Search Results - "MARTILL, D. M"
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The long-term survival of bone: the role of bioerosion
Published in Archaeometry (01-08-2002)“…Fossil bones (N = 350) spanning more than 350 million years, and covering a wide range of depositional environments, were studied to compare the distribution…”
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Morphologic and spectral investigation of exceptionally well-preserved bacterial biofilms from the Oligocene Enspel formation, Germany
Published in Geochimica et cosmochimica acta (01-05-2002)“…The fossilised soft tissues of a tadpole and an associated coprolitic structure from the organic-rich volcanoclastic lacustrine Upper Oligocene Enspel…”
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A possible earthquake-triggered mega-boulder slide in a Chilean Mio-Pliocene marine sequence; evidence for rapid uplift and bonebed genesis
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-07-2006)“…The type area of the Bahia Inglesa Formation (north-central Chile) is structurally complex as a result of active margin subduction at the Peru-Chile Trench…”
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Phosphatization of soft-tissue in experiments and fossils
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-11-1993)“…In laboratory experiments, the smaller the aggregations of calcium phosphate particles precipitated the greater the fidelity of morphological preservation; the…”
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A new crested maniraptoran dinosaur from the Santana Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of Brazil
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-01-1996)“…The skull of a new, and highly unusual crested dinosaur with an elongate rostrum is the first dinosaur to be named from the Santana Formation of NE Brazil…”
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A pliosaur (Reptilia, Sauropterygia) exhibiting pachyostosis from the Middle Jurassic of England
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-11-1996)“…A new and unusual pliosaurid from the Peterborough Member, Oxford Clay Formation (Callovian, Jurassic) of Cambridgeshire, UK, exhibits a type of pachyostosis…”
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The trophic structure of the biota of the Peterborough Member, Oxford Clay Formation (Jurassic), UK
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-01-1994)“…The Peterborough Member of the Oxford Clay Formation is organic-rich and contains an abundance of well-preserved vertebrate and invertebrate fossils. A high…”
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The Peterborough Member (Callovian, Middle Jurassic) of the Oxford Clay Formation at Peterborough, UK
Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-01-1994)“…King’s Dyke brick pit, Whittlesey, near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, provides a continuous section through the Peterborough Member (formerly known as the…”
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Macromolecular resolution of fossilized muscle tissue from an elopomorph fish
Published in Nature (London) (12-07-1990)“…The Santana Formation (Lower Cretaceous, Aptian/Lower Albian) of Ceara, Brazil, contains many exceptionally preserved fish fossils within carbonate…”
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Evidence for photic‐zone euxinia in the Early Albian Santana Formation (Araripe Basin, NE Brazil)
Published in Terra nova (Oxford, England) (01-10-2008)“…Organic matter from two black shale units in the Santana Formation, Araripe Basin, NE Brazil, has been studied to investigate the palaeoenvironmental…”
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The Preservation of Marine Vertebrates in the Lower Oxford Clay (Jurassic) of Central England
Published in Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences (17-10-1985)“…Fossil vertebrate remains are found throughout the Lower Oxford Clay (Callovian, Middle Jurassic) in the Peterborough (Cambridgeshire) area, but occur more…”
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On the Nature of the Pteroid in Pterosaurs
Published in Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences (22-01-1996)“…The nature of the pteroid, a rod-like bone projecting from the carpus in pterosaurs, has long been disputed. Three lines of evidence, morphological,…”
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The fossil Ainiktozoon is an arthropod
Published in Nature (London) (13-02-1997)“…The enigmatic fossil Ainiktozoon loganense Scourfield 1937 from the Lower Silurian period of Lesmahagow, Scotland, has puzzled most who have studied it. We…”
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The gonorynchiform fish Dastilbe from the lower Cretaceous of Brazil
Published in Palaeontology (01-08-1999)“…We examine the preservation, autecology and morphological variation for several characters of the Cretaceous gonorynchiform fish Dastilbe from the Lower…”
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Did dinosaurs come up to scratch?
Published in Nature (London) (10-12-1998)“…The high specificity of bird ectoparasites has frequently been interpreted to mean that they have a long evolutionary history. Either they were present as…”
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A New Japygid Dipluran from the Lower Cretaceous of Brazil
Published in Palaeontology (01-09-2001)“…The first Mesozoic japygid (Hexapoda: Diplura), Ferrojapyx vivax gen. et sp. nov., is described from the Lower Cretaceous (Aptian) Crato Formation of…”
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Dinosaur nesting or preying?
Published in Nature (London) (29-02-1996)Get full text
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Exceptionally well preserved pterosaur wing membrane from the Cretaceous of Brazil
Published in Nature (London) (13-07-1989)“…The first description of the internal anatomy of the wing membrane of a pterosaur, based on exceptionally well preserved soft tissues from the forearm of a…”
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Pterosaurs--a successful invasion of prehistoric skies
Published in Biologist (London) (01-10-2003)“…Pterosaurs were actively flying, quadruped reptiles with a unique wing configuration. Darren Naish and Dave Martill describe recent discoveries of pterosaur…”
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