نتایج جستجو برای: early maastrichtian

تعداد نتایج: 686539  

2013
Bernat Vila Oriol Oms Víctor Fondevilla Rodrigo Gaete Àngel Galobart Violeta Riera José Ignacio Canudo

A comprehensive review and study of the rich dinosaur track record of the Tremp Formation in the southern Pyrenees of Spain (Southwestern Europe) shows a unique succession of footprint localities prior to the end-Cretaceous mass extinction event. A description of some 30 new tracksites and data on sedimentary environments, track occurrence and preservation, ichnology and chronostratigraphy are ...

2016
Sa’ad S. Al-Sheikhly

Five new ostracod species belonging to the subfamily Trachyleberidinae have been described. They are Paragrenocythere monilis and Peloriops levisulcata from the Maastrichtian of Iraq; Oertliella petraensis from the early Palaeocene (middle – late Danian) of Jordan; Reticulina syriaensis from the Palaeocene of Syria and Reticulina ninurta from the middle – late Eocene of Iraq.

2017
Eric Buffetaut Eric BUFFETAUT

An isolated dinosaur vertebra from the marine deposits of the Maastrichtian type area, near the city of Maastricht (The Netherlands), collected during the 19th century and kept in the palaeontological collection of the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, is described as a caudal vertebra of a hadrosaurid ornithopod. Although it cannot be identified with greater accuracy, this specimen is an additi...

پایان نامه :وزارت علوم، تحقیقات و فناوری - دانشگاه پیام نور - دانشگاه پیام نور استان تهران - دانشکده علوم 1392

واحدهای سنگی کرتاسه بالایی تا پالئوژن زیرین در استان خراسان جنوبی (شرق لوت) گسترش دارند. در این مطالعه پنج برش چینه شناسی سیلک، آرک شمالی، بین آباد، آرک جنوبی و کبوده به منظور ارائه مدل رسوبی نمونه برداری و مورد بررسی قرار گرفتند. در مجموع 26 رخساره در تمام برش ها شناسایی گردید که در جایگاه های مختلف یک پلتفرم کربناته از نوع رمپ از مناطق ساحلی تا رمپ خارجی نهشته شده اند. علاوه بر این برای برش ه...

2018
Nicholas R Longrich David M Martill Brian Andres

Pterosaurs were the first vertebrates to evolve powered flight and the largest animals to ever take wing. The pterosaurs persisted for over 150 million years before disappearing at the end of the Cretaceous, but the patterns of and processes driving their extinction remain unclear. Only a single family, Azhdarchidae, is definitively known from the late Maastrichtian, suggesting a gradual declin...

Journal: :Journal of South American Earth Sciences 2023

The Upper Cretaceous deposits of northwestern Colombia accumulated in two regions with distinct tectonic settings. eastern deposits, consisting Turonian–Maastrichtian rocks from the Magdalena Valley (UMV) and Cesar-Rancheria basins, were deposited by an epicontinental sea that partially covered South American Plate. In contrast, western which comprise a series highly faulted folded Coniacian–Ma...

2014
Alejandro Blanco Eduardo Puértolas-Pascual Josep Marmi Bernat Vila Albert G. Sellés

The controversial European genus Allodaposuchus is currently composed of two species (A. precedens, A. subjuniperus) and it has been traditionally considered a basal eusuchian clade of crocodylomorphs. In the present work, the new species A. palustris is erected on the base of cranial and postcranial remains from the lower Maastrichtian of the southern Pyrenees. Phylogenetic analyses here inclu...

Journal: Geopersia 2016

A succession of Late Campanian- Early Maastrichtian is analyzed from Gurpi Formation with regard to the calcareous nannofossils. Correlation Matrix was applied for the first time to the entire nannofossil assemblage to reconstruct environmental conditions. A detailed quantitative calcareous nannofossil analyses is performed on samples in order to further investigate the climate events, and inte...

Journal: :Science 2007
G V R Prasad O Verma A Sahni V Parmar A Khosla

The sedimentary record documenting the northward drift of India (Late Cretaceous to late Early Eocene) has recently provided important clues to the evolution, radiation, and dispersal of mammals. Here, we report a definitive Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) archaic ungulate (Kharmerungulatum vanvaleni genus et species nova) from the Deccan volcano-sedimentary sequences exposed near Kisalpuri vil...

Journal: :Current Biology 2015
Caleb M. Brown Donald M. Henderson

Ceratopsid (horned) dinosaurs are an iconic group of large-bodied, quadrupedal, herbivorous dinosaurs that evolved in the Late Cretaceous and were largely restricted to western North America [1-5]. Ceratopsids are easily recognized by their cranial ornamentation in the form of nasal and postorbital horns and frill (capped by epiossifications); these structures show high morphological disparity ...

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