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On Ammonites from Spitsbergen [PDF]

open access: possibleGeological Magazine, 1921
There appears to be a good deal of variation in the Lower Triassic succession of the different parts of Spitsbergen, even between Ice Fjord and Bell Sound, at which latter Gyronites nathorsti J. Böhm occurs in soft shales. The grey sandstones with a Lamellibranch fauna of Werfenian age from Axel Island, again, represent quite a different facies.
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The Ammonite Project

Leonardo, 2003
The Ammonite Project is a large tent sculpture (Fig. 9) based on the shape of the creature of the same name from the Cretaceous period. The installation was inspired by the spiral shape of the fossil remains of the ammonite and created as an offering of thanks to nature, symbolically giving an ammonite back to Mother Earth.
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The Ammonite Phoneme /Ṯ/

Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 1988
The presumed equation of bʿlysʿ on a seventh century B. C. Ammonite seal with bʿlys in Jer 40:14 reopens the complex question of sibilants and interdentals in Canaanite dialects.
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The earliest tissotiid ammonite

1978
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Kennedy, W. J. (William James)   +1 more
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Les sceaux ammonites

Syria, 1987
Israel Felice. Les sceaux ammonites . In: Syria. Tome 64 fascicule 1-2, 1987. pp. 141-146.
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An Ammonite Lyric Poem

Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 1976
The recently discovered Ammonite bronze bottle inscription of the late seventh century B.C. is a remarkable epigraphic find.1 Its modest eight lines are the first complete text in the language of the Ammonites. Yet, despite its perfect state of preservation, this "intriguing little inscription," to use Professor Cross's description of it,2 remains ...
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Heterochrony in Ammonites

1988
Ammonites are externally shelled cephalopods and range in geologic age from the Devonian to the Late Cretaceous. They comprise nine orders that may be informally grouped into the paleo-, meso-, and neoammonoidea. The paleoammonoidea consists of the Devonian-Permian goniatites, anarcestids, clymeniids, and prolecanitids.
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III.—On Jurassic Ammonites

Geological Magazine, 1889
In a former communication (Geol. Mag. Dec. III. Vol. IV. No. 9, p. 396, 1887), when pointing out how Reinecke's Amm. serpentinus had been misunderstood, I gave as a synonym, but with a query, Sowerby's Amm. Strangewaysi. As I have, since then, examined the type-specimen of the latter species contained in the collection of the Natural History Museum ...
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A Corpus of Ammonite Inscriptions

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1992
This volume presents a discussion, bibliography, and analysis of all published inscriptions that have been identified as Ammonite. It contains numerous illustrative photographs.
Stanislav Segert, Walter E. Aufrecht
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Ammonite Religion

Centered on the region around the modern city of Amman, Jordan, the tribally organized, agropastoralist society of the Ammonites (literally, "the sons of Ammon") flourished during the Iron Age II (ca. 1000–500 BCE), and especially in the latter half of this period.
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