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Macropoma
71St Annual Meeting Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Paris Las Vegas Las Vegas, Nevada, USA November 2 – 5, 2011 SESSION CONCURRENT SESSION CONCURRENT
Giant Fossil Coelacanths from the Late Cretaceous of the Eastern
I Ecomorphological Change in Lobe-Finned Fishes (Sarcopterygii
Giant Mesozoic Coelacanths (Osteichthyes, Actinistia) Reveal High Body Size Disparity Decoupled from Taxic Diversity
New Coelacanth Material from the Middle Triassic of Eastern Switzerland, and Comments on the Taxic Diversity of Actinistans
Dobrogeria Aegyssensis, a New Early Spathian (Early Triassic) Coelacanth from North Dobrogea (Romania)
New Materials of a Cretaceous Coelacanth, Mawsonia Lavocati Tabaste from Morocco
Earliest Known Coelacanth Skull Extends the Range of Anatomically Modern Coelacanths to the Early Devonian
The Long-Time Adaptation of Coelacanths to Moderate Deep Water: Reviewing the Evidences
Archiv Für Naturgeschichte
Allometric Growth in the Extant Coelacanth Lung During Ontogenetic Development
Norntates PUBLISHED by the AMERICAN MUSEUM of NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST at 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y
Multi-Proxy Analyses of Late Cretaceous Coprolites from Germany
Family-Group Names of Fossil Fishes
Fishes of the World
Phylogeny and Evolutionary History of Mawsoniid Coelacanths Which Is Known Mostly by Isolated Remains, on the Basis of Axelrodichthys Megadromos
Cavin ACTA LAYAUT
Universidade Do Estado Do Rio De Janeiro Centro Biomédico Instituto De Biologia Roberto Alcantara Gomes Rodrigo Tinoco Figueroa
Top View
Why Coelacanths Are Not Living Fossils
A New Coelacanth from the Lower Jurassic of Switzerland
The Surviving Crossopterygian Fish, Latiivieria
Giant Mesozoic Coelacanths (Osteichthyes, Actinistia)
A Redescription of the Coelacanth Macropoma Willemoesii VETTER from the Lithographic Limestone of Solnhofen (Upper Jurassic, Bavaria)
A Phylogenetic Comparative Analysis of Coelacanthiform Environmental
A New Coelacanth from the Middle Triassic of Monte San Giorgio, Switzerland
Coelacanths As “Almost Living Fossils”
Coelacanths from the Middle Triassic Luoping Biota, Yunnan, South China, with the Earliest Evidence of Ovoviviparity
Heterochronic Evolution Explains Novel Body Shape in a Triassic