10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PLESIOSAURIAN»
Discover the use of
plesiosaurian in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
plesiosaurian and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Upper Cretaceous Ichthyosaurian and
Plesiosaurian Remains ...
2
Dinosaur Provincial Park: A Spectacular Ancient Ecosystem ...
Plesiosaurian Remains from Non-marine to Paralic Sediments Tamaki Sato,
David A. Eberth, Eltzabeth L. Nicholls, and Makoto Manabe Although
plesiosaurian fossils occur throughout the Dinosaur Park Formation across
Dinosaur Provincial ...
Philip J. Currie, Eva Bundgaard Koppelhus, 2005
Plesiosaurian limbs were jointed to massive pectoral and pelvic girdles (Figure M
), presumably by very strong muscles and ligaments. In 1976 Jane Robinson
suggested that these structures could be explained if all four limbs were used in
an ...
4
Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Saurians: A Historical Perspective
Plesiosaurian D.10.10 n.9.x Two cervical vertebrae. Plesiosaurian (noted by
Delair 1969) D.10.11 n.9.a Two cervical vertebrae. Plesiosaurian (noted by
Delair 1969) D.10.12 n.9.b Cervical vertebra with double headed rib facet.
Plesiosaurian ...
5
Report of the ... Meeting
... through ossification of the intermediate elastic tissue, and the Plesiosaurian
type of vertebra to be thus acquired. The normal digits of the fin might be
supposed to become strengthened and elongated by more frequent reptation on
dry land, ...
British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1842
6
Report on British Fossil Reptiles ...
... for example, the fish-like characters of the vertebral column of the
Ickthyosaurus to have been obliterated by a filling-up of the intervertebral cavities
through ossification of the intermediate elastic tissue, and the Plesiosaurian type
of vertebra ...
7
Eleventh Meeting ; Held At Plymouth In July 1841: 10
... through ossification of the intermediate elastic tissue, and the Plesiosaurian
type of vertebra to be thus acquired. The normal digits of the fin might be
supposed to become strengthened and elongated by more frequent reptation on
dry land, ...
8
Medical and physical researches, or Original memoirs in ...
surgery, physiology, geology, zoology and comparative anatomy... Richard
Harlan. Notice of Plesiosaurian and other Fossil Reliquise, from the State of New
Jersey. I have lately received from Mr. I. Lukens, a collection of fossil teeth and
bones, ...
9
Report of the ... Meeting of the British Association for the ...
on a dinosaurian reptile (Scelidosaurns Harrisoni) from the lower has of
Charmouth, 121; on the remains of a Plesiosaurian reptile (Plesiosaurus
Australis) from the oolitic formation in the middle island of New Zealand, 122; on
the cervical and ...
British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1862
10
Report of the Annual Meeting
... through ossification of the intermediate elastic tissue, and the Plesiosaurian
type of vertebra to be thus acquired. The normal digits of the fin might be
supposed to become strengthened and elongated by more frequent reptation on
dry land, ...
British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting, 1842
4 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «PLESIOSAURIAN»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
plesiosaurian is used in the context of the following news items.
Midnight Sun Fun
On the look-out for plesiosaurian ancestors in slightly younger rocks, the team stumbled upon older rocks instead. A weird geological ... «NatGeo News Watch, Aug 14»
Bone Rush in the Arctic
So, we went looking for plesiosaurian ancestors. Early plesiosaurs from the Late Triassic are few and far between, but we are on the look-out ... «NatGeo News Watch, Aug 14»
Modern Polar Explorers on the Hunt for Ancient Sea Monsters
A reconstruction of Middle Triassic fauna including ichthyosaurs (number 14/15) and plesiosaurian relatives (12/18). (Illustration by Nadine ... «NatGeo News Watch, Jul 14»
Sauropterygians NEVER FORGET
Non-plesiosaurian sauropterygians are mostly Tethyan in distribution: that is, they inhabited the warm, equatorial Triassic Tethys Sea. «Scientific American, Oct 12»