, Saitama, Japan
1992: Miocene pinnipeds of the genera Prototaria and Neotherium in the North Pacific Ocean; relationships and distribution (II 3 4 O 9)
1992: Summary of the Fossil record of pinnipeds of Japan, and comparisons with those from the eastern North Pacific (II 3 4 P 16)
1994: Summary of the Fossil record of pinnipeds of Japan, and comparisons with that from the eastern North Pacific
1996: Miocene pinniped Allodesmus(mammalia : Carnivora); with special reference to the Mito seal from Ibaraki Prefecture, Central Japan
1997: The First Record of the Pliocene Gilmore Fur Seal in the Western North Pacific Ocean
1997: The first record of an amphicyonid (Mammalia: Carnivora) from Japan, and its implication for amphicyonid paleobiogeography
2002: Reconsideration of the Pliocene tusked walruses ( Odobeninae: Odobenidae Pinnipedia) in the North Atlantic
2011: Reappraisal of Brachyodus japonicus, an Oligocene anthracotheriid cetartiodactyl from Japan
2016: A new desmostylian mammal from Unalaska (USA) and the robust Sanjussen jaw from Hokkaido (Japan), with comments on feeding in derived desmostylids
2017: Enigmatic humerus of an archaic Oligocene Miocene neocete from Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan
2017: Habitat preferences of the enigmatic Miocene tethythere Desmostylus and Paleoparadoxia (Desmostylia; Mammalia) inferred from the depositional depth of fossil occurrences in the Northwestern Pacific realm