نتایج جستجو برای: late cretaceous

تعداد نتایج: 201920  

Journal: :Biology letters 2012
Darren Naish Gareth Dyke Andrea Cau François Escuillié Pascal Godefroit

We describe an enormous Late Cretaceous fossil bird from Kazakhstan, known from a pair of edentulous mandibular rami (greater than 275 mm long), which adds significantly to our knowledge of Mesozoic avian morphological and ecological diversity. A suite of autapomorphies lead us to recognize the specimen as a new taxon. Phylogenetic analysis resolves this giant bird deep within Aves as a basal m...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2013
Ricardo N Martínez Cecilia Apaldetti Carina E Colombi Angel Praderio Eliana Fernandez Paula Santi Malnis Gustavo A Correa Diego Abelin Oscar Alcober

Sphenodontians were a successful group of rhynchocephalian reptiles that dominated the fossil record of Lepidosauria during the Triassic and Jurassic. Although evidence of extinction is seen at the end of the Laurasian Early Cretaceous, they appeared to remain numerically abundant in South America until the end of the period. Most of the known Late Cretaceous record in South America is composed...

صلواتی, مژگان, کنعانیان , علی , زعیمنیا, فاطمه , صمدی صوفی, علیرضا ,

The Southern Caspian Sea ophiolite complex (SCO) is one of the Late Cretaceous discontinuous oceanic lithosphere remnants in northern Iran. These complex is almost a complete sequence from bottom to top, ultramafic cumulates, layered gabbros, isotropic gabbros, dike complex and basaltic lavas which is covered by Late Cretaceous (Companion- maaestirchtian) pelagic limestone. Crustal ultramafic c...

2016
Gregory P. Wilson Eric G. Ekdale John W. Hoganson Jonathan J. Calede Abby Vander Linden

Marsupial mammal relatives (stem metatherians) from the Mesozoic Era (252-66 million years ago) are mostly known from isolated teeth and fragmentary jaws. Here we report on the first near-complete skull remains of a North American Late Cretaceous metatherian, the stagodontid Didelphodon vorax. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates that marsupials or their closest relatives evolved in North Americ...

Journal: :Science 2009
Arnold I Miller Michael Foote

Environmental perturbations during mass extinctions were likely manifested differently in epicontinental seas than in open-ocean-facing habitats of comparable depth. Here, we present a dissection of origination and extinction in epicontinental seas versus open-ocean-facing coastal regions in the Permian through Cretaceous periods, an interval through which both settings are well represented in ...

Journal: :Science 2009
Dong Ren Conrad C Labandeira Jorge A Santiago-Blay Alexandr Rasnitsyn ChungKun Shih Alexei Bashkuev M Amelia V Logan Carol L Hotton David Dilcher

The head and mouthpart structures of 11 species of Eurasian scorpionflies represent three extinct and closely related families during a 62-million-year interval from the late Middle Jurassic to the late Early Cretaceous. These taxa had elongate, siphonate (tubular) proboscides and fed on ovular secretions of extinct gymnosperms. Five potential ovulate host-plant taxa co-occur with these insects...

2012
Silvina de Valais Sebastián Apesteguía Alberto C. Garrido

Ecological relationships among fossil vertebrate groups are interpreted based on evidence of modification features and paleopathologies on fossil bones. Here we describe an ichnological assemblage composed of trace fossils on reptile bones, mainly sphenodontids, crocodyliforms and maniraptoran theropods. They all come from La Buitrera, an early Late Cretaceous locality in the Candeleros Formati...

2015
Walter G. Joyce Tyler R. Lyson

The fossil record of the turtle clade Baenidae ranges from the Early Cretaceous (Aptian–Albian) to the Eocene. The group is present throughout North America during the Early Cretaceous, but is restricted to the western portions of the continents in the Late Cretaceous and Paleogene. No credible remains of the clade have been reported outside of North America to date. Baenids were warmadapted fr...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2003
Rowan Lockwood

Ecological studies suggest that rare taxa are more likely to go extinct than abundant ones, but the influence of abundance on survivorship in the fossil record has received little attention. An analysis of Late Maastrichtian bivalve subgenera from the North American Coastal Plain found no evidence that survivorship is tied to abundance across the end-Cretaceous mass extinction (65 million years...

Journal: :Science 2006
Hai-Lu You Matthew C Lamanna Jerald D Harris Luis M Chiappe Jingmai O'connor Shu-An Ji Jun-Chang Lü Chong-Xi Yuan Da-Qing Li Xing Zhang Kenneth J Lacovara Peter Dodson Qiang Ji

Three-dimensional specimens of the volant fossil bird Gansus yumenensis from the Early Cretaceous Xiagou Formation of northwestern China demonstrate that this taxon possesses advanced anatomical features previously known only in Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic ornithuran birds. Phylogenetic analysis recovers Gansus within the Ornithurae, making it the oldest known member of the clade. The Xiagou F...

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