Academic literature on the topic 'Cymbospondylu'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cymbospondylu"

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Sander, P. Martin. "Cymbospondylus (Shastasauridae: Ichthyosauria) from the Middle Triassic of Spitsbergen: filling a paleobiogeographic gap." Journal of Paleontology 66, no. 2 (March 1992): 332–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000033825.

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The occurrence of the large ichthyosaur Cymbospondylus in the Middle Triassic of Spitsbergen is recognized based on two different specimens. One consists of a semiarticulated string of 17 dorsal vertebrae with associated ribs and the other of an anterior dorsal vertebral centrum and possibly a caudal vertebral centrum. Both specimens can only be identified as Cymbospondylus sp. This record fills a gap in the distribution of Cymbospondylus, establishing this genus as the second most widespread Triassic ichthyosaur after Mixosaurus.
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Lindemann, Franz-Josef. "Note on the ichthyosaurian Cymbospondylus." Journal of Paleontology 72, no. 5 (September 1998): 936. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002233600002727x.

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In 1992 Sander described in this journal a find of the ichthyosaurian genus Cymbospondylus from the Middle Triassic of Spitsbergen. At the time of publication, the specimen illustrated in figures 2-4 (Sander, 1992) and five associated elements (not figured) were housed at the Paleontological Institute and Museum of the University of Zürich (PIMUZ A/III 496 and PIMUZ A/III 647-651). These specimens were later donated by their collector and owner Professor Hans-Joachim Schweitzer (Bonn) to the Paleontological Museum of the University of Oslo (PMO), where they are now stored under the following numbers: PMO 162.003 (=PIMUZ A/III 496, figs. 2-4 in Sander, 1992)PMO 162.004 (=PIMUZ A/III 647)PMO 162.005 (=PIMUZ A/III 648)PMO 162.006 (=PIMUZ A/III 649)PMO 162.007 (=PIMUZ A/III 650)PMO 162.008 (=PIMUZ A/III 651)
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Sander, P. Martin, Olivier C. Rieppel, and H. Bucher. "New marine vertebrate fauna from the Middle Triassic of Nevada." Journal of Paleontology 68, no. 3 (May 1994): 676–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000026020.

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The marine Triassic rocks of Nevada are well known for their ichthyosaur finds, and a number of new genera and species were described from this state. Based on a few vertebrae, Leidy (1868) erected a new Middle Triassic ichthyosaur genus, Cymbospondylys, with two species, C. petrinus and C. piscosus. The type material of C. petrinus came from the Prida Formation of the southern Humboldt Range, and that of C. piscosus from the Favret Formation of the New Pass Range.
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Massare, Judy A., and Jack M. Callaway. "Cymbospondylus(Ichthyosauria: Shastasauridae) from the Lower Triassic Thaynes Formation of southeastern Idaho." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 14, no. 1 (March 31, 1994): 139–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02724634.1994.10011545.

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5

Klein, Nicole, Lars Schmitz, Tanja Wintrich, and P. Martin Sander. "A new cymbospondylid ichthyosaur (Ichthyosauria) from the Middle Triassic (Anisian) of the Augusta Mountains, Nevada, USA." Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 18, no. 14 (April 20, 2020): 1167–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2020.1748132.

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Vörös, Attila, Tamás Budai, László Makádi, Miklós Bercsényi, Gabriella Földvári, Zsolt Pintér, and Márton Szabó. "Rediscovery of a classic Middle Triassic fossil site of the Balaton Highland (Transdanubian Range, Hungary): cephalopods, brachiopods and vertebrate remains from the Akol Hill at Barnag." Földtani Közlöny 152, no. 3 (October 1, 2022): 233–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.23928/foldt.kozl.2022.152.3.233.

