Sea level, dinosaur diversity and sampling biases: investigating the 'common cause' hypothesis in the terrestrial realm
Butler, Richard J, Benson, Roger B J, Carrano, Matthew T, Mannion, Philip D, Upchurch, Paul
Proceedings. Biological sciences, 22 April 2011, Vol.278(1709), pp.1165-70
[Revue évaluée par les pairs]
Titre:
What, if anything, is a cursor? : categories versus continua for determining locomotor habit in mammals and dinosaurs / M.T. Carrano
Auteur:Carrano, Matthew, T Sujet RERO:Locomotion
- Biomécanique
- Mammifères
- Dinosaures Sujet RERO - forme:[document électronique] Publication en relation:
In: Journal of zoology. - London. - Vol. 247(1999), p. 29-42
Document hôte:Journal of zoology Note:
Bibliogr.: p. 41-42
No RERO:
R005109426
Titre:
The dinosauria (second edition) / rev. by Matthew T. Carrano
Auteur:Carrano, Matthew, T Sujet RERO:Dinosaures Sujet RERO - forme:[document électronique] Publication en relation:
In: Palaeontologia electronica. - [S.l.]. - Vol. 8(2005), no 2, p. 1-7
Document hôte:Palaeontologia electronica No RERO:
R004772173
Carrano, Matthew T, Choiniere, Jonah
Journal of vertebrate paleontology, 03 March 2016, Vol.36(2)
[Revue évaluée par les pairs]
Taylor & Francis (Taylor & Francis Group)
Titre: New information on the forearm and manus of Ceratosaurus nasicornis Marsh, 1884 (Dinosauria, Theropoda), with implications for theropod forelimb evolution Auteur:Carrano, Matthew T; Choiniere, Jonah Sujet:Geology Description:
Here we describe the forearm and manus of the ceratosaurian theropod dinosaur Ceratosaurus nasicornis Marsh, 1884, from the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation of the western U.S.A. Recently removed from exhibition and reprepared, the holotype offers important new information on the morphology of this taxon that bears on the evolution of the forelimb in nonavian theropod dinosaurs more generally. The ulna and radius show particular similarities to those of Dilophosaurus and Eoabelisaurus but lack features that characterize derived abelisaurids. In the manus, Ceratosaurus bears short first phalanges, like more derived taxa in the clade, but retains metacarpals that are much more similar to those of Dilophosaurus, Berberosaurus, and Eoabelisaurus. Taken together, and incorporated with existing phylogenetic data on other ceratosaurs, these data are consistent with the placement of Ceratosaurus as close to Abelisauroidea but basal to Eoabelisaurus. More importantly, they strongly imply...
Fait partie de:
Journal of vertebrate paleontology, 03 March 2016, Vol.36(2)
Identifiant:
0272-4634 (ISSN); 1937-2809 (E-ISSN); 10.1080/02724634.2015.1054497 (DOI)