A series of ethylene copolymers with long-chain alpha-olefins [LCAOs, 1-dodecene (DD), 1-tetradecene (TD), 1-hexadecene (HD)] and various LCAO contents were prepared, and their thermal properties, including effects of LCAO content and side chain length, were explored. The Cp*TiCl2(O-2,6-Pr-i(2)-4-SiEt3-C6H2)-MAO catalyst system afforded rather high-molecularweight copolymers with unimodal molecular weight distributions and uniform compositions (confirmed by DSC thermograms). In addition to the melting temperatures (T-m values) corresponding to the so-called main chain crystallization (samples with low LCAO contents, the T-m value decreased upon increasing the LCAO content) and the side chain crystallization [polymer samples with high LCAO contents, by intermolecular interaction of side chains as observed in poly(DD), poly(TD), and poly(HD)], the other T-m value was observed, especially in poly(ethylene-co-HD)s (assumed to be due to co-crystallization of the branch and the main chain through an interaction of the main chain and the long side chains). The presence of another crystalline phase in poly(ethylene-co-HD)s was also suggested by a wide-angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD) analysis. These T-m values in poly(ethylene-co-TD)s and poly(ethylene-co-DD)s with rather high TD or DD contents were affected by the heating conditions in the measurement of DSC thermograms (5 or 10 degrees C/min), suggesting that the driving force for formation of the crystal packing (observed as T-m) is weak and affected by the alkyl side chain lengths.