Книга Палеонтология антрополога. Книга 1. Докембрий и палеозой, страница 86. Автор книги Станислав Дробышевский

Разделитель для чтения книг в онлайн библиотеке

Онлайн книга «Палеонтология антрополога. Книга 1. Докембрий и палеозой»

Cтраница 86

Walossek D. et M-ller K.J. Early arthropod phylogeny in light of the Cambrian 'Orsten' fossils // Arthropod fossils and phylogeny. Ed.: G.D. Edgecombe. New York, Columbia University Press, 1998, 347 pp., pp.185-231.

Waloszek D., Chen J., Maas A. et Wang X. Early Cambrian arthropods – new insights into arthropod head and structural evolution // Arthropod Structure & Development, 2005, V.34, № 2, pp.189-205.

Whittington H. B. The enigmatic animal Opabinia regalis, Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale, British Columbia // Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 1975, V.271, № 910, pp.1-43.

Wood R., Ivantsov A.Yu. et Zhuravlev A.Yu. First macrobiota biomineralization was environmentally triggered // Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2017, V.284, № 1851, p.20170059.

Xian-Guang H., Bergstr-m Ja. et Ahlberg P. Anomalocaris and other large animals in the lower Cambrian Chengjiang fauna of southwest China // GFF, 1995, V.117, pp. 163-183.

Xian-Guang H., Bergstr-m Ja., Xiao-Ya M. et Jie Zh. The lower Cambrian Phlogites Luo & Hu re-considered // GFF, 2006, V.128, № 1, pp.47-51.

Xiao Sh. Written in stone: the fossil record of early eukaryotes // Evolution from the Galapagos. Social and ecological interactions in the Galapagos Islands, V.2. Eds.: G. Trueba et C. Mont-far. NewYork, Springer Science+Business Media 2013, pp.107-124.

Yang Ch., LiX.-H., Zhu M., Condon D.J. et Chen J. Geochronological constraint on the Cambrian Chengjiang biota, South China // Journal of the Geological Society, 2018, V.175, pp.659-666.

Young G.C., Karatajute-Talimaa V.N. et Smith M.M. A possible late Cambrian vertebrate from Australia // Nature, 1996, V.383, № 6603, pp.810-812.

Zhang X. et Briggs D.E.G. The nature and significance of the appendages of Opabinia from the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale // Lethaia, 2007, V.40, № 2, pp.161-173.

Zhang X.G. et Hou X.G. Evidence for a single median fin-fold and tail in the lower Cambrian vertebrate, Haikouichthys ercaicunensis // Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2004, V.17, № 5, pp.1162-1166.

Zhang Z.-F., Li G.-X., Holmer L.E., Brock G.A., Balthasar U., Skovsted C.B., Fu D.-J., Zhang X.-L., Wang H.-Z., Butler A., Zhang Z.-L., Cao C.-Q., Han J., Liu J.-N. et Shu D.-G. An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod characters // Scientific Reports, 2014, V.4, p.4682.

Zhao F., Smith M.R., Yin Z., Zeng H., Li G. et Zhu M. Orthrozanclus elongata n. sp. and the significance of sclerite-covered taxa for early trochozoan evolution // Scientific Reports, 2017, V.7, № 1, p.16232.

Zhao Ya., Vinther Ja., Parry L.A., Wei F., Green E., Pisani D., Hou X., Edgecombe G.D. et Cong P. Cambrian sessile, suspension feeding stem-group ctenophores and evolution of the comb jelly body plan // Current Biology, 2019, V.29, pp.1-14.

Zhu M., Yu X., Ahlberg P.E., Choo B., Lu J., Qiao T., Qu Q., Zhao W., Jia L., Blom H. et Zhu Y. A Silurian placoderm with osteichthyan-like marginal jaw bones // Nature, 2013, V.502, № 7470, pp.188-193.

Ордовик

Наугольных С.В. Колонизация суши: продуценты первых наземных экосистем. Москва, Российская академия наук, 2017, сс.3-25.

Evans D.H. et Holland C.H. The nautiloid cephalopod order Endocerida in the Silurian // Pal-ontologie Zeitschrift, 1995, V.69, pp.343-352.

