Conodont elements are the earliest mineralised vertebrate dental tools and the only ones capable of extensive repair. Two models of conodont growth, as well as the presence of a larval stage, have been hypothesised. We analysed normally and pathologically developed elements to test these hypotheses and identified three ontogenetic stages characterised by different anisometric growth and morphology. The distinction of these stages is independently corroborated by differences in tissue strontium content. The onset of the last stage is marked by the appearance of wear resulting from mechanical food digestion. At least five episodes of damage and repair could be identified in the normally developed specimen. In the pathological element, functio...
Conodont elements have high rates of morphological evolution, but the drivers of this disparity are ...
Knowledge of conodont element function is based largely on analysis of morphologically similar P1 el...
Mesozoic tooth marks on bone surfaces directly link consumers to fossil assemblage formation. Striat...
Conodont elements are the earliest mineralised vertebrate dental tools and the only ones capable of ...
Conodonts were the first vertebrates to develop mineralized dental tools, known as elements. Recent ...
ABSTRACT: Conodonts are a highly diverse group of chordates that thrived in prehistoric oceans from...
Analysis of natural assemblages reveals that the architecture of the ozarkodinid conodont feeding ap...
Predation is potentially one of the most impactful evolutionary traits to have ever developed. Conod...
Conodonts are the first vertebrates to bear a mineralized skeleton, restricted to an array of tooth-...
Conodonts are an extinct group of jawless vertebrates whose toothlike elements are the earliest inst...
Knowledge of the conodont skeleton, in terms of the morphology of the elements and the positions the...
The morphological disparity of conodont elements rivals the dentition of all other vertebrates, yet ...
Conodonts were small, thin, elongate jawless creatures that were a common component of the marine fa...
Conodont elements have high rates of morphological evolution, but the drivers of this disparity are ...
Knowledge of conodont element function is based largely on analysis of morphologically similar P1 el...
Mesozoic tooth marks on bone surfaces directly link consumers to fossil assemblage formation. Striat...
Conodont elements are the earliest mineralised vertebrate dental tools and the only ones capable of ...
Conodonts were the first vertebrates to develop mineralized dental tools, known as elements. Recent ...
ABSTRACT: Conodonts are a highly diverse group of chordates that thrived in prehistoric oceans from...
Analysis of natural assemblages reveals that the architecture of the ozarkodinid conodont feeding ap...
Predation is potentially one of the most impactful evolutionary traits to have ever developed. Conod...
Conodonts are the first vertebrates to bear a mineralized skeleton, restricted to an array of tooth-...
Conodonts are an extinct group of jawless vertebrates whose toothlike elements are the earliest inst...
Knowledge of the conodont skeleton, in terms of the morphology of the elements and the positions the...
The morphological disparity of conodont elements rivals the dentition of all other vertebrates, yet ...
Conodonts were small, thin, elongate jawless creatures that were a common component of the marine fa...
Conodont elements have high rates of morphological evolution, but the drivers of this disparity are ...
Knowledge of conodont element function is based largely on analysis of morphologically similar P1 el...
Mesozoic tooth marks on bone surfaces directly link consumers to fossil assemblage formation. Striat...