In: Palaeovertebrata, 2020, vol. 43, no. 1, p. e2
The region of Porrentruy (Swiss Jura Mountains) is known for its rich and diverse assemblage of Late Jurassic coastal marine turtles (Thalassochelydia). Dominated by the “Plesiochelyidae”, this assemblage also includes representatives of the two other thalassochelydian groups, the “Thalassemydidae” and “Eurysternidae.” In this study, we present new shell-based material from Porrentruy...
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture, Paléontologie A16, 2018
(Catalogues du patrimoine paléontologique jurassien - A16)
ISBN: 9782884360531
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture, Paléontologie A16, 2018
(Catalogues du patrimoine paléontologique jurassien - A16)
ISBN: 9782884360500
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture, Paléontologie A16, 2017
(Catalogues du patrimoine paléontologique jurassien – A16)
ISBN: 9782884360449
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture, Paléontologie A16, 2017
(Catalogues du patrimoine paléontologique jurassien – A16)
ISBN: 9782884360418
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture, Paléontologie A16, 2017
(Catalogues du patrimoine paléontologique jurassien – A16)
ISBN: 9782884360432
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In: PeerJ, 2017, vol. 5, p. e3482
During the Late Jurassic, several groups of eucryptodiran turtles inhabited the shallow epicontinental seas of Western Europe. Plesiochelyidae are an important part of this first radiation of crown-group turtles into coastal marine ecosystems. Fossils of Plesiochelyidae occur in many European localities, and are especially abundant in the Kimmeridgian layers of the Swiss Jura Mountains (Solothurn...
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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: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 2009, vol. 276, p. 3881-3886
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