Search results for "Proboscidea"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Mammoth remains from the Opole area, southwest Poland

2016

Isolated skeletal remains of woolly mammoths, found in the Opole region, are described and illustrated. Most of these were recovered in the first half of the twentieth century; they are now deposited in several museum collections but have not yet been described in detail, nor illustrated. Recent discoveries in the area were the prime trigger for the present review of previously collected material. A summary of current knowledge of all finds of mammoth remains from the Opole area is the main aim of this note, inclusive of a brief history of research. In addition, a single radiocarbon dating has been performed. All skeletal elements, i.e., molars, pelvis, femur, scapula, jaw, tusks and cement…

PleistocenebonesMammuthus primigeniustusksteethProboscideaFragmenta Naturae
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Proboscidea: a preliminary note

1990

Abstract Proboscidean remains collected during the 1983–1989 field seasons are described here. They are assigned to Deinotherium aff. levius (14 isolated teeth) and to Gomphotherium pasalarense (44 isolated teeth). No evidence was found for another subspecies described by Gaziry from Pasalar. The proboscidea are probably indicative of woodland conditions at Pasalar.

DeinotheriumEcologyAnthropologyWoodlandBiologySubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationGomphotheriumEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsProboscideaJournal of Human Evolution
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Über Carpus und Tarsus vonDeinotherium giganteum Kaup (Mamm., Proboscidea)

1962

Zusammengehorige Teile eines Skelettes vonDeinotherium giganteum Kp., welche im unteren Pliozan (Pontium) am Howenegg (Hegau, SW-Deutschland) ausgegraben worden sind, erlauben Beobachtungen zur Struktur des Hand- und Fusskelettes. Ein Verfahren zur graphischen Darstellung von Gelenkflachen wird geschildert, die Gultigkeit desCuvier’schen Korrelationsprinzips erortert.

medicine.anatomical_structurebiologyTarsus (skeleton)medicinePaleontologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationProboscideaPaläontologische Zeitschrift
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Paracamelichnum Jumillensisn.ichnogen. n.ichnosp., Upper Miocene Camelidae Ichnites from the Hoya de la Sima site (Murcia, Spain)

2009

In the proximity of Jumilla (Murcia, Spain) there is a site called Hoya de la Sima with mammal footprints dating from the Upper Miocene. This site is an old gypsum quarry where footprints of Hipparion, Pecoripeda, Carnivora, Ursidae, and Proboscidea were discovered. While the site was being cleaned and conditioned after the discovery to protect the prints, Camelidae and other prints were unearthed and are currently being studied. The description of the Camelidae ichnites demonstrates that these belong to a new ichnogenera, produced by the prints of Paracamelus. The grouping of trackways is congruent with the gregariousness of these animals and with the concentration observed in similar site…

PaleontologyGeographybiologyParacamelusSimaHoyaPaleontologyMammalbiology.organism_classificationIchnitesHipparionProboscideaIchnos
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Data from: Phylogenomics of Lophotrochozoa with consideration of systematic error

2016

Phylogenomic studies have improved understanding of deep metazoan phylogeny and show promise for resolving incongruences among analyses based on limited numbers of loci. One region of the animal tree that has been especially difficult to resolve, even with phylogenomic approaches, is relationships within Lophotrochozoa (the animal clade that includes molluscs, annelids, and flatworms among others). Lack of resolution in phylogenomic analyses could be due to insufficient phylogenetic signal, limitations in taxon and/or gene sampling, or systematic error. Here, we investigated why lophotrochozoan phylogeny has been such a difficult question to answer by identifying and reducing sources of sys…

