Saddle oysters (Anomiidae) attach themselves to calcareous hard substrates by means of a calcified byssus that etches an attachment structure, referred to as ichnospecies Centrichnus eccentricus. Examination of rich material from the Late Cretaceous of central Europe extends the fossil record of this ichnotaxon and revealed a set of previously unrecognised morphological features which appear to be typical for this time period and the respective anomiid trace maker. Excellent preservation of a large number of trace fossil specimens with a complete set of morphological characters allowed a biometrical analysis and additional observations indicating a distinct substrate preference for belemnite rostra, a strong intra- and interspecific competi...
The Jurassic bivalve genus Placunopsis Morris and Lycett, 1853 is shown to be an anomiid on account ...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
WIPPICH Certain groups of gryphaeid oysters became secondarily adapted to soft-bottom conditions by ...
Saddle oysters (Anomiidae) attach themselves to calcareous hard substrates by means of a calcified b...
International audienceWe describe and name Loxolenichnus stellatocinctus Breton and Wisshak igen. et...
Being obligate cementers, oysters (Ostreoidea), both fossil and Recent, often yield valuable informa...
The present study investigated traces of bioerosion in parautochthonous associations of oysters from...
For the first time, articulated shells of Anomia ephippium Linnæus, 1758, the bivalve species widely...
New etching trace fossils produced by the attachment of balanid barnacles on fossil molluscs, mainly...
Original shell coloration, preserved as radial bands in a gryphaeid oyster species from the Upper Cr...
New etching trace fossils produced by the attachment of balanid barnacles on fossil molluscs, mainly...
An isolated gastropod homing scar, etched into an arcoscalpelline (cirripede) scutum, is recorded fr...
Anomalodesmatans comprise a large, ancient and ecologically diverse group of marine bivalves, but ar...
We describe and name Loxolenichnus stellatocinctus Breton and Wisshakigen. et isp. nov., a bioerosio...
The Toolebuc Formation (Late Albian) is a thin (<40m), very widely distributed unit marking the maxi...
The Jurassic bivalve genus Placunopsis Morris and Lycett, 1853 is shown to be an anomiid on account ...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
WIPPICH Certain groups of gryphaeid oysters became secondarily adapted to soft-bottom conditions by ...
Saddle oysters (Anomiidae) attach themselves to calcareous hard substrates by means of a calcified b...
International audienceWe describe and name Loxolenichnus stellatocinctus Breton and Wisshak igen. et...
Being obligate cementers, oysters (Ostreoidea), both fossil and Recent, often yield valuable informa...
The present study investigated traces of bioerosion in parautochthonous associations of oysters from...
For the first time, articulated shells of Anomia ephippium Linnæus, 1758, the bivalve species widely...
New etching trace fossils produced by the attachment of balanid barnacles on fossil molluscs, mainly...
Original shell coloration, preserved as radial bands in a gryphaeid oyster species from the Upper Cr...
New etching trace fossils produced by the attachment of balanid barnacles on fossil molluscs, mainly...
An isolated gastropod homing scar, etched into an arcoscalpelline (cirripede) scutum, is recorded fr...
Anomalodesmatans comprise a large, ancient and ecologically diverse group of marine bivalves, but ar...
We describe and name Loxolenichnus stellatocinctus Breton and Wisshakigen. et isp. nov., a bioerosio...
The Toolebuc Formation (Late Albian) is a thin (<40m), very widely distributed unit marking the maxi...
The Jurassic bivalve genus Placunopsis Morris and Lycett, 1853 is shown to be an anomiid on account ...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
WIPPICH Certain groups of gryphaeid oysters became secondarily adapted to soft-bottom conditions by ...