The first remains of Miocene reptiles from Moravia
Description of the first remains of a crocodile and a sea turtle from the Middle Miocene locality of Kienberg in the Moravian part of Czechia.
Read moreDescription of the first remains of a crocodile and a sea turtle from the Middle Miocene locality of Kienberg in the Moravian part of Czechia.
Read moreThe Pliensbachian (Early Jurassic, ∼192.9–184.2 Ma) plesiosaurs are poorly understood…
Read moreFossilized marine calcifiers provide key data for reconstructing ancient seawater temperatures…
Read moreWilhelm Friedberg (1873–1941) was a Polish naturalist focussing on Miocene geology and palaeontology…
Read moreKyrtatrypa pauli, a new Givetian brachiopod species from Świętomarz and Laskowa in the Holy Cross Mountains, is described.
Read moreAs late as in the mid-1960s, whales were still being intensively harvested and processed in South Georgia.
Read moreHundreds of fossils with direct evidence of foraging were used to compare the trophic dynamics of five vertebrate communities…
Read moreWhere the Dolomites stand today, about 235 million years ago there was a warm sea with many coral reefs.
Read moreBones with large hollow spaces are one of the characteristic features of dinosaurs (including birds) and pterosaurs.Bones with large hollow spaces are one of the characteristic features of dinosaurs (including birds) and pterosaurs.
Read moreA sauropod femur found in 1963 in the Baynshire Formation (Cenomanian–Santonian) in Mongolia had been identified as belonging to a subadult representative of Titanosauriformes.
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