During the Silurian, the Swedish island Gotland was positioned close to the equator and covered by a shallow sea called the Baltic Basin. The sedimentary rocks (predominantly carbonates) comprising most of the island today were initially formed in this warm sea, and the relatively complete succession of rocks often contains fossil fragments and scales from early vertebrates, including heterostracans, anaspids, thelodonts, osteostracans, acanthodians, and a stem-osteichthyan. Fossils of early vertebrates become increasingly more common in younger Silurian rocks, but are mostly represented by fragmentary remains and rarer occurrences of articulated jawless vertebrates (agnathans). However, the record of articulated specimens and jawed vertebr...
<p>The Osteostraci are an early clade of jawless vertebrates widely regarded as the sister group of ...
Ludfordian strata exposed in the Burgen outlier in eastern Gotland, Sweden record a time of initial ...
More than 99 per cent of the roughly 58,000 living vertebrate species have jaws. This major clade, w...
During the Silurian, the Swedish island Gotland was positioned close to the equator and covered by a...
A long history of geological research on the island of Gotland, Sweden, has resulted in a detailed b...
The microvertebrate faunas from ten small pieces of rock from the Öved Sandstone Formation at Klinta...
The fauna from a Late Silurian residue sample from Ovedskloster (Skane) is listed. It comprises scal...
A condensed shale from the middle Silurian of Gotland (Sweden) is herein described with regard to it...
Several vertebrate assemblages are described from the Silurian of the Oslo Region, Norway, based on ...
Scolecodonts, polychaete jaws, generally occur abundantly in Silurian shallow marine successions and...
Jawed polychaete annelid worms were abundant and diverse in the early Palaeozoic seas and their jaws...
Early Silurian vertebrates, especially agnathans, from central Asia (Tuva and norhwestern Mongolia) ...
The Superfamily Strophomenoidea is a very diverse group of brachiopods in the Early Palaeozoic. In t...
SUMMARY: All the facies beginning with black clay to carbonate mud in a complete and continuous geol...
More than 99 per cent of the roughly 58,000 living vertebrate species have jaws. This major clade, w...
<p>The Osteostraci are an early clade of jawless vertebrates widely regarded as the sister group of ...
Ludfordian strata exposed in the Burgen outlier in eastern Gotland, Sweden record a time of initial ...
More than 99 per cent of the roughly 58,000 living vertebrate species have jaws. This major clade, w...
During the Silurian, the Swedish island Gotland was positioned close to the equator and covered by a...
A long history of geological research on the island of Gotland, Sweden, has resulted in a detailed b...
The microvertebrate faunas from ten small pieces of rock from the Öved Sandstone Formation at Klinta...
The fauna from a Late Silurian residue sample from Ovedskloster (Skane) is listed. It comprises scal...
A condensed shale from the middle Silurian of Gotland (Sweden) is herein described with regard to it...
Several vertebrate assemblages are described from the Silurian of the Oslo Region, Norway, based on ...
Scolecodonts, polychaete jaws, generally occur abundantly in Silurian shallow marine successions and...
Jawed polychaete annelid worms were abundant and diverse in the early Palaeozoic seas and their jaws...
Early Silurian vertebrates, especially agnathans, from central Asia (Tuva and norhwestern Mongolia) ...
The Superfamily Strophomenoidea is a very diverse group of brachiopods in the Early Palaeozoic. In t...
SUMMARY: All the facies beginning with black clay to carbonate mud in a complete and continuous geol...
More than 99 per cent of the roughly 58,000 living vertebrate species have jaws. This major clade, w...
<p>The Osteostraci are an early clade of jawless vertebrates widely regarded as the sister group of ...
Ludfordian strata exposed in the Burgen outlier in eastern Gotland, Sweden record a time of initial ...
More than 99 per cent of the roughly 58,000 living vertebrate species have jaws. This major clade, w...