Pages that link to "Q55953790"
The following pages link to The skeletal anatomy of the triassic protorosaurDinocephalosaurus orientalisLi, from the Middle Triassic of Guizhou Province, southern China (Q55953790):
Displaying 16 items.
- The enigmatic marine reptile nanchangosaurus from the lower triassic of Hubei, China and the phylogenetic affinities of Hupehsuchia (Q21090609) (← links)
- The hooked element in the pes of turtles (Testudines): a global approach to exploring primary and secondary homology (Q28649607) (← links)
- The higher-level phylogeny of Archosauria (Tetrapoda: Diapsida) (Q29028229) (← links)
- Live birth in an archosauromorph reptile (Q37651990) (← links)
- The evolution of the manus of early theropod dinosaurs is characterized by high inter- and intraspecific variation (Q45072256) (← links)
- Land to sea transitions in vertebrates: the dynamics of colonization (Q55921821) (← links)
- The oldest archosauromorph from South America: postcranial remains from the Guadalupian (mid-Permian) Rio do Rasto Formation (Paraná Basin), southern Brazil (Q56029457) (← links)
- A new taxonomic arrangement for Paleorhinus scurriensis (Q56769716) (← links)
- A long-snouted protorosaur from the Middle Triassic of southern China (Q56777915) (← links)
- New information on the protorosaurian reptileMacrocnemus fuyuanensisLi et al., 2007, from the Middle/Upper Triassic of Yunnan, China (Q56838403) (← links)
- Phylogenetic corrections for morphological disparity analysis: new methodology and case studies (Q56981696) (← links)
- First evidence of centralia in Ichthyopterygia reiterating bias from paedomorphic characters on marine reptile phylogenetic reconstruction (Q58421629) (← links)
- Cranial morphology of the tanystropheid Macrocnemus bassanii unveiled using synchrotron microtomography (Q97692857) (← links)
- The biostratigraphic importance of conchostracans in the continental Triassic of the northern hemisphere (Q102190380) (← links)
- Footprints of marine reptiles from the Middle Triassic (Anisian-Ladinian) Guanling Formation of Guizhou Province, southwestern China: The earliest evidence of synchronous style of swimming (Q106699980) (← links)
- A new phylogenetic hypothesis of Tanystropheidae (Diapsida, Archosauromorpha) and other “protorosaurs”, and its implications for the early evolution of stem archosaurs (Q110669638) (← links)