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In: Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology : an international journal for the geo-sciences, 2005, vol. 216, p. 359
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In: Eclogae geologicae Helvetiae : recueil périodique de la Société géologique suisse = Mitteilungen der Schweiz. geologischen Gesellschaft, 2005/98/313/
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In: 5th International Symposium on Lithographic Limestone and Plattenkalk : abstracts and field guides, 2009, p. 17-18
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In: Pour la science : revue mensuelle, 2008/34
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In: Biogeosciences, 2016, vol. 12, no. 23, p. 6945–6954
Chondrichthyan teeth (sharks, rays, and chimaeras) are mineralized in isotopic equilibrium with the surrounding water, and parameters such as water temperature and salinity can be inferred from the oxygen isotopic composition (δ18Op) of their bioapatite. We analysed a new chondrichthyan assemblage, as well as teeth from bony fish (Pycnodontiformes). All specimens are from Kimmeridgian coastal...
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In: 5th International Symposium on Lithographic Limestone and Plattenkalk : abstracts and field guides, 2009, p. 94-129
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In: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 2009, vol. 276, p. 3881-3886
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In: Pour la science : revue mensuelle, 2002, no. 293, p. 30
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In: Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 2014, vol. 34, no. 2, p. 353–374
The fossil turtle Tropidemys langii is a representative of Plesiochelyidae, a traditionally recognized group of Late Jurassic turtles diagnosed by the presence of three cervical scutes and adapted to life in the sea. Tropidemys langii was previously only known from fossilized carapaces and, possibly, plastra from Europe, most notably the famous ‘Solothurn Turtle Limestone’ of Switzerland. Due...
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