Cranial sinuses result from the resorption and deposition of bone in response to biomechanical stress during a process known as pneumatisation. The morphology of a pneumatic bone represents an optimisation between strength and being light weight. The presence of very large sinuses has been described in a number of extinct marsupial megafauna, the size of which no longer exist in extant marsupials. With advances in digital visualisation, and the discovery of a number of exceptionally preserved fossil crania, a unique opportunity exists to investigate hypotheses regarding the structure and evolution of the atypically voluminous sinuses. Sinus function is difficult to test without first obtaining data on sinus variation within and between spec...
Introduction: The phylogenetic and ecological importance of paranasal sinuses in carnivorans was hig...
Figure 6. Digital reconstructions from computed tomography (CT) scan data of the skulls of Bubalus d...
Giant wombats (defined here as ≥70 kg) are found in the genera Phascolonus, Ramsayia and perhaps Sed...
The extinct Diprotodon optatum was the largest ever marsupial, reaching over two tonnes. However, de...
The frontal sinuses are cavities inside the frontal bone located at the junction between the face an...
Mammal skulls contain up to four mucosal-lined, air-filled cavities called paranasal sinuses within ...
Paranasal sinuses are highly variable among living and fossil hominins and their function(s) are poo...
Mid-late Pleistocene fossil hominins such as Homo neanderthalensis and H. heidelbergensis are often ...
The frontal sinuses are cavities inside the frontal bone located at the junction between the face an...
To investigate the claim that the primate paranasal sinuses possess not a functional but a structura...
Sinuses are internal skull cavities of elusive function, which are often neglected and considered as...
Frontal pneumatisation is not present in all primates, and among extant species, ethmoidally-derived...
Macaques (genus Macaca) are unique among cercopithecids in that they possess a maxillary sinus, and ...
Abstract. — The study of facial pneumatisation in 3 samples of modem populations (french, australian...
Unlike most primates, extant cercopithecoids lack maxillary sinuses, which are pneumatic spaces in t...
Introduction: The phylogenetic and ecological importance of paranasal sinuses in carnivorans was hig...
Figure 6. Digital reconstructions from computed tomography (CT) scan data of the skulls of Bubalus d...
Giant wombats (defined here as ≥70 kg) are found in the genera Phascolonus, Ramsayia and perhaps Sed...
The extinct Diprotodon optatum was the largest ever marsupial, reaching over two tonnes. However, de...
The frontal sinuses are cavities inside the frontal bone located at the junction between the face an...
Mammal skulls contain up to four mucosal-lined, air-filled cavities called paranasal sinuses within ...
Paranasal sinuses are highly variable among living and fossil hominins and their function(s) are poo...
Mid-late Pleistocene fossil hominins such as Homo neanderthalensis and H. heidelbergensis are often ...
The frontal sinuses are cavities inside the frontal bone located at the junction between the face an...
To investigate the claim that the primate paranasal sinuses possess not a functional but a structura...
Sinuses are internal skull cavities of elusive function, which are often neglected and considered as...
Frontal pneumatisation is not present in all primates, and among extant species, ethmoidally-derived...
Macaques (genus Macaca) are unique among cercopithecids in that they possess a maxillary sinus, and ...
Abstract. — The study of facial pneumatisation in 3 samples of modem populations (french, australian...
Unlike most primates, extant cercopithecoids lack maxillary sinuses, which are pneumatic spaces in t...
Introduction: The phylogenetic and ecological importance of paranasal sinuses in carnivorans was hig...
Figure 6. Digital reconstructions from computed tomography (CT) scan data of the skulls of Bubalus d...
Giant wombats (defined here as ≥70 kg) are found in the genera Phascolonus, Ramsayia and perhaps Sed...