Results 141 to 150 of about 75,087 (307)
Abstract The study of morphological evolution is fundamentally tied to ontogeny, yet studies of these heterochronic processes in the fossil record are rare. Fossils belonging to an ontogenetic series are difficult to assign to an ontogenetic stage due to inconsistent proxies for skeletal ages, challenging to taxonomically assign due to morphological ...
Erika R. Goldsmith, Michelle R. Stocker
wiley +1 more source
Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome with bilateral rudimentary uterine horns
Yusra Sheikh
openalex +1 more source
Korn—Software Verification with Horn clauses (Post-Competition Evaluation)
Gidon Ernst
openalex +2 more sources
Skeletal pathologies in extant crocodilians as a window into the paleopathology of fossil archosaurs
Abstract Crocodilians, together with birds, are the only extant relatives to many extinct archosaur groups, making them highly important for interpreting paleopathological conditions in a phylogenetic disease bracketing model. Despite this, comprehensive data on osteopathologies in crocodilians remain scarce.
Alexis Cornille +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Bilateral Clubfoot in Nail-Patella Syndrome: A Rare Syndromic Case Successfully Treated with the Ponseti Method. [PDF]
Chhatriwala BF +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Despite documented ecomorphological shifts toward an herbivorous diet in several coelurosaurian lineages, the evolutionary tempo and mode of these changes remain poorly understood, hampered by sparse cranial materials for early representatives of major clades. This is particularly true for Therizinosauria, with representative crania best known
William J. Freimuth, Lindsay E. Zanno
wiley +1 more source
The Behaviour of 1,2,3-Indantrione Towards Wittig-Horner Reagents [PDF]
Naglaa M. Abd El‐Rahman +1 more
openalex +1 more source
Hominoid‐specific calretinin‐immunopositivity of the optic radiation (geniculocalcarine tract)
Calretinin‐immunostained coronal section through the primary (V1) and extrastriate (ExSt) cortex of the lar gibbon. Note that the optic radiation (OR) is strongly calretinin‐immunoreactive. This calretinin‐immunopositivity of the OR distinguishes the Hominoidea from other primates in terms of the neurochemistry of the OR.
Nelyane N. M. Santana +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Transcriptomic basis underlying the evolution of female horn plasticity in scarab beetles. [PDF]
Qi C, Zhang W, Hu Y.
europepmc +1 more source