Helobdella robustaGlycera dibranchiataMytilus edulisAnnelidaEntalina tetragonaLeptochiton asellusCerebratulus marginatusLoxosomella cf. viviparaGraptacme eboreaLineus longissimusmedicine and health careClymenella torquataRuditapes philippinarumNucella lapillusHaliotis rufescenslong branch attractionPlatyzoaBarentsia gracilisPriapulus caudatusLineus ruberAlitta virenssaturationProchaetoderma californicumPinctada fucataSchistosoma mansoniLife sciencesPolyzoaCephalothrix hongkongensisRhyssoplax olivaceusLoxosoma pectinaricolaPhascolosoma agassiziiAdineta vagaDrosophila melanogasterEntoproctaBugula neritinaPhoronis vancouverensisMedicineNovocrania anomalaVillosa lienosaDaphnia pulexSagitta sp.Pectinaria gouldiiSymbion americanusNuculana pernulaSepia esculentaEnucula tenuisSolemya velumLineus lacteusTubulanus polymorphus-StruckGnathostomula paradoxaBoccardia proboscideaMacellomenia schanderiLaevipilina hyalinaTubulanus polymorphus-HalanychBryozoaPomatoceros lamarckiiSepioteuthis lessonianaParanemertes peregrinaMalacobdella grossaHemithiris psittaceaLeptochiton rugatusTrochozoaBrachionus plicatilisSpathoderma clenchiLaqueus californicusPatella vulgataLottia giganteaCrepidula fornicataPhoronidaAplysia californicaGlottidia pyramidataPhoronis psammophilaSchmidtea mediterraneaAlexandromenia crassaBrachiopodaMegadasys sp.Octopus vulgarisCapitella teletaNeomenia carinatacompositional heterogeneityNemerteaPhenacolepas pulchellaGadila tolmieiMolluscaMacrodasys sp.Crassostrea gigasPedicellina cernuaTaenia pisiformisDosidicus gigasCephalothrix linearisSpiralia
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Data from: Phylogenomics of Lophotrochozoa with consideration of systematic error

2021

Phylogenomic studies have improved understanding of deep metazoan phylogeny and show promise for resolving incongruences among analyses based on limited numbers of loci. One region of the animal tree that has been especially difficult to resolve, even with phylogenomic approaches, is relationships within Lophotrochozoa (the animal clade that includes molluscs, annelids, and flatworms among others). Lack of resolution in phylogenomic analyses could be due to insufficient phylogenetic signal, limitations in taxon and/or gene sampling, or systematic error. Here, we investigated why lophotrochozoan phylogeny has been such a difficult question to answer by identifying and reducing sources of sys…

Helobdella robustaGlycera dibranchiataMytilus edulisAnnelidaEntalina tetragonaLeptochiton asellusCerebratulus marginatusLoxosomella cf. viviparaGraptacme eboreaLineus longissimusmedicine and health careClymenella torquataRuditapes philippinarumNucella lapillusHaliotis rufescenslong branch attractionPlatyzoaBarentsia gracilisPriapulus caudatusLineus ruberAlitta virenssaturationProchaetoderma californicumLife SciencesPinctada fucataSchistosoma mansoniPolyzoaCephalothrix hongkongensisRhyssoplax olivaceusLoxosoma pectinaricolaPhascolosoma agassiziiAdineta vagaDrosophila melanogasterEntoproctaBugula neritinaPhoronis vancouverensisMedicineNovocrania anomalaVillosa lienosaDaphnia pulexSagitta sp.Pectinaria gouldiiSymbion americanusNuculana pernulaSepia esculentaEnucula tenuisSolemya velumLineus lacteusTubulanus polymorphus-StruckGnathostomula paradoxaBoccardia proboscideaMacellomenia schanderiLaevipilina hyalinaTubulanus polymorphus-HalanychBryozoaPomatoceros lamarckiiSepioteuthis lessonianaParanemertes peregrinaMalacobdella grossaHemithiris psittaceaLeptochiton rugatusTrochozoaBrachionus plicatilisSpathoderma clenchiLaqueus californicusPatella vulgataLottia giganteaCrepidula fornicataPhoronidaAplysia californicaGlottidia pyramidataPhoronis psammophilaSchmidtea mediterraneaAlexandromenia crassaBrachiopodaMegadasys sp.Octopus vulgarisCapitella teletaNeomenia carinatacompositional heterogeneityNemerteaPhenacolepas pulchellaGadila tolmieiMolluscaMacrodasys sp.Crassostrea gigasPedicellina cernuaTaenia pisiformisDosidicus gigasCephalothrix linearisSpiralia
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