Gabbott S.E., Aldridge R.J. et Theron J.N. A giant conodont with preserved muscle tissue from the upper Ordovician of South Africa // Nature, 1995, V.374, № 6525, pp.800-803.

Ghavidel-Syooki M. Cryptospore and trilete spore assemblages from the late Ordovician (Katian – Hirnantian) Ghelli Formation, Alborz Mountain Range, Northeastern Iran: palaeophytogeographic and palaeoclimatic implications // Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 2017, V.244, pp.217-240.

Hanken N.-M., Uchman A., Kresten J.N., Olaussen S., Eggeb- T. et Steinsland R. Late Ordovician trace fossils from offshore to shallow water mixed siliciclastic and carbonate facies in the Ringerike Area, Oslo Region, Norway // Ichnos, 2016, V.23, № 3-4, pp.189-221.

Kenrick P., Kva-ek Z. et Bengtson S. Semblant land plants from the middle Ordovician of the Prague basin reinterpreted as animals // Palaeontology, 1999, V.42, № 6, pp.991-1002.

Klug Ch., Frey L., Korn D., Jattiot R. et R-cklin M. The oldest Gondwanan cephalopod mandibles (Hangenberg Black Shale, late Devonian) and the Mid-Palaeozoic rise of jaws // Palaeontology, 2016, V.59, № 5, pp.611-629.

Klug C., Frey L., Pohle A., De Baets K. et Korn D. Palaeozoic evolution of animal mouthparts // Bulletin of Geosciences, 2017, V.92, № 4, pp.511-524.

Kozlowski R. et Greguss P. Discovery of Ordovician land plants // Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 1959, V.4, № 1, pp.1-9.

Musciphyton и Hepaticaephyton. Mironenko A.A. Endocerids: suspension feeding nautiloids? // Historical Biology, 2018, pp.1-9.

Morris J.L., Puttick M.N., Clark J.W., Edwards D., Kenrick P., Pressel S., Wellman Ch.H., Yang Z., Schneider H. et Donoghue Ph.C.J. The timescale of early land plant evolution // Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 2018, V.115, № 10, pp.E2274-E2283.

Obrhel J. Ein Landpflanzenfund im mittelb-hmischen Ordovizium // Geologie Jahrgang, 1959, V.8, № 5, pp.535-541.

Retallack G.J. Scoyenia burrows from Ordovician palaeosols of the Juniata Formation in Pennsylvania // Palaeontology, 2001, V.44, № 2, pp.209-235.

Retallack G.J. et Feakes C.R. Trace fossil evidence for late Ordovician animals on land // Science, 1987, V.235, № 4784, pp.61-63.

Richardson J.B. Late Ordovician and early Silurian cryptospores and miospores from northeast Libya // Subsurface Palynostratigraphy of Northeast Libya, 1988, pp.89-109.

Riding R. Solenopora is a chaetetid sponge, not an alga // Palaeontology, 2004, V.47, № 1, pp.117-122.

Roy P.V. et Briggs D.E.G. A giant Ordovician anomalocaridid // Nature, 2011, V.473, № 7348, pp.510-513.

Rudkin D.A., Young G.A., Elias R.J. et Dobrzanske E.P. The world's biggest trilobite: Isotelus rex new species from the upper Ordovician of northern Manitoba, Canada // Palaeontology, 2003, V.70, № 1, pp.99-112.

Steemans P., H-riss- le A. et Bozdogan N. Ordovician and Silurian cryptospores and miospores from southeastern Turkey // Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 1996, V.93, № 1-4, pp.35-76.

Strother P. K., Al-Hajri S. et Traverse A. New evidence for land plants from the lower Middle Ordovician of Saudi Arabia // Geology, 1996, V.24, pp.55-58.

Szaniawski H. The earliest known venomous animals recognized among conodonts // Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 2009, V.54, № 4, pp.669-676.

Wellman C.H. New evidence for the nature of earliest land plants // Polen (antes an. Asoc. Palinol. Leng. Esp.), 2004, V.14, pp.135-136.

Вход
Поиск по сайту
Ищем:
Календарь
Навигация