Results 61 to 70 of about 76 (72)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

A predatory drillhole inGlottidia palmeriDall (Brachiopoda; Lingulidae) from Recent tidal flats of northeastern Baja California, Mexico

Journal of Paleontology, 1994
Predatory drillholes (boreholes) are known from fossils as old as the late Precambrian (Bengtson and Zhao, 1992). The presence of predatory drillholes has been documented in a large number of shelly invertebrates including bivalves, gastropods, scaphopods, crabs, ostracodes, brachiopods, and many others (e.g., Sohl, 1969; Bishop, 1975; Bromley, 1981 ...
Michał Kowalewski, Karl W. Flessa
openaire   +1 more source

Revision of the superfamily Acrotheloidea (Brachiopoda, class Linguliformea, order Lingulida) from the Lower and Middle Cambrian of the Siberian Platform

Paleontological Journal, 2016
This paper continues our revision of Yu.L. Pelman’s collection of the superfamily Acrotheloidea (phosphatic brachiopods) and of our own material from the Early–Middle Cambrian of the Siberian Platform. The following representatives of the superfamily Acrotheloidea (order Lingulida, class Linguliformea) are restudied and revised based on new techniques:
G. T. Ushatinskaya, I. V. Korovnikov
openaire   +1 more source

PLIOCÉN LINGULIDAE BRACHIOPODÁK OLASZORSZÁGBÓL: ÚJ ADATOK A CSALÁD FEJLŐDÉSTÖRTÉNETÉRŐL ÉS NEOGÉN ELTERJEDÉSÉRŐL

2021
A mai Földközi-tenger Brachiopoda faunája elég szegényes (14 faj), és többek között az egyébként kozmopolita elterjedést mutató Lingulidae család képviselői is hiányoznak. Az ismert neogén rekordok is nagyon ritkák a Mediterráneumban. Olasz kollégák a közelmúltban Lingulida maradványokat találtak La Serra lelőhely (Toszkána,
ALFRÉD DULAI   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

How and why did the Lingulidae (Brachiopoda) not only survive the end-Permian mass extinction but also thrive in its aftermath?

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2007
The end-Permian mass extinction devastated most of the organisms in the sea and on land. However, a few Late Permian taxa survived the mass extinction and also the subsequent Early Triassic post-extinction catastrophic environments. Among them, the Lingulidae brachiopods were perhaps one of the most noted conquerors. Not only had they survived the mass
Yuanqiao Peng   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Lingula (Lingulidae, Brachiopoda) from the late Artinskian (Permian), Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia

1981
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
openaire   +1 more source

Cretaceous Lingulidae Brachiopods of the Tropical America

The Paleontological Society Special Publications, 2014
Alexis Rojas   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Shell morphology and structure of Upper Permian and Lower Triassic lingulids and their significance in the Mesozoic-Cenozoic phylogeny of Lingulidae (Brachiopoda)

2015
The systematics of lingulids was mainly based, in the past, on the outer shell morphology (e.g., outline, inflation and ornamentation) and the late Paleozoic – Cenozoic species were mostly referred to the extant genus Lingula. More recently, on the basis of the internal characters (e.g., position and shape of muscle scars, pedicle nerve grooves, mantle
POSENATO, Renato, Holmer, L., Popov, L.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy