6.6 569 Documentary History Site

: The discovery of transitional fossils in the American West (documented by rival paleontologists Marsh and Cope during the "Bone Wars") filled the 569 archives with thousands of new species, particularly prehistoric horses and rhinoceroses.

The Dewey Decimal Classification for covers the evolutionary history and fossil record of mammals. It is subdivided to provide granular detail on different orders: 569.1 : Monotremata (Egg-laying mammals like the platypus). 569.2 : Marsupialia (Pouched mammals). 569.3 : Edentata and related orders ( Sloths , armadillos). 569.6 : Ungulata (Hoofed mammals). 569.7 : Carnivora (Meat-eaters). 569.8 : Primates (Including early hominids). 2. Documentary History of Mammalian Paleontology

: Documentation shifted toward Phylogeny —using fossil evidence to map the family trees of modern mammals. The development of the DDC 569 category allowed libraries to organize these vast records of bone morphology and stratigraphy. 3. Key Thematic Areas in 569 Studies 6.6 569 Documentary History

: Traditional paper catalogs are being replaced by digital repositories like the Paleobiology Database, which provides open-access data on fossil occurrences.

Documentation of how mammals filled ecological niches left by dinosaurs after the K-Pg extinction. Studies on the "Ice Age" giants ( mammoths , saber-toothed cats) and their eventual extinction. Hominid Evolution The fossil record of the primate order leading to Homo sapiens , often the most scrutinized section of the 569 category. Morphological Adaptation : The discovery of transitional fossils in the

Documentation of how environmental changes led to physical shifts, such as the evolution of whale ancestors from land-dwellers to marine mammals. 4. Technical Documentation Standards

Today, "deep papers" in the 569 category utilize advanced digital documentation techniques: Technical Documentation Standards Today

Below is a documentary history and "deep paper" overview of this classification and the history of mammalian fossil documentation. 1. Classification and Scope