نتایج جستجو برای: early cambrian schists

تعداد نتایج: 688211  

Journal: :Geological Society, London, Special Publications 2008

2015
Huaqiao Zhang Shuhai Xiao Yunhuan Liu Xunlai Yuan Bin Wan A. D. Muscente Tiequan Shao Hao Gong Guohua Cao

Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses support the monophyly of the Scalidophora (Kinorhyncha, Loricifera, Priapulida) and Nematoida (Nematoda, Nematomorpha), together constituting the monophyletic Cycloneuralia that is the sister group of the Panarthropoda. Kinorhynchs are unique among living cycloneuralians in having a segmented body with repeated cuticular plates, longitudinal muscles, dorso...

2010
Jian Han Shin Kubota Hiro-omi Uchida George D. Stanley Xiaoyong Yao Degan Shu Yong Li Kinya Yasui

BACKGROUND Abundant fossils from the Ediacaran and Cambrian showing cnidarian grade grossly suggest that cnidarian diversification occurred earlier than that of other eumetazoans. However, fossils of possible soft-bodied polyps are scanty and modern corals are dated back only to the Middle Triassic, although molecular phylogenetic results support the idea that anthozoans represent the first maj...

2016
K M Strang H A Armstrong D A T Harper

The Sirius Passet Lagerstätte of North Greenland contains the first exceptionally preserved mat-ground community of the Cambrian, dominated, in terms of abundance, by trilobites but particularly characterized by iconic arthropods and lobopods, some also occurring in the Burgess shale. High-resolution photography, scanning electron imaging and elemental mapping have been carried out on a variety...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1994
A H Knoll

In rocks of late Paleoproterozoic and Mesoproterozoic age (ca. 1700-1000 million years ago), probable eukaryotic microfossils are widespread and well preserved, but assemblage and global diversities are low and turnover is slow. Near the Mesoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic boundary (1000 million years ago), red, green, and chromophytic algae diversified; molecular phylogenies suggest that this was p...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2009
Erik A Sperling Jakob Vinther Vanessa N Moy Benjamin M Wheeler Marie Sémon Derek E G Briggs Kevin J Peterson

Both the monophyly and inter-relationships of the major annelid groups have remained uncertain, despite intensive research on both morphology and molecular sequences. Morphological cladistic analyses indicate that Annelida is monophyletic and consists of two monophyletic groups, the clitellates and polychaetes, whereas molecular phylogenetic analyses suggest that polychaetes are paraphyletic an...

2013
Graham E Budd

The certain fossil record of animals begins around 540 million years ago, close to the base of the Cambrian Period. A series of extraordinary discoveries starting over 100 years ago with Walcott's discovery of the Burgess Shale has accelerated in the last thirty years or so with the description of exceptionally-preserved Cambrian fossils from around the world. Such deposits of "Burgess Shale Ty...

2010
STEFAN BENGTSON

ECOS III The slender, spine-shaped, apatitic protoconodonts appear in the fossil record near the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary and persist through the Cambrian . Recent work (Szaniawski 1 982, J. Paleont. 56) suggests that protoconodont elements were homologous to the grasping spines of modern chaetognaths . Paraconodonts are similar to protoconodonts in their mode of growth by basal accretion ...

2013
Przemysław Gorzelak Samuel Zamora

Echinoderms possess a skeleton with a unique and distinctive meshlike microstructure called stereom that is underpinned by a specific family of genes. Stereom is thus considered the major echinoderm synapomorphy and is recognized already in some Cambrian echinoderm clades. However, data on the skeletal microstructures of early echinoderms are still sparse and come only from isolated ossicles of...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2013
Xi-Ping Dong John A Cunningham Stefan Bengtson Ceri-Wyn Thomas Jianbo Liu Marco Stampanoni Philip C J Donoghue

The Early Cambrian organism Olivooides is known from both embryonic and post-embryonic stages and, consequently, it has the potential to yield vital insights into developmental evolution at the time that animal body plans were established. However, this potential can only be realized if the phylogenetic relationships of Olivooides can be constrained. The affinities of Olivooides have proved con...

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