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Recent collecting of the classic Middle Anisian fossil site of the Akol Hill at Barnag (Nagyvázsony Plateau, Balaton Highland) yielded a plenty of new palaeontological data.The Middle Anisian platform carbonate succession (Tagyon Formation) is overlain by 1-2 metres thick reddish, nodular, crinoidal limestone (Vászoly Formation) that contains a very rich fossil assemblage with ammonoids, nautiloids and brachiopods. Some vertebrate fossils were also found. Besides fish teeth, remains of marine reptiles are also present in the fauna. Four vertebrae, a piece of a rib, as well as a tooth crown fragment have also been found.Based on the geological buildup and the new biostratigraphic data the active stage of the Barnag Platform was much shorter than that of the other two Middle Anisian platforms of the Balaton Highland (Tagyon Platform, Kádárta Platform). The ammonoid fauna of the lowermost thin limestone bed above the Tagyon Formation contains elements reworked from the Balatonicus Zone. The overlying some beds contain a very rich lower Illyrian ammonoid fauna which is more diverse than the equivalent faunas of the Tagyon Platform and the Kádárta Platform. The ammonites of the Balatonicus Zone in the basal part of the Vászoly Formation prove that the drowning of the Barnag Platform occured even during the Pelsonian, earlier than in the case of the Tagyon and the Kádárta Platforms where the oldest basin sediments are mid-Illyrian (Camunum Subzone of the Trinodosus Zone) above the drowning surface.The Akol Hill locality also provided the first known occurrence of ichthyosaurs like Cymbospondylus, predators that probably dwelled mostly open marine environments but also might have been well adapted for hunting in shallow environments like submarine highs.
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7

FRÖBISCH, NADIA B., P. MARTIN SANDER, and OLIVIER RIEPPEL. "A new species of Cymbospondylus (Diapsida, Ichthyosauria) from the Middle Triassic of Nevada and a re-evaluation of the skull osteology of the genus." Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 147, no. 4 (August 2006): 515–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2006.00225.x.

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8

Maisch, Michael W., and Andreas T. Matzke. "Observations on Triassic ichthyosaurs. Part XIII: New data on the cranial osteology of Cymbospondylus petrinus (LEIDY, 1868) from the Middle Triassic Prida Formation of Nevada." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Monatshefte 2004, no. 6 (June 8, 2004): 370–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpm/2004/2004/370.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cymbospondylu"

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BINDELLINI, GABRIELE. "STUDY OF THE PALEONTOLOGICAL RECORD OF THE BESANO FORMATION (MIDDLE TRIASSIC) AT ¿SASSO CALDO¿, VARESE, UNESCO WHL MONTE SAN GIORGIO." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2022. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/924610.

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The Besano Formation consists of an alternation of laminated dolomitic banks and bituminous shales, and sparse cineritic tuffs that are dated as Late Anisian–Early Ladinian. It is one of the richest fossil-bearing formations from the Monte San Giorgio area; on the Italian side of Monte San Giorgio, the Sasso Caldo site is the one from which the greatest part of the Besano collection housed at the Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano is from. This Ph.D. thesis aims to the study of the Besano Formation macrofauna, through biochronostratigraphic zonation of the Sasso Caldo Site, revision of the large ichthyosaur Besanosaurus leptorhynchus), and study of the most important specimens, chosen for their preservation and rarity, but also to test the hypothesis of variations in the influence of open sea on the Besano basin. All the available ammonoids and bivalves from the Sasso Caldo site (Besano Formation), housed in the collections of the Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano, were examined and determined. The systematic study led to the recognition of 15 ammonoid taxa belonging to 10 genera, and five species belonging to the bivalve genus Daonella. The study of bed-by-bed collected specimens allowed the biochronostratigraphic classification of the Sasso Caldo section and the time-calibration of invertebrate and vertebrate bioevents. Results evidence that at Sasso Caldo site crops out almost the entire middle to upper Besano Formation. corresponding the Nevadites secedensis ammonoid zone. The trend of distribution of specimens reflects the establishment of an intraplatform basin with discontinuous open-marine influence in the middle Besano Formation, while the upper Besano Formation corresponds to a shallower subtidal restricted platform environment. Among the terrestrial taxa recovered at Sasso Caldo from the upper Besano Formation, a remarkably well-preserved fossil scorpion (BES SC 1973) is described in this thesis. This finding corroborates the hypothesized existence of a near shoreline during the deposition of the upper Besano Formation. BES SC 1973 is assigned to a new taxon gen. et sp. nov., included in the family Protobuthidae. This finding represents the first arachnid recorded from the Besano Formation, and the second genus attributed to the family Protobuthidae. This specimen is also the first reported Italian Mesozoic fossil scorpion. Regarding vertebrates, MSNM V927 and 928, a portion of the axial skeleton of a large diapsid, is attributed to Helveticosaurus zollingeri, a rare diapsid known only from the Besano Formation. This animal was recovered in association with the ammonoid Ticinites, at the base of the N. secedensis Zone, in coincidence with the establishment of the intraplatform basin of the middle Besano Formation. This specimen is the first record of skeletal remains and the second specimen assigned to the taxon in Italy. In this work the niche occupied by this animal in the Middle Triassic coastal ecosystems and its swimming style are also revised and discussed. MSNM V926, and SMNS 50010, respectively a portion of ribcage and an isolated partial forefin of a large ichthyosaur, were attributed to Cymbospondylus buchseri. MSNM V926 represents the first specimen attributed to this taxon and recovered on the Italian side of Monte San Giorgio. A great part of this thesis is dedicated to the revision of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus. The specimens studied and attributed to Besanosaurus leptorhynchus preserve a remarkably complete cranial and postcranial anatomy so that this taxon can be now accounted among the best-understood Middle Triassic ichthyosaur taxa. The revision of the skull morphology of this taxon clarified long-standing controversies regarding its cranial anatomy and the taxonomy of shastasaurids from Monte San Giorgio. The six specimens here described represent a potential ontogenetic series composed of an embryo (inside the maternal cavity of BES SC 999), likely two subadults, and four adults. They can be ordered by increasing size as follows: embryonic material of BES SC 999, PIMUZ T 4376, PIMUZ T 1895, BES SC 999, BES SC 1016, GPIT 1793/1, PIMUZ T 4847. Also, Besanosaurus resulted the largest Middle Triassic ichthyosaur taxon of the Western Tethys to date, since a full adult size is confidently estimated to be almost 8 m in PIMUZ T 4847. Besanosaurus is characterized by a long, slender, and gracile snout, representing an ecological specialization never seen before the Anisian in a large-sized diapsid. The study of the postcranial anatomy of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus is based on four specimens: PIMUZ T 4376, PIMUZ T 1895, BES SC 999, PIMUZ T 4847. The results suggest that this taxon possesses a peculiar bauplan, which in its proportions fits in between Cymbospondylus and the shastasaur-grade ichthyosaurs. Swimming capabilities of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus were tested and compared with Cymbospondylus and Mixosaurus. Among the ichthyosaurs from the Besano-Monte San Giorgio fauna (Cymbopondylus, mixosaurids, and Besanosaurus), different hunting strategies, demonstrated by different morphologies and dimensions of the rostra, as well as different body proportions and swimming styles, should have led to niche partitioning. The key phylogenetic position occupied by Besanosausurus leptorhynchus in the ichthyosaurian phylogeny was investigated: the analysis shows that this taxon represents the basalmost member of shastasaur-grade ichthyosaurs, recovered to be a paraphyletic group. Eventually is addressed a study of the embryonic material preserved in BES SC 999. We deem the material in the body cavity of BES SC 999 unambiguously embryonic and attributable to Besanosaurus leptorhynchus. Here the embryonic material is described in detail and qualitatively compared with the maternal specimen and to other known ichthyosaur prenatal specimens.
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